Programs like The Simpsons, South Park, and Family Guy include a lot of humor related to religion. But what does it mean? David Feltmate discusses his book Drawn to the Gods where he examines how these animated comedies feature Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Native American religions, Hinduism, new religious movements, and atheism. Feltmate is Associate Professor of Sociology at Auburn University in Montgomery, Alabama.
George Chryssides and Fieldwork in New Religious Movements
Erin Stiles on Mormon encounters with the spirit world
David J. Halperin on UFOs and Myth
Rabbi Ariel Mellul of the International Raëlian Movement
Elias D’eis, the Holy Land Trust, and the War in Gaza
J. Gordon Melton on the Church of Scientology
Matthew Bowman and The Abduction of Betty and Barney Hill
The Satanic Temple’s Unveiling Day: Pluralism and Archaic Superstition
The Covid Pandemic and the World’s Religions
Celucien Joseph on Christianity and Vodou in Dialogue in Haiti
The Christian Fascination with”Ex-Occultist” Narratives
Kaleb Graves on Psychedelic Theology
George Chryssides on Contested Concepts in the Study of Religion
Heron Michelle, Street Preachers, and Pagan Religious Freedoms
Catherine Wessinger on the Thirtieth Anniversary of the Branch Davidian Tragedy
Ida Glaser and the Reading the Bible in the Context of Islam project
Dr. Benno van den Toren on interfaith apologetics
Jack Hunter and an Anthropology of the Paranormal
James Keenan on Moral Theology, the New Testament and Multifaith Encounters
Stephen Bullivant on Nonverts and the Making of Ex-Christian America
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