Theology and Breaking Bad
By (Author) David K. Goodin
Edited by George Tsakiridis
Contributions by Neal Foster
Contributions by David K. Goodin
Contributions by Brian Fiu Kolia
Contributions by Clive Marsh
Contributions by Cherish Nelson
Contributions by Alex Sosler
Contributions by George Tsakiridis
Contributions by Trevor B. Williams
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
6th July 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Media studies
Popular culture
791.4572
Hardback
202
Width 161mm, Height 226mm, Spine 22mm
485g
Theology and Breaking Bad explores the brutal and seemingly nihilistic moral landscape of the AMC neo-Western crime drama Breaking Bad (2008-2013) with insights into the characters, their struggles, and the moral consequences resulting from their actions. Throughout the book, the contributors find telltale traces of theological themes that have been woven into the storylines by the writers and directors and bring them out for the reader in ten essays that span topics from Greek mythology to the Hebrew Bible, and extend into Eastern and Western Christendom. Readers will find provocative reflections that will add to their appreciation of this show, as well as its spinoff series, Better Call Saul (2015-2022). This volume also advances academic inquiries in such fields as popular culture and theology, hermeneutics, biblical studies, Patristics, film studies, diasporic and colonial studies, and explores such themes as antihero redemption, penance, salvation, and forgiveness. This book will be of interest to both academics and fans alike.
As the editors of the essays included in Theology and Breaking Bad skillfully argue, and as the volume of essays aptly demonstrate, the series is not just an American 'crime-caper' but a serious exploration of intriguing and provocative questions of theological concern with regard to Walter White and his world: themes such as sin, regret, family, loyalty, moral equivocation, evil and redemption are compelling, universal, and timeless. The essays are well- written and happily free of the academic jargon that usually precludes readership outside the academy, and making the volume an excellent resource for anyone interested in the intersection of popular narrative and serious (here, theological) analysis.
--June-Ann Greeley, Sacred Heart UniversityDavid K. Goodin and George Tsakiridis have gathered a collection of creative, deeply knowledgeable essays that help us rethink what the relationship between theology and pop culture can be. These essays are the ones who knock, opening up new ways of seeing the moral worldview of the Breaking Bad universe in all its messy, uncomfortable complexity.
--Brandon R. Grafius, Ecumenical Theological Seminary, DetroitThis book pushes past simple notions of heroes and antiheroes to consider Breaking Bad and its spinoffs in all their moral complexity. The contributors demonstrate convincingly that, far from being "morally barren," Vince Gilligan's universe offers rich resources for thinking about both vice and virtue, and about truths both moral and metaphysical.
--John W. McCormack, Aurora UniversityDavid K. Goodin is a lecturer for the McGill School of Religious Studies in Montreal, Professeur Associ at the Universit Laval, Institut de Thologie Orthodoxe de Montral, and an instructor for the Pappas Patristic Institute at the Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology in Brookline, Massachusetts.
George Tsakiridis is senior lecturer of philosophy and religion at South Dakota State University.