Call for Papers: Religion in Grant Morrison Comics

Call for Papers: Religion in the Grant Morrison Comics Editor: Matthew Brake Series: Religion and Comics (McFarland) In the 1980s, a movement known as the “British Invasion” saw a number of writers and artists from the UK join the ranks of American comics writers to produce some of the most popular and enduring work in…

St. Nektarios and Hagiography in Yelena Popovic’s “Man of God”

By Katherine Kelaidis As I wrote last year, “Advent” as such really isn’t a thing in the Eastern Christian tradition. That being said, in my mind, and all through my life The Holiday Season ™ began on November 9th, with the feast of St. Nektarios of Aegina. In 2021, Serbian filmmaker  Yelena Popovic wrote and…

Theology and Horror: A Mirror for Current Events

By John W. Morehead I have roots in the conservative Evangelical Christian tradition, even though I see myself staking out more of a centrist position. When evangelicals “do theology,” whether biblical, systematic, or whatever form it takes, rarely is there an effort to wrestle with the darker aspects of the Hebrew and Christian Bible. For…

The Devil and Generational Conflict in 1968

By Danny Anderson The year is 1968 and two attractive young people find themselves seduced by a Devil-worshiping cult. The cult seeks the vitality of their youth and will stop at nothing in a plot to indoctrinate them as servants of Satan. This plot summary surely rings a bell for horror aficionados, but the fact…

A Happy Lovecraft Halloween!

By Austin Freeman It’s spooky season again–that time when the barrier between the living and the dead, the mortal and the damned, grows thin. Spectral shapes scratch at our bedroom windows. And we, sloughing off the illusions of our civilized and rational age, slink back into the mouldy embrace of pagan tradition. Halloween is coming….

A Friday the 13th in October: Jason Voorhees and Scapegoating

By David L. Dickey Today marks a special Holiday for us “spooky kids” of the 1980’s. Not only are we in the middle of October, with most of us elbow deep in the process of transforming our homes and yards (and workplaces and cars and whatever else we can afford to) into tombs, graveyards, haunted…

On Why I Didn’t Deserve to Edit a Book on the Avett Brothers

By Alex Sosler Like most of life, I didn’t have the sense to know what decision I was making. I watched May It Last: A Portrait of the Avett Brothers a few years prior. It portrayed thoughtful, beautiful, compelling relationships. It displayed redemptive hopes and real fears, leaving and returning home. I thought because the…

Ryan Murphy, As American as Apple Pie and Demons

Ilaria Biano, PhD Clive Barker once said, “There are apparently two books in every American household—one of them is the Bible, and the other one is probably by Stephen King,”[i] thus suggesting an inseparable connection between American culture, religion, and the horror genre. If one were to seek a champion of this cultural milieu within…

Oppenheimer and the Deification of Humanity

By Walter Staggs, PhD The gap between what a film is meant to convey versus what actually gets conveyed (and therefore lost) can often be vast. In this case, though, Christopher Nolan delivers on his assertion that Oppenheimer is about consequences, particularly the kind that are out of our control once the genie is out…