Ebook
Saving the World and Healing the Soul treats the heroic and redemptive trials of Jason Bourne, Bruce Wayne, Bella Swan, and Katniss Everdeen. The Bourne films, Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy, the Twilight saga, and the Hunger Games series offer us stories to live into, to make connection between our personal loves and trials and a good order of the world.
”This book goes much deeper than analyzing The Jason Bourne
movies, Christopher Nolan’s Batman series, Twilight,
and the films based on the Hunger Games books. McCarthy and
Blaugher reveal how our expectations about
courage, heroism, and salvation are determined by these
films. More importantly, they give readers reasons
to hold onto ideas of hope, justice, and love in our overly complex
world. This is required reading for students of
cultural studies, film studies, gender studies, philosophy,
psychology, religious studies, and theology."
--Jacob L. Goodson, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Southwestern
College
“This engaging volume points to the power of stories and the hero’s
journey in these unstable and uncertain times. Though not always
favorites among critics, the films profiled herein have caught the
public’s imagination by serving as windows into basic questions of
our humanity and providing touchstones for a society searching for
order and meaning. Through attention to romance, love, redemption,
and the hero’s quest to navigate the forces of good and evil,
Saving the World and Healing the Soul makes a compelling
case for the action blockbuster as a religious narrative for the
twenty-first century."
--Ann W. Duncan, Associate Professor of Religion, Goucher College;
coeditor of The Universe Is Indifferent: Theology, Philosophy,
and Mad Men
"Compelling, accessible, provocative, and always
entertaining, Saving the World and Healing the
Soul shows us how goodness and truth and humanity are
always as close as a theater (or tablet screen) near you. In their
super-engaging treatment of films like The Hunger
Games and The Dark Knight Rises, the authors
serve us by both dealing with films people actually watch, and
helping us know how to watch them, a treat even better than
buttered popcorn."
--Jonathan Tran, Baylor University; author of The Vietnam War
and Theologies of Memory
David McCarthy has over twenty years of experience teaching
theology and ethics. More to the point, he has been teaching a
course on theology and film since 2008. For the last four years, he
has been developing the course by drawing on Kurt's expertise.
David contributed a chapter to the Cascade book on theology and
The Wire, and he is currently writing for Cascade's
forthcoming collection on Mad Men.
Kurt Blaugher has been teaching theater in a liberal arts
curriculum for thirty years. He has engaged with theologians and
theological analysis for nearly as many years by teaching within
Mount St. Mary's strong, interdisciplinary core curriculum.
Recently, he has written on ways that dramatic narrative and
theatrical performance shape moral perspectives: "Stirring Hearts
and Minds," in Where Justice and Mercy Meet (2013).