Pagan Outrage Machine Fires Up in Response to Time Halloween Article
Pagans have demanded an apology for a Time magazine article that, according to a petition, compared witches to terrorists. The…
Read MorePagans have demanded an apology for a Time magazine article that, according to a petition, compared witches to terrorists. The…
Read MoreNew Vatican Confab on ‘Complementarity’ in Marriage Before the dust had settled from the Catholic…
Read MoreMurder often functions as a cultural Rorschach test: the narratives we tell about why people…
Read More“Halloween gives you a great opportunity to show how Christians celebrate the day that death was defeated, and you can give them Gospel tracts…”
Read MoreThe “Anba Dlo” water symposium held last weekend in New Orleans featured an unexpected alliance:…
Read MoreThis week, controversies emerged involving both a statue of Satan and a statue of Jesus,…
Read MoreLast week, Raw Story featured an unusual summer travel spot—The Occult Museum of Ed and…
Read MoreHere, in the order in which the Ouija board instructed us to offer them, is an assortment of stories about ghosts, death, fundamentalists, and general spookiness.
Read MoreIn the wake of a series of high-profile April Fool’s pranks and a hoax at the expense of mega-preacher Joel Osteen, the question remains: what makes us believe in bacon-flavored mouthwash, a Martian invasion, or the renunciation of faith by one of the world’s most famous Christians?
Read MoreSo to see Manhattan itself go belly-up after the storm, to watch how carnal we become when met with loss of power, has been a sobering and a saddening experience. All of this has made me think more squarely about how inured we have become to screens as the mediator of our imaginative lives. Without electricity, we have no escape. Without Playstations and Xboxes, we have no other-worlds. Without fully charged mobile devices, we have no social media. Without our screens, we have lost our spaces of order, our promised places of reliable rules, our escape from reality. Whereas some New Yorkers contented themselves with flashlights and novels during Sandy’s aftermath, others felt compelled to trudge up to the gaudy power-lit mega-screens of Times Square, where at least you could see commercials and fight for seats at Starbucks.
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