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Religion, Theology, and Stranger Things: Studies from the Upside Down on Evil, Ethics, Horror, and Hope [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 260 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 522 g, 2 b-w illustrations;
  • Sērija : Theology, Religion, and Pop Culture
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Feb-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1978715722
  • ISBN-13: 9781978715721
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  • Cena: 117,14 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 260 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 522 g, 2 b-w illustrations;
  • Sērija : Theology, Religion, and Pop Culture
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Feb-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1978715722
  • ISBN-13: 9781978715721
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

Religion, Theology and Stranger Things: Studies from the Upside Down on Evil, Ethics, Horror, and Hope brings interdisciplinary analysis to the teeming spiritual side of the hit television series. With chapters from social scientists, historians, theologians, and Biblical scholars, the volume addresses the many different theological, religious, and supernatural themes present in the fictional world of Hawkins, Indiana. From spiritualism to secularism, Mormon gender norms to monsters of abnormality, rock & roll to Dungeons & Dragons, an international list of scholars come together to argue that imaginative realms like the one created by the Duffer brothers can serve to showcase and to scrutinize the common impulses and needs of our culture and ourselves. To venture into the darkness of the Upside Down is to venture into the depths of human experience. This volume explores the shadows and suggests a few paths back into the light.



Analyzing the spirituality in a hit television series, this scholarly volume explores topics ranging from spiritualism to secularism, Mormonism to mythology, rock & roll to Dungeons & Dragons. The book demonstrates that popular culture can serve as an effective lens through which to reflect on the soul of humanity.

Recenzijas

Modern cultures and society frequently consider theology and religion as if they belong to a long-gone nostalgia of another world, yetas the essays which Byers and Powell have compiled showthe universe of Stranger Things draws freely from the wells found in that other world. Stranger Things provides a rich and fertile ground to explore these themes. Through a wide-ranging series of essays and reflections, Religion, Theology and Stranger Things does a wonderful job of translating and working through both the Upside Down of Stranger Things in Hawkins, Indiana into the Right Side Up of our own world. It is an excellent volume thinking through the religion and theology of such a popular series which has sparked widespread cultural nostalgia for the 1980s. May this volume do the same for reflections on our theology and religion. -- Christopher A. Porter, Trinity College, Melbourne Andrew Byers and Adam Powell have curated an engaging and entertaining volume that opens a portal into the religious dimension of the hit series Stranger Things. The international ensemble of contributors offers profound, multi-disciplinary insights into the shows exploration of identity, monsters, nostalgia, and the human condition in the Upside Down. Each essay expertly weaves together pop-culture analysis with sociological, religious, or theological reflection, making it both a go-to resource and a must-read for fans and scholars alike. -- Brandon M. Hurlbert, Durham University

Papildus informācija

Analyzing the spirituality in a hit television series, this scholarly volume explores topics ranging from spiritualism to secularism, Mormonism to mythology, rock & roll to Dungeons & Dragons. The book demonstrates that popular culture can serve as an effective lens through which to reflect on the soul of humanity.
Introduction, Andrew J. Byers, Adam Powell

Part I: Spirits, Monsters, and Supernatural Science

Chapter 1: Comfort, Control, and Christmas Lights: The Types and Techniques
of Spirit Communication in Stranger Things, Season One, Adam Powell

Chapter 2: The Myth of Stranger Things: A Structural Analysis of Monsters and
Fears in Season One, Vivian Asimos

Chapter 3: Defining the Normal: Monstrosity in Stranger Things, Brandon
Grafius

Chapter 4: Enchanted Science? The Supernatural Imagination of Stranger
Things, Josh Reeves

Part II: History, (Pop) Culture, and Nostalgic Contexts

Chapter 5: Who Is Suzie Bingham? Gender and the 1980s Mormon Family in
Stranger Things, Jana Reiss

Chapter 6: Do Not Be Overcome by Evil: Dungeons, Dragons, and the Satanic
Panic in Stranger Things , Joseph P. Laycock

Chapter 7: Fighting Satan with the Devils Music? Subverting Suspicions of
Demonic Influence on Rock n Roll in Stranger Things Season 4, John Anthony
Dunne

Chapter 8: Home, Nostalgia, and Stranger Things, Andrew Root

Chapter 9: Utopia, Intertextuality, and Liturgy: Nostalgia and Religion in
Stranger Things, Melissa Conroy

Part III: Theology, Ethics and Biblical Themes

Chapter 10: Peeking Behind Baumans Curtain: A Theology and Ethics of
Institutions in Stranger Things, Nathaniel A. Warne Adishian

Chapter 11: Max and the Magdalene: On Violence, Grief, and Trauma Under
Patriarchy, Siobhįn Jolley

Chapter 12: From Patmos to Hawkins: Slipping through Time and Space in
Revelation and Stranger Things, Heather Macumber

Chapter 13: Can Anything Good Come out of Hawkins? Self, Place, Evil, and
Salvation in Johns Gospel, Stranger Things, and the Secular Age, Andrew J.
Byers

Afterword: What Would Suzy, Erica, and Steve Say? Concluding Reflections,
Andrew J. Byers, Adam Powell
Andrew J. Byers serves as lecturer in New Testament at Ridley Hall in the Cambridge Theological Federation and as an affiliated lecturer in the Faculty of Divinity at the University of Cambridge.

Adam Powell is a lecturer in medical humanities in the Department of Theology & Religion at Durham University (UK).