In From Angels To
Aliens Lynn Schofield Clark explores the resurgence of interest in the
supernatural among teenagers. She theorizes this is happening, at least in
part, as a result of the legacy and suffusion of evangelical Christianity in
American culture. A generation ago, religious identity was something one was
born into; increasingly it is becoming something we chose for ourselves,
selected from various narratives presented in media and religion. (bricolage?)
People are less religious but more “spiritual”. This means that while people
(especially youth) are dissatisfied, confused, or disappointed with the job
science and religion have done providing ultimate answers for life, they remain
open to the notion that there may be more to our world than meets the eye.
In
their quest to form a religious identity, people develop certain strategies.
Culture, as Clark defines it, is the store of public symbols and stories that
flesh out and reinforce these strategies of how things should be done, making
them seem sensible and even meaningful (10). Film and television offer
satisfaction because they symbolically resolve conflicts that are troubling to
our society. Although teenagers may develop their taste in media based on what
fits their “style”, their exposure to various ideologies is one of the ways
they gather materials from which they construct identities. Identity is a
result of both parenting and exposure to cultural products.
Within
evangelicalism there has been a tendency to draw lines in the sand: us vs.
them, sacred vs. secular, holy vs. demonic, etc. In what was initially an
attempt to convert people to Christianity (“repent or burn!”), evangelicals
ended up simply encouraging Americans to accept the notion of cosmic,
incomprehensible forces at work in (or responsible for) our visible world. Thus,
today popular teen culture is rife with elements of the supernatural—vampires,
aliens, demons (does The Hunger Games
dystopian future count?) etc. Horror stories, especially those with
supernatural elements, “allow young people to experience and relieve fears
about death, the afterlife, and in general, the forces in life that they
believe are beyond their control—which includes quite a bit, from the teen
perspective” (64). Since the Divine can be somewhat ineffable, we occasionally
explore it through its negation.
Clark
then roughly categorizes her research subjects (interviews with teens and their
families) as having one of five various approaches. They refer to teenagers’
feelings on supernatural and organized religion, and range from loving one
while hating the other to the other way around. Science and religion are not
necessarily at odds with each other, as they might have been a few decades ago.
The line between them ranges from non-existent to blurry to firm, depending on
the teen’s family history (were they raised in a religious household?),
parenting style (do they limit media exposure?), socioeconomic status (how
marginalized to they feel?), etc. The group in the middle seems the most
normative or typical: seekers, or “customizers” are individuals who actively
select from various sources to make sense of their worlds and to meaningfully
participate in them (118). Some teens desire to distinguish between religion
and myth but have trouble doing so.
Teenagers’
wide range of perspectives on the supernatural is reflected in the ways their
parents raise them. Some parents see religion as harmful; some see it as
providing a good moral foundation. Media is approached in much the same
way—some let their kids be exposed to everything available in to help them make
“informed” decisions; some carefully filter the media their teens consume.
Clark states that the purpose of her book is not to celebrate some semiotic
democracy where infinite meaning can be constructed from a number of media
texts, but to demonstrate that “the choices teens have are limited…and were
influenced by their positions and their perceived relation to culture and its
resources” (231). Popular culture is neither completely toxic or redemptive;
the goal is simply to encourage teens (and everyone) to think and discuss the ways
in which they process the media they encounter, since it is frequently easier
to discuss media than personal life experiences.
Clark, L. S. (2003). From angels to aliens: Teenagers, the media, and the supernatural. Oxford: Oxford University Press.