Paul Elie on Postsecularism
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Paul Elie on Postsecularism

Art, faith, sex, and controversy in the 1980s

Event Information

This event is on sale to members Tuesday, March 11 at 10am CT.

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About the Event:

National Book Critics Circle Award finalist Paul Elie joins us to discuss his new book, The Last Supper, which explores the origins of our postsecular present and the moment when popular culture became the site of religious conflict, namely the 1980s. From Andy Warhol’s adaptation of The Last Supper to the boycott sparked by Madonna’s “Like a Prayer” music video, "crypto-religious" artists pushed back against the spirit of the age, venturing into vexed areas where politicians and clergy were loath to go. Elie traces the beginning of our age of postsecularism, in which religion is both surging and in decline. And he presents an outlook — open to belief but wary of it — that those artists and Americans today have in common.

This program is part of the American Writers Museum’s American Prophets: Writers, Religion & Culture series, which examines the relationship between American writers and religion. American Prophets is sponsored by a grant from Lilly Endowment Inc. through its Religion and Cultural Institutions Initiative.

A book signing will follow this program.


This program is presented in partnership with the American Writers Museum.

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Paul Elie

Paul Elie

Paul Elie is the author of The Life You Save May Be Your Own (2003) and Reinventing Bach (2012), both N...

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Emily D. Crews

Emily D. Crews

Emily D. Crews is the Executive Director of the Marty Center. In collaboration with its staff and faculty co-director...

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