Students go to hell and back in this course that looks at depictions of the damned throughout the ages
- Written by Robert Gordon Joseph, Senior Lecturer of Communication, University of Dayton
References
- ^ Uncommon Courses (theconversation.com)
- ^ Meghan R. Henning (udayton.academia.edu)
- ^ her 2014 book (www.mohrsiebeck.com)
- ^ Joseph Valenzano III (works.bepress.com)
- ^ ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead (arce.org)
- ^ evangelical “hell houses” of the 21st-century United States (sacredmattersmagazine.com)
- ^ ancient Jewish concept of Sheol (api.bibleodyssey.com)
- ^ Greek and Roman visions of Hades (www.britannica.com)
- ^ Norse mythology’s Ragnarok (www.britannica.com)
- ^ from the Gospels (api.bibleodyssey.com)
- ^ the Book of Revelation (www.worldhistory.org)
- ^ Dante’s Inferno (www.britannica.com)
- ^ scholarly definitions of an apocalypse (ecommons.udayton.edu)
- ^ hell is a concept that is never far from people’s minds (hyperallergic.com)
- ^ since at least the 1970s (doi.org)
- ^ Hell Hath No Fury (yalebooks.yale.edu)
- ^ Enraptured by Rapture (digitalcommons.unomaha.edu)
- ^ Giving the Devil His Due: Satan and Cinema (www.fordhampress.com)
Authors: Robert Gordon Joseph, Senior Lecturer of Communication, University of Dayton