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Prophetic Critique and Popular Media

Theoretical Foundations and Practical Applications

by Robert H. Jr. Woods (Volume editor) Kevin Healey (Volume editor)
©2013 Textbook XVIII, 209 Pages

Summary

This book positions the "prophetic" as an organizing concept that can bridge religious and secular criticism of popular media. Drawing from philosophical ethics and moral psychology, the book argues that prophetic critique engages a complex set of universal human capabilities. Whether religious or secular in origin, prophetic critique requires developmentally complex modes of critical reflection, imagination, empathy, and communication. Although this book is diverse in perspective, each author seeks to expose how the content, institutions, and technologies of popular media alternately support—or undermine—the basic values of equality, human dignity, and social justice. By foregrounding such universal principles, the authors distinguish their arguments from critical/cultural scholarship that fails to acknowledge its own normative foundations and implicit theology of culture. The authors demonstrate the efficacy of this framework by applying it to specific case studies in popular media including theater, film, music, journalism, and digital culture. The book argues that the prophetic critique of mass media is essential to maintaining a productive tension between religious communities and the institutions of secular democracy. More broadly, in outlining an inclusive understanding of prophetic critique, this book builds bridges between religious and secular scholarship and generates a unique vision for a revitalized, mass-mediated public sphere.

Details

Pages
XVIII, 209
Year
2013
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433118142
ISBN (Softcover)
9781433118135
Language
English
Keywords
human capabilities imagination empathy digital culture communication
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2013. XVIII, 209 pp.

Biographical notes

Robert H. Jr. Woods (Volume editor) Kevin Healey (Volume editor)

Robert H. Woods, Jr., J.D., PhD, is Professor of Communication and Media at Spring Arbor University. He is co-editor of Understanding Evangelical Media: The Changing Face of Christian Communication, co-author of Prophetically Incorrect: A Christian Introduction to Media Criticism, and one of the authors of Media Ethics: Cases and Moral Reasoning. Kevin Healey, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Communication at the University of New Hampshire. His research appears in Journal of Mass Media Ethics, Cultural Studies↔Critical Methodologies, Symbolic Interaction, and Trans/missions.

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Title: Prophetic Critique and Popular Media