Nostalgia, Religion and Popular Culture: Rethinking the Sacred and the Secular through the Death of Queen Elizabeth II
By (Author) Chris Deacy
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
9th January 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Nostalgia: general
Sociology: death and dying
Popular culture
306.09410905
Hardback
216
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Drawing on the event of Queen Elizabeth IIs death in 2022 as a central case study, Chris Deacy explores the way we navigate the relationship between nostalgia and religion. Focusing on the lived experiences of ordinary people and in tandem with the turn to the self discourse, Deacy suggests that our relationship with nostalgia illustrates the shift from objective and transcendent value-systems towards the domain of everyday experience, love and loss. Deacy revisits the way we understand religion and the secular, using the medium of popular culture, such as radio, film, TV and music to interrogate the nostalgia-as-religion narrative. The interpersonal and social elements of nostalgia are explored, such as through the way radio fostered virtual communities and played a key role regarding national, religious and cultural memory during the mourning of the Queen. Attention is given to how nostalgia has evolved over time, and how it can be understood as a religious process which transforms our lives at a time of loss and contributes to a eschatological future.
Chris Deacy is a Reader in Theology and Religious Studies and the course lead for Philosophy, Religion and Ethics, University of Kent, UK.