Metaphysical Media: The Occult Experience in Popular Culture
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Considered sinister by Western religious traditions and bizarre in mainstream America, supernatural beliefs and the rituals of occult traditions are often publicly disparaged. But they are paradoxically embraced and exposed by popular culture, in television shows such as Bewitched and in movies from The Wizard of Oz to The Craft, according to Emily D. Edwards. Metaphysical Media: The Occult in Popular Culture is an in-depth discussion of the media's presentation of a wide spectrum of the occult that also serves as a comprehensive sourcebook of movies and television programs that deal with supernatural characters and themes.
Metaphysical Media focuses on the blurred definitions of topics associated with the occult as they are presented in popular culture to show moving image media as devices that help structure an understanding of the supernatural world. Edwards examines what media treatment of supernatural subjects and the very characteristics of the media themselves reveal about the persistence of the occult. She maintains that popular art has always had a close association with the paranormal or supernatural-sometimes in illustration of an ideology, sometimes in ridicule of it, and sometimes as invocation itself. Beginning with an overview of the role of the media in contemporary society and in its use of the occult, Metaphysical Media looks at the properties of media technology that extend human senses beyond biological boundaries. Edwards then discusses specific media treatment of topics related to the occult, including witchcraft, atavism, reincarnation, out-of-body experiences, and lycanthropy. She outlines the interplay of media and folklore regarding taboos about the handling of the dead and investigates media stories about creatures that cross the boundaries between human, beast and god. She also provides a comprehensive guide for interpreting a century of witch films, outlining eight noticeable portraits of the witch, and thoroughly investigates representations of werewolves and other phenomena. The volume includes twenty-one illustrations. "Using the tools of media studies, Emily D. Edwards examines how movies, books, and other media represent witches, paranormal events, and death. She provides the reader with insights into what these portrayals tell us about the movie makers, audiences, and our society. Metaphysical Media is well-written and provides fresh insights into the occult at the beginning of the twenty-first century America. This is an important book for students of the media, the occult, and of our society." -Helen A. Berger, author of A Community of Witches: Contemporary Witches and Neo-Pagans in the United States
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
About the Author
Emily D. Edwards is an associate professor of broadcasting and cinema at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. The producer or director of more than fifteen films, she has published articles on documentary filmmaking, popular music, and the occult in popular culture.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Metaphysical Media: The Occult Experience in Popular Culture,Emily D. Edwards,Southern Illinois University Press,0809326485,Cinema/Film: Book,Cults,Film & Video - General,General,Metaphysics,Occultism,Occultism in motion pictures,Occultism on television,Performing Arts,Pop Arts / Pop Culture,Popular Culture - General
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