Reviews
The value of examining dystopia, particularly for its religious and theological elements, could be no more timely than right now. Whether it be film, television, comic book, or novel, at the soul of any dystopia lies both truths and warnings about our own society, and Theology, Religion, and Dystopia takes an unflinching account of these troubling futures. In dissecting and naming the spiritual drives, aims, and bogeymen that undergird these fictions, Donahue-Martens and Simonson's contributors do us a service of marking such territory within our own faiths and lives., In this timely book, Donahue-Martens and Simonson have edited together an opulent blend of dystopian wealth. This volume puts recent dystopian narratives into dialogue with biblical text, Ricoeurian thought, and a diversity of religious thinkers, pointing readers to varied understandings of this key topic. Beginning with dystopia as demythologized apocalyptic, the reader is invited into conversation with both our present and future. Drawing from books, films, and television, the volume presents a broad and intricate examination of both the theory behind dystopia and religion as well as its results. I will definitely be reaching for this volume on my bookshelf in the future., The 21st century has witnessed an astonishing increase of dystopic themes in popular culture--no accident in light of new ecological disasters, the COVID-19 pandemic, an upsurge in racially motivated violence, and a resurgence of totalitarian governments around the world. This remarkable collection of essays brings religious and theological studies to bear on dystopia from a wide range of methodological approaches while engaging a variety of popular cultural phenomena, including television, movies, literature, and social practices. Readers will find the volume provocative and engaging as it takes the intersections of religion, dystopia, utopia, and apocalyptic in new and insightful directions.
Table of Content
1.Dystopia as Demythologized Apocalyptic Brandon Simonson and Scott Donahue-Martens 2.The Dystopic Relations of Interstellar: A Response from Christian Ecotheology Thomas G. Hermans-Webster 3.Color-blind Dystopia: The Giver, Theology, Race, and Ricoeur Scott Donahue-Martens 4.Qu(e)erying Posthuman Theologies in Ghost in the Shell Amanda L. Pumphrey and Nicholaus B. Pumphrey 5.Social Life from Scratch: Morality, Religion, and Society in The Walking Dead Justin F. Martin 6.How NOT to be a Zombie: The Walking Dead and Love for the World David Penn 7.Dystopia in the Apocalypse: Religion and Community in Asimov's Foundation Universe Brandon Simonson 8.Katniss, Christos: Sacrifice and Salvation in Scripture and Young Adult Dystopian Novels Shayna Sheinfeld 9.Dystopian Festivals, Utopian Fictions: Sovereignty, Sacrifice, and Sanctity in Biblical Jubilee and The Purge C. J. McCrary 10.The Ability or Inability to Change by the Presence or Absence of Deus ex Machina Bea ta Gombko to 11.The Spectacle of Hope Beyond Capital's Dehumanizing Violence: Reading George Lucas' Dystopian THX 1138 John C. McDowell, 1.Dystopia as Demythologized Apocalyptic Brandon Simonson and Scott Donahue-Martens 2.The Dystopic Relations of Interstellar: A Response from Christian Ecotheology Thomas G. Hermans-Webster 3.Color-blind Dystopia: The Giver, Theology, Race, and Ricoeur Scott Donahue-Martens 4.Qu(e)erying Posthuman Theologies in Ghost in the Shell Amanda L. Pumphrey and Nicholaus B. Pumphrey 5.Social Life from Scratch: Morality, Religion, and Society in The Walking Dead Justin F. Martin 6.How NOT to be a Zombie: The Walking Dead and Love for the World David Penn 7.Dystopia in the Apocalypse: Religion and Community in Asimov's Foundation Universe Brandon Simonson 8.Katniss, Christos: Sacrifice and Salvation in Scripture and Young Adult Dystopian Novels Shayna Sheinfeld 9.Dystopian Festivals, Utopian Fictions: Sovereignty, Sacrifice, and Sanctity in Biblical Jubilee and The Purge C. J. McCrary 10.The Ability or Inability to Change by the Presence or Absence of Deus ex Machina Beata Gombkoto 11.The Spectacle of Hope Beyond Capital's Dehumanizing Violence: Reading George Lucas' Dystopian THX 1138 John C. McDowell