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  • 1
    Article
    Article
    In:  The Oxford Handbook of the Bible and American Popular Culture (2021) 46-62
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The Oxford Handbook of the Bible and American Popular Culture
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 46-62
    Keywords: Roeg, Nicolas, ; Samson and Delilah (Motion picture : 1996) ; Bible. Criticism, interpretation, etc. ; Bible In motion pictures
    Abstract: This chapter considers popular understandings of Samson and Delilah’s relationship in Judges 16, arguing that readers’ interpretations of this relationship are often guided by the discourses, beliefs, and ideologies dominant within their own sociocultural context. The chapter first offers an overview of some common interpretive traditions surrounding this biblical story, which appear to draw upon those familiar tropes of feminine treachery and masculine vulnerability. Specifically, it suggests that interpreters’ reading strategies for the Judges 16 text are constantly negotiated and shaped by readers’ own heteronormative assumptions and discourses of gender and sexuality. In the subsequent section, the chapter focuses on a cultural retelling of this biblical story—Nicolas Roeg’s 1996 movie, Samson and Delilah—and considers the ways that this contemporary cultural text likewise employs these same tropes, imbued with the cultural flavors of the time, to offer a portrayal of Delilah as a postfeminist femme fatale whose erotic allure proved too hot to handle for “new man” Samson. Considering interpretive and cultural afterlives side by side, the chapter demonstrates the complexities of the reading process and the multiple threads—those sociocultural discourses, ideologies, and trends—that occupy and direct readers’ interpretations of the biblical text.
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  • 2
    Article
    Article
    In:  The Oxford Handbook of the Bible and American Popular Culture (2021) 293-308
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: The Oxford Handbook of the Bible and American Popular Culture
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2021) 293-308
    Keywords: Bible. Criticism, interpretation, etc. ; Bible In motion pictures
    Abstract: This chapter explores the ways cinema appropriates biblical motifs and transforms them, and how those motifs might be received and experienced by viewers. Insofar as it engages more fully film criticism and theory and inquires about audience reception, it reflects the so-called third wave of religion and film studies. While films have taken their inspiration from biblical narratives and characters since the medium’s invention, this contribution, following Adele Reinhartz’s lead, directs our attention to films whose biblical elements may be apparent only to those familiar with the Bible and its cultural interpretation. It focuses on Godfrey Reggio’s critically acclaimed Qatsi trilogy (Koyaanisqatsi, Powaqqatsi, and Naqoyqatsi), which represent cinematic transformations of the primeval history of Genesis 1–11. The ordering of the Cosmos, God’s declaration of its goodness, the command to the first humans to conquer and hold sway over it, human disobedience, the devolution of the created order into increasing violence, and the transgression of boundaries, including the building of the tower of Babel, are all echoed in these films. The films are transformations in the sense that they do not merely allude to the Genesis story or touch upon it in passing; they stay with the passages to which they allude, drawing out the implications of the text, wrestling with interpretive possibilities, offering visual metamorphoses that tantalize the modern imagination. While the character of the original story remains recognizably familiar, the cinematic vesture provides for dazzling transfigurations.
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