Description

Book Synopsis

Religion Across Television Genres: Community, Orange Is the New Black, The Walking Dead, and Supernatural connects communication theories to the religious content of TV programs across an array of platforms and content genres, specifically the NBC comedy Community, the critically acclaimed Netflix series Orange Is the New Black, AMC's international megahit The Walking Dead, and the CW's long-running fan favorite Supernatural. Its contemporary relevancy makes Religion Across Television Genres ideal for use as a library resource, scholarly reference, and textbook for both undergraduate and graduate courses in mass media, religious studies, and popular culture.



Trade Review
"Religion Across Television Genres is a must-have book for anyone who studies pop culture and religion; it deserves a spot on every TV connoisseur's bookshelf." —Jarret Keene, Popular Culture Review, 30/2019
“Through their close analysis of the ‘sign-vehicles’ within television programs across a range of genres, Joseph M. Valenzano III and Erika Engstrom show us how television both mirrors how religion is lived in America and performs a subtle but significant sermonic function in authorizing and adumbrating religious belief. Religion Across Television Genres would greatly enrich any course in religious communication or mass media and society. I recommend it highly.” —Dennis D. Cali, Professor and Chair of the Department of Communication at the University of Texas at Tyler
Religion Across Television Genres persuasively and perspicaciously illustrates that television is equipment for living. In this thoroughly researched and elegantly evaluated volume, Joseph M. Valenzano III and Erika Engstrom argue that implanted in our current pop culture television programming is an abiding sense of religion and religiosity, expressed through multiform genres. In only the way sapient teachers can, Valenzano and Engstrom demonstrate how the influence of context on content is a dialectical process. In 1985, Neil Postman penned his prophetic Amusing Ourselves to Death. The cultural discoveries unveiled by Valenzano and Engstrom’s Religion Across Television Genres may suggest that in terms of religious content displayed on television in the twenty-first century, we may be ‘Amusing Ourselves to Life.’ However, this renewed faith life is not in any one particular institutionalized religion but a more ubiquitous faith in the human values of community, tolerance, self-reliance, and love of family and friends. Scholars and students of communication, cultural studies, mass media, and religion will find this work unique, timely, and conducive to binge reading.” —Christopher J. Oldenburg, Associate Professor of Communication and Rhetorical Studies at Illinois College

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements – Introduction – The (Unseen) Order of the Study Group: NBC’s Community and Religious Humor – Adherence and Adherents in Netflix’s Orange Is the New Black – Redefining Religious Boundaries in AMC’s The Walking Dead – Hunting Monsters, Finally Finding God in the CW’s Supernatural – Conclusion – Index.

Religion Across Television Genres

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Erika Engstrom, Erika Engstrom

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      View other formats and editions of Religion Across Television Genres by Erika Engstrom

      Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
      Publication Date: 1/30/2018 12:11:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781433152801, 978-1433152801
      ISBN10: 1433152800

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Religion Across Television Genres: Community, Orange Is the New Black, The Walking Dead, and Supernatural connects communication theories to the religious content of TV programs across an array of platforms and content genres, specifically the NBC comedy Community, the critically acclaimed Netflix series Orange Is the New Black, AMC's international megahit The Walking Dead, and the CW's long-running fan favorite Supernatural. Its contemporary relevancy makes Religion Across Television Genres ideal for use as a library resource, scholarly reference, and textbook for both undergraduate and graduate courses in mass media, religious studies, and popular culture.



      Trade Review
      "Religion Across Television Genres is a must-have book for anyone who studies pop culture and religion; it deserves a spot on every TV connoisseur's bookshelf." —Jarret Keene, Popular Culture Review, 30/2019
      “Through their close analysis of the ‘sign-vehicles’ within television programs across a range of genres, Joseph M. Valenzano III and Erika Engstrom show us how television both mirrors how religion is lived in America and performs a subtle but significant sermonic function in authorizing and adumbrating religious belief. Religion Across Television Genres would greatly enrich any course in religious communication or mass media and society. I recommend it highly.” —Dennis D. Cali, Professor and Chair of the Department of Communication at the University of Texas at Tyler
      Religion Across Television Genres persuasively and perspicaciously illustrates that television is equipment for living. In this thoroughly researched and elegantly evaluated volume, Joseph M. Valenzano III and Erika Engstrom argue that implanted in our current pop culture television programming is an abiding sense of religion and religiosity, expressed through multiform genres. In only the way sapient teachers can, Valenzano and Engstrom demonstrate how the influence of context on content is a dialectical process. In 1985, Neil Postman penned his prophetic Amusing Ourselves to Death. The cultural discoveries unveiled by Valenzano and Engstrom’s Religion Across Television Genres may suggest that in terms of religious content displayed on television in the twenty-first century, we may be ‘Amusing Ourselves to Life.’ However, this renewed faith life is not in any one particular institutionalized religion but a more ubiquitous faith in the human values of community, tolerance, self-reliance, and love of family and friends. Scholars and students of communication, cultural studies, mass media, and religion will find this work unique, timely, and conducive to binge reading.” —Christopher J. Oldenburg, Associate Professor of Communication and Rhetorical Studies at Illinois College

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements – Introduction – The (Unseen) Order of the Study Group: NBC’s Community and Religious Humor – Adherence and Adherents in Netflix’s Orange Is the New Black – Redefining Religious Boundaries in AMC’s The Walking Dead – Hunting Monsters, Finally Finding God in the CW’s Supernatural – Conclusion – Index.

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