Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 264
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-0-7425-6333-9 • Hardback • November 2009 • $62.00 • (£48.00)
978-1-4422-0063-0 • eBook • November 2009 • $58.50 • (£45.00)
Theresa Sanders is associate professor of religion at Georgetown University. She is the author of Celluloid Saints.
Chapter 1 In the Beginning
Chapter 2 And God Said
Chapter 3 A Helper Fit for Him
Chapter 4 Fig Leaves
Chapter 5 The Curse of Adam
Chapter 6 The Curse of Eve
Chapter 7 Monkeyshines
Chapter 8 Back to Nature
Chapter 9 Paradise Regained
Chapter 10 The Final Frontier
Chapter 11 Appendix: Additional Uses of Adam and Eve in Film
Adam and Eve have become icons, pop stars. Their mythical presence emerges in The Simpsons, New Yorker cartoons, and Beech-Nut baby food advertisements. Approaching Eden is a delightfully serious romp through pop culture's religious unconscious....
— S. Brent Plate
Theresa Sanders' Approaching Eden gives us another adventure in Paradise with her fruitful analysis of the Adam and Eve biblical story within popular film and television. Ranging through drama to science fiction, horror to the Jesus genre and beyond, it is a veritable tree of knowledge. Her interfaith exploration of Genesis is an especially devilish delight....
— Anton Karl Kozlovic
Approaching Eden is without a doubt the most engaging and instructive book that I have read on reflections in popular culture of our foundational mythic text.....
— John R. May
Her study reveals the assumptions we have made about what the story both says and doesn't say. She accomplishes this in articulate fashion that engages, informs, and entertains without being pedantic. Through the lens of modern cultural phenomena she lets us glimpse how the chronicle from the first chapters of Genesis touches our lives in ways we may not even be aware of....
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Sanders takes readers through a myriad of sources, ranging from medieval Jewish legends about Lilith to episodes of The Simpsons and movies such as Pleasantville (1998). . . . Recommended.....
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Sanders's work is often fascinating and always suggestive in how it illuminates the connections between Gen 2—3 and popular cultural products.
— Relegere: Studies in Religion and Reception