CFP The Afterlife in Popular Culture (special issue of the The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture)

deadline for submissions: 
October 13, 2023
full name / name of organization: 
Angelique Nairn and Justin Matthews (Auckland University of Technology)

CFP The Afterlife in Popular Culture (special issue of the The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture)

Due to the great interest in the Depicting the Afterlife edited collection, we have arranged to co-edit a special issue of The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture set for publication in early 2024.

The theme remains the same:

As Garrett (2015) contends, popular cultural representations of the afterlife are a means of imaginatively and creatively grappling with the unknown. These representations can offer explanations about life after death or the in-between, to rationalize the existential, support and challenge religious doctrines, and entertain and educate so that society might live life to the fullest or feel assured that there is something more. 

According to O’Neil (2022), at their crux, these representations hinge on hope and the prospect of happiness, permeable boundaries that see a blurring of ‘here’ and ‘there,’ self-determination as key to understanding the afterlife, and acts of sacrifice and love that forge the conditions of eternal happiness. These ideas about the afterlife construct perceptions of morality and religion: what one must do now to reap the benefits once one has passed over.

These popular cultural representations, then, present “a range of narratives, consumer choices, moral dispositions and selected rituals of conduct” (Saenz, 1992, p. 43), which people “may adopt, adapt, criticize or reject as components in our implicit knowledge” (Dant, 2012, p. 24). With media such as The Good Place, Upload, The Inbetween, Afterlife of the Party, Coco, Soul, Reaper, Elsewhere, If I Stay, and Boo Bitch (to name but a few), focused on the afterlife, it seems timely to explore the messages promulgated in such texts about morality and/or religion. This is especially given media can prompt questioning and reasoning that aids self-reflection (Hawkins, 2001) and integrates people into an established order offering models of appropriate ways of being (Krijen & Verboord, 2016).

Therefore, this special issue aims to explore representations of morality and/or religion in 21st-century popular cultural texts that feature and emphasize the afterlife. It asks how the afterlife is understood but moreover, how are people encouraged to live their lives? Such aims will inevitably consider what place (if any) religion has in shaping popular cultural texts and understandings of the beyond, and what perceptions of morality are favoured and guide character story arcs. Ultimately this special issue will contribute to a continued and growing discussion on the representations of morality, religion, and the afterlife in contemporary society.

Possible topics might include, but are not limited to:

  • Moral motivation/reasoning and life after death
  • Dichotomies of Heaven and Hell
  • Representations of the ‘soul’
  • Cultural differences in constructions of the afterlife
  • Depictions/constructions of the spiritual realm
  • Ghosts, the paranormal, and the afterlife
  • Religious motifs in texts that feature the afterlife
  • Representations of Supreme Being(s)
  • Notions of suffering and reward in the afterlife

Full articles are required by 13th October 2023 and are to be emailed to me or my co-editor (Justin Matthews) directly. Articles should be 5-6k words in length. More information about the AJPC in general can be found here:   

Contact information:

Associate Professor Angelique Nairn: angelique.nairn@aut.ac.nz

Senior Lecturer Justin Matthews: justin.matthews@aut.ac.nz