Spring 2017/Pasadena
TC509
Taylor
TC509: THEOLOGY AND POP CULTURE (4 Units: 160 Hours). Barry Taylor.
DESCRIPTION: This course will engage students in a two-way dialogue between pop culture and theology, with particular emphasis upon music, movies, TV, art, fashion, and sports. Students will develop a biblical, theological, and historical understanding of these art forms and a critical understanding of the advertising, consumerism, and celebrity that drives pop culture.
LEARNING OUTCOMES: (1) Students will develop critical grids for evaluating pop cultural products; (2) students will find points of contact (Anknüpfungspunkte) between God and popular culture; (3) students will sharpen their skills as interpretive leaders for church, ministry, and therapeutic settings; and (4) students will engage in public theology, joining the broad conversation regarding faith and culture.
COURSE FORMAT: This class meets once per week for three-hour sessions for a total of 30 hours of classroom instruction for lecture and discussion plus 10 hours of directed learning activities for a total of 40 instructional hours.
REQUIRED READING AND VIEWING: 1,162 total pp. required.
Detweiler, Craig, and Barry Taylor. A Matrix of Meanings. Baker Academic, 2003. ISBN: 978-0801024177, Pub. Price $28.00 [352 pp.].
During, Simon, ed. The Cultural Studies Reader. Routledge, 1993. ISBN: 978-0415374132, Pub. Price $45.95 [300 pp. assigned].
Lynch, Gordon. Understanding Theology and Popular Culture. Blackwell, 2005. ISBN: 978-1405117487, Pub. Price $46.95 [254 pp.].
Stevens, Tim. Pop Goes the Church. Power Publishing, 2008. ISBN: 978-0979017490, Pub. Price $16.95 [256 pp.].
RECOMMENDED READING: Reading list will be provided in class.
ASSIGNMENTS AND ASSESSMENT:
PREREQUISITES: None.
RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM: Option to meet the TH5 requirement in the 120 MDiv Program. Option to count in the Theology and Arts emphasis, Worship and Music Ministry emphasis, and Worship, Theology and the Arts emphasis. Meets the MACL in Integrative Studies requirement for an interdisciplinary course (IDPL); meets the culture (CULT) requirement in Cultural Literacy for MA programs.
FINAL EXAMINATION: None