The Exorcist Effect: Horror, Religion, and Demonic Belief
Autor Joseph P. Laycock, Eric Harrelsonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 dec 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197635391
ISBN-10: 0197635393
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 165 x 226 x 43 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197635393
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 165 x 226 x 43 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
In The Exorcist Effect, Joseph Laycock and Eric Harrelson demonstrate how horror's fake blood seeps through the screen to stain our cultural and religious beliefs and habits. By combining film theory with religious history and cultural currents, readers find ways cinema is deeply imbricated with conspiracy theories, xenophobia, religious faith, racism, and our legal system.
This book rocks! A brilliantly researched exploration of the strange entanglements of religion and horror packed with cultural insights, nail-sharp arguments, and deep dives into the all-too-human angels and demons we meet along the way. As a longtime fan of The Exorcist, I was fascinated from page one. As a professional filmmaker, I can honestly say this book has impacted my very approach to the wonderfully dark art of horror cinema.
An excellent book, well thought-out and well presented, and takes seriously the power of popular culture in shaping the culture of religion in late modern society. It could serve as a model for other scholars to consider that relationship more carefully than has too often been the case to this point.
With The Exorcist Effect, Joseph Laycock continues his forensic analyses of the intersection of Catholic practices and American media and popular culture. Here we find an intriguing investigation into the cultural developments that inspire the thriving practice of exorcism in North America. Countering the intuitive assumption that the rising demand for exorcists correlates to a rise in weird phenomena, Laycock and Harrelson trace the effects that media like The Exorcist have on perceptions and practices related to demonic possession. This is an engaging and enjoyable book for anyone interested in Catholicism, the supernatural, and religion. Laycock continues the work he has become known for-delivering top scholarship that is cutting edge and frankly, hard to put down. Highly recommended!
The Exorcist Effect an invaluable source for both students and professors interested in religious studies, popular culture, the horror film, and American religious history.
Laycock and Harrelson's The Exorcist Effect transforms understanding of the interplay between pop culture, religion, and the nature of evil...this remarkable book demonstrates the importance of such transdisciplinary approaches and probes how horror cinema influences attitudes toward spirituality and the supernatural. Notable chapters consider the 'possession' film subgenre, mountebank mediums Ed and Lorraine Warren, the paranoid writings of priest Malachi Martin, the rise of the religious Right, and the 'Satanic panic' connected to heavy metal and horror cinema. An extremely powerful and relevant section centers on how conspiratorial thinking (as demonstrated by groups such as QAnon) related to the 'Exorcist effect' continue to haunt US culture. This brilliant project opens up new avenues of study concerning cinema, culture, and systems of belief.
The Exorcist Effect represents a highly accessible and extremely formidable work of scholarship... Laycock and Harrelson provide a powerful model for approaching similar topics.
The Exorcist Effect: Horror, Religion, and Demonic Belief, the latest book from Joseph Laycock, with co-author Eric Harrelson, expertly encapsulates the stakes and implications of researching possession/exorcism phenomena in the United States. It investigates the influence of exorcism film and television media on "real world" beliefs and practices as contextualized within America's fractured sociability: a country suffering the effects of information illiteracy, wherein cultural truths are fostered by media bombardment and the perceived value/authenticity assigned to media reproduction. The book effectively connects the historical dots between popular horror films and political religious movements, leaving space for future studies to expand their findings within the new media ecology of today.
This book is a valuable contribution to both religious studies and film studies.
This book rocks! A brilliantly researched exploration of the strange entanglements of religion and horror packed with cultural insights, nail-sharp arguments, and deep dives into the all-too-human angels and demons we meet along the way. As a longtime fan of The Exorcist, I was fascinated from page one. As a professional filmmaker, I can honestly say this book has impacted my very approach to the wonderfully dark art of horror cinema.
An excellent book, well thought-out and well presented, and takes seriously the power of popular culture in shaping the culture of religion in late modern society. It could serve as a model for other scholars to consider that relationship more carefully than has too often been the case to this point.
With The Exorcist Effect, Joseph Laycock continues his forensic analyses of the intersection of Catholic practices and American media and popular culture. Here we find an intriguing investigation into the cultural developments that inspire the thriving practice of exorcism in North America. Countering the intuitive assumption that the rising demand for exorcists correlates to a rise in weird phenomena, Laycock and Harrelson trace the effects that media like The Exorcist have on perceptions and practices related to demonic possession. This is an engaging and enjoyable book for anyone interested in Catholicism, the supernatural, and religion. Laycock continues the work he has become known for-delivering top scholarship that is cutting edge and frankly, hard to put down. Highly recommended!
The Exorcist Effect an invaluable source for both students and professors interested in religious studies, popular culture, the horror film, and American religious history.
Laycock and Harrelson's The Exorcist Effect transforms understanding of the interplay between pop culture, religion, and the nature of evil...this remarkable book demonstrates the importance of such transdisciplinary approaches and probes how horror cinema influences attitudes toward spirituality and the supernatural. Notable chapters consider the 'possession' film subgenre, mountebank mediums Ed and Lorraine Warren, the paranoid writings of priest Malachi Martin, the rise of the religious Right, and the 'Satanic panic' connected to heavy metal and horror cinema. An extremely powerful and relevant section centers on how conspiratorial thinking (as demonstrated by groups such as QAnon) related to the 'Exorcist effect' continue to haunt US culture. This brilliant project opens up new avenues of study concerning cinema, culture, and systems of belief.
The Exorcist Effect represents a highly accessible and extremely formidable work of scholarship... Laycock and Harrelson provide a powerful model for approaching similar topics.
The Exorcist Effect: Horror, Religion, and Demonic Belief, the latest book from Joseph Laycock, with co-author Eric Harrelson, expertly encapsulates the stakes and implications of researching possession/exorcism phenomena in the United States. It investigates the influence of exorcism film and television media on "real world" beliefs and practices as contextualized within America's fractured sociability: a country suffering the effects of information illiteracy, wherein cultural truths are fostered by media bombardment and the perceived value/authenticity assigned to media reproduction. The book effectively connects the historical dots between popular horror films and political religious movements, leaving space for future studies to expand their findings within the new media ecology of today.
This book is a valuable contribution to both religious studies and film studies.
Notă biografică
Joseph P. Laycock is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Texas State University and co-general editor for the journal Nova Religio. He is the author of several books that explore new religious movements, possession and exorcism, and moral panic.Eric Harrelson is the Preservation Librarian at Miami University of Ohio. Harrelson has been a film festival programmer and lecturer for Other Worlds Film Festival in Austin, Texas. Harrelson has written on film studies and religious studies for The World Religions and Spirituality Project and Religion Dispatches.