Handcrafting the Sacred on the Screen. The Sacred and Pop Culture Borrowing both from the sanctimonious and the political to make a religion spectacle.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
6th Grade SS Entry Task In your notebooks……..
Advertisements

The Meanings and Uses of Spirituality: From secular therapy to spiritual therapy? Professor Gordon Lynch Department of Religious Studies University of.
Popular Culture & Visual Rhetoric. What is pop culture? Popular - Everyday things Whats hot ? Fashion Technology Music Food Lifestyles Sports Places.
Responding to the ever new call of God hidden in our cherished educational heritage.
Continental Postmodernism James A. Van Slyke. “There is Nothing Outside the Text” Memento –Leonard has lost his ability to make new memories –Uses tattoos.
Utilizing the Metaphor of a Critical Lens.  Reader Response  Talking to the Text  Read Aloud.
Fear of Determinism and Nihilism Liz Beck, Amber Hager, Erica Olsen.
GAMING Games and sports as cultural industries Games and social identities Gaming as environment Gaming as ritual.
Ethics and Social Responsibility pp Ethics  The moral principles and values that govern actions & decisions by individuals & groups.  Doing.
Section D Revision. World Views Religious & Non-Religious.
Religious Studies 2812: Religion and Popular Culture.
Critical Approaches to Film Screen Theory. More than 22,000 people have signed a petition for Disney to make its next princess character plus-sized.
Educ 1101: Education In Modern Society From Provenzo’s Chapter One.
International Business
Sociology of Media (3) Mediation Formats Digital Reproduction ( )
Tolerance and Nietzsche Michael Lacewing co.uk.
Chapter 17, Religion Key Terms.
The Religious and the Mediatic. What is religion? [Religion is] a system of symbols which acts to 2) establish powerful, pervasive, and long-
Introduction to Grade 10 Religion: Does God Exist?
POSTMODERNISM Owen, Rachel, Mary, Jessica, Ty, Elvira.
Key Concepts: Representation
The Role of Affect in Climate Communication Jeffrey T. Kiehl Climate Change Research Section National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is sponsored.
Information Systems in Organizations 1.2 What’s in it for you? 1.3 Ethics of analysis and use of systems, data and information.
THE BIBLE YEAR FOUR TERM THREE – 3 WEEK UNIT. LEARNING INTENTION LI: You will learn about the parts of the Bible.
School & Society: 3 Perspectives1 The Relation of School to Society: Three School of Thought Functionalism –Schools socialize and adopt students to the.
Your Place in History Modern Timeline TRADITIONAL WESTERN “MODERN” THINKING n Modernism n Postmodernism 14th C You are here.
Soc. 118 Media, Culture & Society
Uses of the body in religion 1.Body as metaphor 2.The social body 3.Body and experience – limits and their transcendence.
Rhetoric In the study of rhetoric, the focus should be how a writer uses elements of language – diction, detail, image, tone, syntax, logical ordering,
WORLD STUDIES The Basics of Religion. What is religion? Religion is a set of common beliefs and practices generally held by a group of people. Religion.
Assimilation and Social Media Influencing Identity Nallely Silva English 100.
The Role of Ritual in Religion Contacting the Divine.
Chapters 2 & 3 Learning Objectives Understand why it is important to consider cultural factors when developing a marketing strategy. Identify the characteristics.
DAY 2 Teaching Scripture.
Allegory of the Cave. What is an Allegory? “A form of extended metaphor, in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative, are equated with meanings.
Imagined CommunitiesImagined Communities  Benedict Anderson (1991)  He defines nation as an “imagined political community” (Anderson, p. 6).  As an.
Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Global Business Today 7e by Charles W.L. Hill.
Critical Discourse Analysis
Chapter 2, Culture Defining Culture The Elements of Culture Cultural Diversity The Globalization of Culture Popular Culture Theoretical Perspectives on.
M ODERNISM OR P OSTMODERNISM, THAT IS THE QUESTION ! Final Review Game.
WORLD STUDIES The Basics of Religion. What is religion? Religion is a set of common beliefs and practices generally held by a group of people. Religion.
An Introduction to Analysis AS Media Studies. Introduction Reading media language is the core of Media Studies. Reading a text is a lot broader in Media.
Reorienting the religion curriculum in Catholic schools to address the needs of contemporary youth spirituality Reading 7 Therese Wilson.
What is the purpose of religion? Consider spiritual and practical purposes.
Ed Paschke’s art considered the expanding effect of electronic media on contemporary life before it was a reality. The digital revolution has.
CHAPTER 4: FOLK & POPULAR CULTURE. CULTURAL BASICS Culture – values, material artifacts, & political institutions (Chp. 1) Emphasis on material artifacts.
Research Tells Us : By Integrating Aboriginal Teaching and Values into the Classroom. A number of factors contribute to the academic success of Aboriginal.
RELIGION AND SPIRITUALITY: WHY RELIGIOUS EDUCATORS NEED TO NOTE THE DIFFERENCE (de Souza, 2009). Reflections by Emma Clift Student number: S
Test1 Here some text. Text 2 More text.
Kevin Cheng, Ralph Guerrero & Cliff Simmons
Critical Theories.
The Truly Religious James 1:26 – 27 Pastor Terry Smoak.
Introduction to Advertising
MODERNISM Writers in comparison.
HLT 324V Competitive Success-- snaptutorial.com
HLT 324VCompetitive Success/tutorialrank.com
HLT 324V Education for Service-- snaptutorial.com
HLT 324V Education for Service-- tutorialrank.com.
HLT 324V Teaching Effectively-- snaptutorial.com
Aspects of Culture Vocabulary
Intercultural Communication
[type text here] [type text here] [type text here] [type text here]
Your text here Your text here Your text here Your text here Your text here Pooky.Pandas.
Manufacturing Illusion
Your text here Your text here Your text here Your text here
[type text here] [type text here] [type text here] [type text here]
What is religion? Practice of believing in a god, or gods
White Noise #1.
By mailyah Downes & Ryder Day
Write a Thesis for each prompt
Presentation transcript:

Handcrafting the Sacred on the Screen

The Sacred and Pop Culture Borrowing both from the sanctimonious and the political to make a religion spectacle James Cameron’s Avatar as the Cathedral (intention: build a sense of awe to cherish creation or even the Creator) The role of technology in creating the effect of awe

Avatar and spectacle The metaphor of the “Garden” Pandora: Pure nature delight or digital delight? How is this text a truly religious statement of creation and respect of nature? Lines blur between cinematic and religious spectacle Why should we study these texts?

Oriental Monk Script of Orientalism: Framing of the Oriental through discursive logic informed not simply by empirical reality but by desires, repressions, investments and projections. Oriental Monk: a icon of pop culture in a narrative of a society which faces fear, loss and spiritual turmoil Spiritual search is critical here

Oriental Monk Modernized cultural Patriarchy: Griffith’s “Broken Blossoms”: representative standard for the moral behavior of Asians/different minorities The image of the monk from one of threat to one of desire and hope-The noble Buddhist will care for the children of the West

Oriental Monk Image in popular consciousness transmutes through time, but the narrative remains the same Media reinforce certain kinds of associations which then become a schemata for us to learn about others and their lifeworlds... but only based on what ails us.

Religion and Pop Culture Is this religion? Or is it just a transient consumer product? What are the implications of popular culture appropriating the language of religion in its own artifacts? Where can we draw the boundaries between material culture and religion? Should we draw the line? Isn’t religion also a material experience?