Skip to main content
Contribution to Book
Chapter 7: Rethinking the Maze: Africana Religions, Somatic Memory, and the Journey to Consciousness
Humanities and Politics Faculty Book and Book Chapters
  • Amanda Furiasse, Hamline University
Book Title
Theology and Westworld
Document Type
Book Chapter
ISBN
978-1-9787-0795-5
Publication Date
1-1-2020
Editors
Juli Gittinger and Shayna Sheinfeld
Keywords
  • Religion,
  • Ethics,
  • Theology,
  • Social Science,
  • Popular Culture,
  • Performing Arts,
  • Television,
  • Science Fiction,
  • Fantasy & Horror
Description

In the first two seasons of the HBO series Westworld, human guests pay exorbitant fees to spend time among cybernetic Hosts—partially sentient AI robots—and live out often violent fantasies. In Theology and Westworld, scholars from a range of disciplines within religious studies examine the profound questions that arise when the narrative of Westworld interacts with the study of religion. From transhumanism and personhood to morality and divinity, this book contributes to, confounds, and challenges ideas that are found in the study of religion and philosophy. Taken together, the chapters further our understanding of what it means to live in a world where the hard questions of human existence are explored through the medium of popular culture.

Publisher
Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield
Disciplines
Citation Information
Amanda Furiasse. "Chapter 7: Rethinking the Maze: Africana Religions, Somatic Memory, and the Journey to Consciousness" (2020)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/amanda-furiasse/7/