The Postmodern Sacred
Popular Culture Spirituality in the Science Fiction, Fantasy and Urban Fantasy Genres
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About the Book
From The Matrix and Harry Potter to Stargate SG:1 and The X-Files, recent science fiction and fantasy offerings both reflect and produce a sense of the religious. This work examines this pop-culture spirituality, or “postmodern sacred,” showing how consumers use the symbols contained in explicitly “unreal” texts to gain a secondhand experience of transcendence and belief. Topics include how media technologies like CGI have blurred the lines between real and unreal, the polytheisms of Buffy and Xena, the New Age Gnosticism of The DaVinci Code, the Islamic “Other” and science fiction’s response to 9/11, and the Christian Right and popular culture. Today’s pervasive, saturated media culture, this work shows, has utterly collapsed the sacred/profane binary, so that popular culture is not only powerfully shaped by the discourses of religion, but also shapes how the religious appears and is experienced in the contemporary world.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Emily McAvan
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 194
Bibliographic Info: notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2012
pISBN: 978-0-7864-6388-6
eISBN: 978-0-7864-9282-4
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vi
Introduction: The Return of the Religious and the Postmodern Sacred 1
1. The Postmodern Sacred 21
2. Virtual Religion: Techniques of the Postmodern Sacred 31
3. “Something Up There”: Transcendental Gesturing in New Age–Influenced Texts 43
4. Of Gods and Monsters: Metaphor and the Postmodern Sacred 64
5. Buffy and Xena: Polytheisms On-Screen 80
6. Whither Leonardo da Vinci? New Age Gnosticism 98
7. Christ Figures and the Messianic in The Lord of the Rings 108
8. The Cultural Logic of Postmodern Christianity: The Christian Right and Popular Culture 117
9. The Islamic Other and SFF Responses to 9/11 130
10. Good, Evil and Ethics: Morality and All That Stuff 143
Conclusion: Is There an Outside to Capital? 154
Chapter Notes 165
Bibliography 173
Index 187
Book Reviews & Awards
- “Recommended”—Midwest Book Review
- “Well researched”—Science Fiction Studies