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Rachel Wagner

Rachel Wagner is Associate Professor of Religion and Culture at Ithaca College. Her latest book, Cowboy Apocalypse: Religion and the Myth of the Vigilante Messiah (NYU, 2025) charts the myth of the “good guy with a gun,” connecting America’s frontier beginnings with visions of the end of the world. 

Articles

Religion Dispatches
Perhaps it wasn’t just the pope’s health that sent him into retirement, but his consternation at our increasingly networked lives.
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Religion Dispatches
Without the framing device of community, without any context in which to shape the interpretation of the events, such images become simply sensational, the prick of pain without the moral payoff.
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Religion Dispatches
So to see Manhattan itself go belly-up after the storm, to watch how carnal we become when met with loss of power, has been a sobering and a saddening experience. All of this has made me think more squarely about how inured we have become to screens as the mediator of our imaginative lives. Without electricity, we have no escape. Without Playstations and Xboxes, we have no other-worlds. Without fully charged mobile devices, we have no social media. Without our screens, we have lost our spaces of order, our promised places of reliable rules, our escape from reality. Whereas some New Yorkers contented themselves with flashlights and novels during Sandy’s aftermath, others felt compelled to trudge up to the gaudy power-lit mega-screens of Times Square, where at least you could see commercials and fight for seats at Starbucks.
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