Religion in Contemporary Thought and Cinema
Paragraph, Volume 42, Issue 3
Edited by Libby Saxton and Anat Pick
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Book Presentation:
Probes intersections between contemporary cinema and diverse theoretical, philosophical and theological engagements with religion.
The special issue responds to two concurrent phenomena: the re-emergence in the 21st century of religion as a political and cultural force, and its resurgence in a range of theoretical discourses, from postsecularism to New Atheism. Mirroring this theoretical and cultural turn, cinema across the world is renewing its acquaintance with religion as private practice, public display and political force and exploring overlapping material, spiritual and doctrinal concerns in the new millennium.
This issue probes intersections between contemporary cinema and diverse theoretical, philosophical and theological engagements with religion. It compares cinema’s capacity to present visual expressions of faith, evoke embodied experience and varied modalities of love, correlate earthly and divine realities and inspire belief and doubt with writings on religion and postsecularism. Contributors explore ideas about transcendence, vocation, affliction, love, doubt and forms of religious practice and expression that connect specific films with theoretical accounts that look beyond the secular.
Key Features
• Covers a wide range of cinemas from the United States, France, Poland, Russia, Saudi Arabia and China.
• Juxtaposes responses to Judaeo-Christian thought with Islamic feminism, theology from the Arab-speaking world and Buddhist ethics.
• Situates recent films within traditions of idiosyncratic thinking about God that stretch back to the work of Søren Kierkegaard and Simone Weil.
• Challenges the established (male, white) canon of religious film criticism and filmmakers, from Carl Theodor Dreyer and Robert Bresson to Bruno Dumont and Lars von Trier.
About the authors:
Libby Saxton is Reader in Film Studies at Queen Mary, University of London. She is author of Haunted Images: Film, Ethics, Testimony and the Holocaust (Wallflower, 2008), co-author of Film and Ethics: Foreclosed Encounters (Routledge, 2010) and co-editor of Holocaust Intersections: Genocide and Visual Culture at the New Millennium (Legenda: 2013). She is writing a book on iconic images, photography and cinema.
Anat Pick is Reader in Film Studies at Queen Mary, University of London. She is author of Creaturely Poetics: Animality and Vulnerability in Literature and Film (Columbia University Press, 2011), co-editor of Screening Nature: Cinema Beyond the Human (Berghahn, 2013), and has published articles on animals, ethics and film. Her new book project is on the philosopher and mystic Simone Weil and cinema.
See the publisher website: Edinburgh University Press
> From the same authors:
No Power Without an Image (2020)
Icons Between Photography and Film
by Libby Saxton
Subject: Genre > Documentary
Creaturely Poetics (2011)
Animality and Vulnerability in Literature and Film
by Anat Pick
Subject: Sociology
Haunted Images (2008)
Film, Ethics, Testimony, and the Holocaust
by Libby Saxton
Subject: Genre > Documentary
> On a related topic:
The Wages of Cinema (2025)
A Christian Aesthetic of Film in Conversation with Dorothy L. Sayers
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Movies and the Church of Baseball (2024)
Religion in the Cinema of the National Pastime
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Southern by the Grace of God (2024)
Religion, Race, and Civil Rights in Hollywood's American South
by Megan Hunt
Subject: Sociology
Protestants on Screen (2024)
Religion, Politics and Aesthetics in European and American Movies
Dir. Gastón Espinosa, Erik Redling and Jason Stevens
Subject: Sociology
Exploring Film and Christianity (2024)
Movement as Immobility
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Subject: Sociology
Theology and Survival Movies (2024)
An Orthodox Christian Perspective
by Ioan Buteanu
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Nuns in Popular Culture (2024)
Critical Essays
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Subject: Sociology