Call for Abstracts: Religious Emergence and the Sacred in The Legend of Zelda

deadline for submissions: 
August 1, 2025
full name / name of organization: 
n/a
contact email: 

This book will explore how religion and the sacred emerge from within the structure and narrative of The Legend of Zelda series, one of the most influential and enduring franchises in video game history. Zelda has greatly impacted multiple generations of players, and has an extremely loyal and dedicated fanbse.

Rather than primarily comparing Zelda to existing religious traditions or applying pre-set theological frameworks, this volume will try to focus on how religious meaning arises internally—through gameplay mechanics, symbolism, spatial design, and narrative development. The book aims to show how Zelda generates religious forms as organic expressions native to its world, and how these may impact the player in a manner similar to religion.

The Legend of Zelda movie is set to debut in March of 2027. I want to allow a significant amount of time for editing/peer review/etc. so that the publication date can (roughly) coincide with the movie debut.

Potential topics

  • The role of creation myths and divine figures
  • The emergence of ritual, sacred garments, and symbolic objects (the Hero’s Tunic, masks, the Master Sword) as carriers of spiritual meaning
    • Mantling and embodiment (i.e. wearing the green tunic in Wind Waker to become courageous)
    • The function of temples, shrines, waypoints, and rest zones as sacred spaces that structure the player’s experience of narrative and time
    • The logic of time loops and resets as vehicles for ritual and spiritual transformation
    • The relationship between sacrifice & vocation in the Zelda narrative (especially as embodied by Link and Zelda)
    • The use of music and gesture (ocarina songs, invocation sequences) as sacred technologies within the game world
    • The portrayal of evil and purification ( Demise and Ganon, the role of monsters and environmental corruption, etc.)
    • How the player’s participation, repetition, and travel through space and trial shrines mimic rites of passage and spiritual growth
    • The cultural afterlife and reception of Zelda as a “sacred text” (i.e. impact on players as a sort of religious/mythic thing)
    • The significance of “backworlds” (alternate realms, dream worlds, parallel realities)

Projected length

60,000-75,000 words (I’m hoping for about 15 chapters, and would love for them to be relatively short: 4,000-5,000 words)

Dates

StageDue DateNotesCFP ReleaseJun 27, 2025TodayAbstracts DueAug 1, 20255 weeks from CFP (note: once I hit 15, I'll probably delete this, so the sooner you submit the better)Full Chapter Drafts DueDec 1, 20254 monthss from abstracts; should be long enough for shortish chapters. (if you need a week or two extra, no problem.)Peer Review Feedback ReturnedDec 31, 202530 days for review - should be doable.Major Revisions DueJan 31, 20261 month for revisions (post-holidays; maybe a weekish flexibility here)Final Chapters Due (to me)Feb 21, 20263 weeks for final copyedits, formatting, etc.Final Manuscript to Series EditorMar 1, 2026I'll be sending this.

 

Some notes:

There's been some changes with the (potential) publisher, so I've got editorial interest (this is my 2nd volume with the series), but the actual proposal requires a chapter list/list of contributors before they review it and grant the contract. But, I'm pretty confident on this one. 

I apologize for the short timeline in advance. That's why I am aiming for relatively short chapters. Our goal is to get the book published around the same time as the Zelda movie release in March of 2027, and because of some new peer review standards, etc., I want to be sure we've got at least a year cushion between final draft and publication. 

Please note a few things about the volume itself: the goal is to treat the Zelda universe as though it's a serious cultural product. This is in contrast to, say, a pedagogical medium of sorts. It's an academic volume, but, much like other pop-culture volumes, we want it to be appealing to fans as much as scholars.

If any of this interests you, please shoot me (Michael) an abstract & CV at zeldareligion@gmail.com.