Noah as Antihero

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1 Enoch
animal studies in religion
animals
Ari Handel
Aronofsky Film
Beth El
Bible and film
Bible and popular culture
Biblical Epic
Biblical Film
Biblical Flood Story
biblical reception studies
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cinematic theology
Contemporary Blockbuster
cultural studies
Darren Aronofksy
Darren Aronofsky
David Shepherd
David Tollerton
Dead Sea Scrolls
dream vision
ecological hermeneutics
ecology
Enochic Tradition
environmental themes in biblical cinema
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Event Movie
Exodus
Fabulously Textual
femininity
feminist biblical criticism
Flood Narrative
Flood Story
gender politics
Genesis
Genesis 1:26-28
Genesis 6:6
Genesis Apocryphon
Genesis Rabbah
Ham
IMAX is Believing
Ingrid E. Lilly
Ingrid Lily
Jon Morgan
Jubilees
Justin Michael Reed
Justin Reed
Laura Copier
masculinity
Matthew A. Collins
Methuselah
mystical symbolism
Noah
Noah Story
Noah's Curse
Noah's Drunkenness
Noah's Wife
Noah’s Curse
Noah’s Drunkenness
Noah’s Wife
non-human
Non-human Animals
post-classical blockbuster
Qisas Al Anbiya
Rabbinic literature
Reinhold Zwick
religion and film
religious film analysis
Rewritten Scripture
Rhonda Burnette-Bletsch
Richard Walsh
Ridley Scott
Robert Johnston
Robert K. Johnston
Rock Giants
Sam Tongue
Samuel Tongue
Sanhedrin 108B
Second Temple literature
Temple Jewish Literature
the Flood
The Passion of the Christ
the Watchers
Thomas Elsaesser
Zohar

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138672444
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 10 May 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This collection of essays by biblical scholars is the first book-length treatment of the 2014 film Noah, directed by Darren Aronofsky. The film has proved to be of great interest to scholars working on the interface between the Bible and popular culture, not only because it was heralded as the first of a new generation of biblical blockbusters, but also because of its bold, provocative, and yet unusually nuanced approach to the interpretation and use of the Noah tradition, in both its biblical and extra-biblical forms. The book’s chapters, written by both well-established and up-and-coming scholars, engage with and analyze a broad range of issues raised by the film, including: its employment and interpretation of the ancient Noah traditions; its engagement with contemporary environmental themes and representation of non-human animals; its place within the history of cinematic depictions of the flood, status as an ‘epic’, and associated relationship to spectacle; the theological implications of its representation of a hidden and silent Creator and responses to perceived revelation; the controversies surrounding its reception among religious audiences, especially in the Muslim world; and the nature and implications of its convoluted racial and gender politics. Noah as Antihero will be of considerable interest to scholars conducting research in the areas of religion and film, contemporary hermeneutics, reception history, religion and popular culture, feminist criticism, and ecological ethics.

Rhonda Burnette-Bletsch is Professor of Biblical Studies at Eastern University and the film editor for the projected 30-volume Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception (De Gruyter 2010-present). She is the editor of Bible in Motion (De Gruyter 2016), a two-volume handbook on the Bible’s reception in film, and the author of many articles and chapters on the Bible in film. She is also the author of Studying the Old Testament (Abingdon, 2007). Jon Morgan is Lecturer of Biblical Interpretation at the University of Chester and Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Manchester and the University of Exeter. He is the author of several articles and chapters including "Examining the Entrails: Reading Religion in and through Exodus: Gods and Kings" (Biblical Reception forthcoming) and "Visitors, Gatekeepers and Receptionists: Reflections on the Shape of Biblical Studies and the Role of Reception History" (in Reception History and Biblical Studies: Theory and Practice, T&T Clark/Bloomsbury, 2015).