Description

Book Synopsis
As humans, it is our trust in something larger than ourselves that invests our lives with meaning and value. We hope that outside the boundaries of everyday living there lies something greater. As Doug Cowan argues, science fiction is the genre of possibility and hope, a principal canvas on which writers, artists, and filmmakers have sketched their visions of this transcendent potential for generations. In Sacred Space, he leads readers in a compelling exploration of how this transcendence is manifested in science-fiction cinema and television of today.

From the millennial dreams of a future bright with potential to the promise of evolution from some as-yet-undreamed engine of creation, science fiction's visions of transcendence animate the pages of Sacred Space. Drawing on the most popular examples - Star Wars, Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, Babylon 5, and Stargate SG-1 - as well as the lesser known but no less important, Cowan reveals the multivalent religious ideas present in this media. Why do these themes that consistently appear in science fiction matter? What do they reveal about the often ambivalent relationship between outer space and our spirits? Cowan insightfully shows how these films and shows express and reinforce culturally constructed conceptions of transcendent hope, and along the way provides a provocative reflection on what this ultimately says about our culture's worldviews, hopes, and fears.

Trade Review
An intriguing and entertaining look into some of the questions that science fiction raises, especially what it means to be human, and sometimes more than human....[E]ven casual Trekkies and sci-fi buffs will be engaged by Cowan's interpretations and possibilities. -- Publishers Weekly
Highly recommended. Here we learn that science fiction is more than bug-eyed aliens and saucers--and that it often reveals our quest for the sacred. -- John W. Morehead, editor -- www.theofantastique.com
Sacred Space is a valuable exploration of the place of God through a particular genre. It is an original contribution to an underexplored subject, and it establishes an important reference for future research on this element of life. -- David H. Pereyra -- Religion and the Arts
...Cowan has written a penetrating and thought-provoking book that both scholars or religion and science fiction fans will find engaging. -- Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion

Table of Contents
  • Preface
  • Part I. Science Fiction and the Quest for Transcendence
  • 1. The Brightness against the Black
  • 2. Pinocchio's Galaxy
  • Science Fiction and the Question of Transcendence
  • 3. First Contact
  • Human Exceptionalism in the Calculus of Hope
  • 4. ""Intellects Vast and Cool and Unsympathetic""
  • The War of the Worlds and the Transcendence of Modernity
  • Part II: Science Fiction and the Modes of Transcendence
  • 5. Heeding the Prophet's Call
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
  • 6. The von D?ñniken Paradox
  • Stargate SG-1
  • 7. All Alone in the Night
  • Babylon 5
  • 8. So Say We All
  • Battlestar Galactica
  • 9. The Truth is Out There
  • Transcendence and the Neverending Quest
  • Filmography
  • Bibliography
  • Index

    Sacred Space: The Quest for Transcendence in Science Fiction Film and Television

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      A Paperback by Douglas E. Cowan

      15 in stock

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        View other formats and editions of Sacred Space: The Quest for Transcendence in Science Fiction Film and Television by Douglas E. Cowan

        Publisher: Baylor University Press
        Publication Date: 29/07/2010
        ISBN13: 9781602582385, 978-1602582385
        ISBN10: 1602582386

        Description

        Book Synopsis
        As humans, it is our trust in something larger than ourselves that invests our lives with meaning and value. We hope that outside the boundaries of everyday living there lies something greater. As Doug Cowan argues, science fiction is the genre of possibility and hope, a principal canvas on which writers, artists, and filmmakers have sketched their visions of this transcendent potential for generations. In Sacred Space, he leads readers in a compelling exploration of how this transcendence is manifested in science-fiction cinema and television of today.

        From the millennial dreams of a future bright with potential to the promise of evolution from some as-yet-undreamed engine of creation, science fiction's visions of transcendence animate the pages of Sacred Space. Drawing on the most popular examples - Star Wars, Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, Babylon 5, and Stargate SG-1 - as well as the lesser known but no less important, Cowan reveals the multivalent religious ideas present in this media. Why do these themes that consistently appear in science fiction matter? What do they reveal about the often ambivalent relationship between outer space and our spirits? Cowan insightfully shows how these films and shows express and reinforce culturally constructed conceptions of transcendent hope, and along the way provides a provocative reflection on what this ultimately says about our culture's worldviews, hopes, and fears.

        Trade Review
        An intriguing and entertaining look into some of the questions that science fiction raises, especially what it means to be human, and sometimes more than human....[E]ven casual Trekkies and sci-fi buffs will be engaged by Cowan's interpretations and possibilities. -- Publishers Weekly
        Highly recommended. Here we learn that science fiction is more than bug-eyed aliens and saucers--and that it often reveals our quest for the sacred. -- John W. Morehead, editor -- www.theofantastique.com
        Sacred Space is a valuable exploration of the place of God through a particular genre. It is an original contribution to an underexplored subject, and it establishes an important reference for future research on this element of life. -- David H. Pereyra -- Religion and the Arts
        ...Cowan has written a penetrating and thought-provoking book that both scholars or religion and science fiction fans will find engaging. -- Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion

        Table of Contents
        • Preface
        • Part I. Science Fiction and the Quest for Transcendence
        • 1. The Brightness against the Black
        • 2. Pinocchio's Galaxy
        • Science Fiction and the Question of Transcendence
        • 3. First Contact
        • Human Exceptionalism in the Calculus of Hope
        • 4. ""Intellects Vast and Cool and Unsympathetic""
        • The War of the Worlds and the Transcendence of Modernity
        • Part II: Science Fiction and the Modes of Transcendence
        • 5. Heeding the Prophet's Call
        • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
        • 6. The von D?ñniken Paradox
        • Stargate SG-1
        • 7. All Alone in the Night
        • Babylon 5
        • 8. So Say We All
        • Battlestar Galactica
        • 9. The Truth is Out There
        • Transcendence and the Neverending Quest
        • Filmography
        • Bibliography
        • Index

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