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Title details for The Last Supper by Paul Elie - Wait list

The Last Supper

Art, Faith, Sex, and Controversy in the 1980s

ebook
Pre-release: Expected May 27, 2025
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: Not available
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: Not available

The origins of our postsecular present, revealed in a vivid, groundbreaking account of the moment when popular culture became the site of religious conflict.
The 1980s are usually seen as a slick, shrill decade. The Ayatollah Khomeini and his followers urged "Death to America"; Ronald Reagan was in the White House, backed by the Moral Majority; John Paul II was asserting Catholic traditionalism and denouncing homosexuality, as were the televangelists on cable TV. And yet "crypto-religious" artists pushed back against the spirit of the age, venturing into vexed areas where politicians and clergy were loath to go—and anticipating the postsecular age we are living in today.
That is the story Paul Elie tells in this enthralling group portrait. Here's Leonard Cohen writing "Hallelujah" in a Times Square hotel room; Andy Warhol adapting Leonardo's The Last Supper in response to the AIDS crisis; Prince making the cross and altar into "signs of the times." Through Toni Morrison the spirits of the enslaved speak from the grave; Patti Smith and Bruce Springsteen deepen the tent-revival intensity of their work; U2, Morrissey, and Sinéad O'Connor give voice to the anguish of young people who were raised religious; Wim Wenders offers an angel's-eye view of Berlin. And Martin Scorsese overcomes fundamentalist opposition to make The Last Temptation of Christ—a struggle that anticipates Salman Rushdie's struggle with Islam in The Satanic Verses.
Much of that work drew controversy, and episodes such as the boycott sparked by Madonna's "Like a Prayer" video and the tearing up of Andres Serrano's Piss Christ in Congress were early skirmishes in the culture wars. But in this book's interlocking tales of the crypto-religious, the artists are the protagonists, and their work speaks to us because it deals with matters of the spirit that are too complex to be reduced to doctrines and headlines.
Stirring, immersive, The Last Supper traces the beginning of our age, in which religion is both surging and in decline. And it presents an outlook—open to belief but wary of it—that those artists and today's readers have in common.

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    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2025
      An analysis of popular culture's incorporation of religious elements. In 1979, when Bob Dylan released the albumSlow Train Coming, fans felt betrayed that an "un-cooptable" rebel had become a born-again Christian, "marking his conversion with a set of songs dealing with spiritual warfare and holy submission." He performed selections onSaturday Night Live, 13 years before Sin�ad O'Connor sang Bob Marley's "War" on SNL and infamously ripped up a picture of Pope John Paul II. Those two performances bracketed a moment in which "figures in what we call popular culture engaged questions of faith and art and the ways they fit together with an intensity seldom seen before or since." In this all-encompassing book, Elie documents the achievements of a range of artists from popular music, cinema, literature, and more whose work during that period, primarily the 1980s, was "crypto-religious," a term coined by Czeslaw Milosz that Elie uses to mean "work that incorporates religious words and images and motifs but expresses something other than conventional belief." Among the artists he cites are Andy Warhol, whose work, Elie argues, "put him squarely in a line of twentieth-century writers and artists with Christian preoccupations"; U2, the Irish band whose "mix of devotion and desire came together inThe Unforgettable Fire," their 1984 album; Madonna, who "made old-school Catholicism suddenly, inexplicably sexy"; and filmmaker Martin Scorsese, who devoted 15 years to making 1988'sThe Last Temptation of Christ, with its depiction of a fallible Jesus, which provoked a backlash from religious conservatives. The writing can be dry, but there's enough entertaining material to keep readers interested, as when Elie notes that Universal Studios was so concerned about protestors when they showedLast Temptation to clergymen in New York that, before the screening, they "had the cinema inspected by men with walkie-talkies crawling down the aisles, looking for explosives under the seats." A thought-provoking evaluation of religious-themed art of the 1980s.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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