Science Fiction Theology: Beauty and the Transformation of the Sublime

Science Fiction Theology: Beauty and the Transformation of the Sublime

by Alan P. R. Gregory
Science Fiction Theology: Beauty and the Transformation of the Sublime

Science Fiction Theology: Beauty and the Transformation of the Sublime

by Alan P. R. Gregory

eBook

$48.99  $64.99 Save 25% Current price is $48.99, Original price is $64.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Science fiction imagines a universe teeming with life and thrilling possibility, but also hidden and hideous dangers. Christian theology, often a polemical target for science fiction, reflects on the plenitude out of which and for which the universe exists. In Science Fiction Theology, Alan Gregory investigates the troubled relationship between science fiction and Christianity and, in particular, how both have laid claim to the modern idea of sublimity.

To the extent that science fiction has appropriated—and reveled—in the sublime, it has persisted in a sometimes explicit, sometimes subterranean, relationship with Christian theology. From its seventeenth-century beginnings, the sublime, with its representations of immensity, has informed the imagining of God. When science fiction critiques or reinvents religion, its writers have engaged in a literary guerrilla war with Christianity over what is truly sublime and divine.

Gregory examines the sublime and its implicit theologies as they appear in early American pulp science fiction, the horror writing of H. P. Lovecraft, science fiction narratives of evolution and apocalypse, and the work of Philip K. Dick. Ironically, science fiction’s tussle with Christianity hides the extent to which the sublime, especially in popular culture, serves to distort the classical Christian understanding of God, secularizing that God and rendering God’s transcendence finite. But by turning from the sublime to a consideration of the beautiful, Gregory shows that both Christian and science-fictional imaginations may discover a new and surprising conversation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781481304382
Publisher: Baylor University Press
Publication date: 07/01/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 994 KB

About the Author

Alan P. R. Gregory is Principal of the South East Institute for Theological Education.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Sublime Fiction?
2. Pulp Fiction, or the Sublime Subversion of the Boy-Engineer
3. Wells and Stapledon: The Evolutionary Sublime
4. Philip Dick versus the Sublime
5. The Apocalyptic Sublime
6. From the Sublime to the Beautiful
Conclusion

What People are Saying About This

Roger Luckhurst

Alan Gregory's absorbing book is a significant investigation into the links between the aesthetic of the sublime, science fiction, and the Christian 'sense of wonder.' 'Science fiction has never steered clear of Christianity,' Gregory asserts. His book is a stimulus for thinking through some of the consequences of acknowledging this claim.

David Seed

The spiritual dimension of science fiction has been ignored for too long, but here Alan Gregory gives us a pioneering account of how science fiction emerged from the tradition of the sublime. This suggestive new study combines historical insights into the context of the fiction with detailed analysis of particular works.

James F. McGrath

Science Fiction Theology situates science fiction, from its earliest literary expressions to its modern cinematic ones, within the broader context of an approach to nature that is itself a relatively recent phenomenon in human history. In the process, Alan Gregory reveals the profoundly theological underpinnings and implications of the unexplored depths of sci-fi’s most characteristic components. He guides the reader through these subjects with an insightful eloquence that deserves to be widely read and widely quoted.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews