This book explores how culture functions and intersects with
religious groups, particularly Christians. It explores the way
electronic communications, especially film and television, shape
our world of meaning. Using the theories of British thinker Raymond
Williams as his framework, Warren focuses on the actual process by
which versions of reality are produced, the production of
signification. He also draws on the ideas of Paulo Freire pointing
out that cultural agency happens when individuals decide to
exercise some judgment and control over the kinds of cultural
material they will accept or resist.
If culture is a signifying system, says Warren, then religion is
too. Contrasting values from the wider culture create dilemmas for
those trying to follow a religious life. Choices either mirror the
wider culture or reflect a culture of resistance. Warren seeks to
help the reader develop the skills of cultural analysis by paying
attention to the images that support culture, examining the life
structures that support culture, and paying attention to how any
particular aspect of culture is produced. Beyond all this, however,
the author calls for a stance of resistance to all that violates
human dignity and unity--all the aspects of culture that persons
with high religious ideals cannot accept.
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