This paper engages in a critical, creative conversation with John Lyden\u27s article in JR & F 1.2. Though affirming the basic tenor of Lyden\u27s approach, this paper presses Lyden to consider that a commending and critiquing approach to the task of film interpretation requires greater attention to the ideological basis upon which such a stance is possible. In particular, the theological particularity of discrete religious traditions has to be respected by the scholar of religion. This respect must be shown despite all the attendant institutional complexities which accompany it. The consequences of this need for religious interpreters of film to be more aware of, and consciously working from, the particular hermeneutical (including theol...
How plausible is it to examine the medium of film through a Christian lens? Are there any grounds fo...
Film is certainly a medium which can appear to revel in the vulgar and inconsequential, (Kracauer, ...
didn’t want you to enjoy the film. I wanted you to look very closely at your own soul Sam Peckinpah ...
In response to John Lyden\u27s paper, To Commend or Critique? The Question of Religion and Film Stu...
In his book, Film as Religion: Myths Morals and Rituals, John C. Lyden argues that the movie theate...
This book has two main areas of focus: first, how it is possible to develop theological perspectives...
The aim of this article is to examine the manner and extent to which the medium of film is capable o...
This paper examines two approaches to popular film to come out of religious studies. The first assum...
Using philosophical propositions from Stanley Cavell\u27s work The World Viewed, I argue in this pap...
This article examines recent scholarly attempts to revisit the Christian theme of redemption by maki...
Film is becoming an important art form. Studies on the relationship between film and theology have b...
In this article, I examine how film enables us to (re-)examine, critique and challenge the efficacy ...
This article was delivered as a paper at the 2015 International Conference on Religion and Film in I...
A link to the complete videorecording of the 2015 Brooks Lecture, given by John Lyden at the Univers...
This is a book review of S. Brent Plate\u27s Religion and Film: Cinema and the Re-creation of the Wo...
How plausible is it to examine the medium of film through a Christian lens? Are there any grounds fo...
Film is certainly a medium which can appear to revel in the vulgar and inconsequential, (Kracauer, ...
didn’t want you to enjoy the film. I wanted you to look very closely at your own soul Sam Peckinpah ...
In response to John Lyden\u27s paper, To Commend or Critique? The Question of Religion and Film Stu...
In his book, Film as Religion: Myths Morals and Rituals, John C. Lyden argues that the movie theate...
This book has two main areas of focus: first, how it is possible to develop theological perspectives...
The aim of this article is to examine the manner and extent to which the medium of film is capable o...
This paper examines two approaches to popular film to come out of religious studies. The first assum...
Using philosophical propositions from Stanley Cavell\u27s work The World Viewed, I argue in this pap...
This article examines recent scholarly attempts to revisit the Christian theme of redemption by maki...
Film is becoming an important art form. Studies on the relationship between film and theology have b...
In this article, I examine how film enables us to (re-)examine, critique and challenge the efficacy ...
This article was delivered as a paper at the 2015 International Conference on Religion and Film in I...
A link to the complete videorecording of the 2015 Brooks Lecture, given by John Lyden at the Univers...
This is a book review of S. Brent Plate\u27s Religion and Film: Cinema and the Re-creation of the Wo...
How plausible is it to examine the medium of film through a Christian lens? Are there any grounds fo...
Film is certainly a medium which can appear to revel in the vulgar and inconsequential, (Kracauer, ...
didn’t want you to enjoy the film. I wanted you to look very closely at your own soul Sam Peckinpah ...