William D. Romanowski. Eyes Wide Open. Looking for God in Popular Culture. Brazo Press. Grand Rapids, Michigan, 2001.
One of the books frequently referred to by authors is William D. Romanowski’s Eyes Wide Shut. Romanowski also contributed one of the articles to Forbes and Mahan's Religion and Popular Culture in America, which was one of the better written and more interesting ones in my opinion. I had already enjoyed another one of his books, Pop Culture Wars, and Eyes Wide Open, which is often called a classic, often drew my attention. Moreover, I had gathered that it offered an explicitly Christian perspective on how to deal with popular culture. So anthropologically this book also seemed interesting to me. I felt it was time.
First  of all I have to say that Romanowski has a very pleasent style of  writing. It really takes you by the hand and guides you through what he  has to say. Probably, aside from talent, he does this because he has  actually something to say and wrote this book to say it, not to have his  name on a book cover, although I’m sure that doesn’t keep Mr.  Romanowski up at night. It just feels that he is careful to make sure  that what he is trying to say is being said as clearly as he can say it.  Some might think this is patronizing, but it isn’t. Romanowski doesn’t  compromise his story but just tries to make sure all of it will receive  the reader and he doesn’t shroud his narrative in clouds of mystery, an  abundance of obsolete references or far-fetched theoretical sidetracks.  Well, not too much anyway. He seems to put his ego on the shelf whereby  (oh how Christian!) he might actually transcend himself as a writer. In  any case he seems to walk the fine line of clarity that separates the  realm of superficiality from that of over-analysis.
Now as I pointed out already, this book is written from a  Christian perspective, so that didn't come as a surprise. I didn't,  however, expect it to be... that Christian. Especially in the first part  of the book, the emphasis on the Christian perspective feels heavy,  reading lines such as “Christians cannot be selective in their  responsibility to the God who lays claim to all of life and creation. We  cannot try to be faithful when it comes to personal morality and church  life but then employ ‘secular’ tactics, values, goals, and ethical  standards for business, politics, education, art, and so forth. Our  entire life is meant for service in God’s kingdom.” (p. 52). Ehm...  amen?
Let me be quick to say that being a bit surprised at this  emphasis is more my problem than it is one of the book. After all it was  aimed at a Christian audience, so what would you expect? And let me  then also say that Romanowski’s judgments are in fact well informed and  nuanced and nowhere near a fundamentalist evangelical rant without end  might be. But so if not fundamentalist evangelical, then what are his judgments?
Romanowski's position could be situated between two extremes of on the one hand the  idea that “efforts to make the movie theater or concert hall into a  revival tent invest the popular arts with powers they do not really  possess.” (p. 81) while on the other, the idea that “critics were right  to worry about the potential influence “‘the market-driven, therapeutic,  narcissistic and entertainment-oriented culture’ can have on church and  society” (p. 40). Romanowski claims that calling popular arts  entertainment suggests “that the popular arts are somehow not really art  or that they do not serve the same roles and purposes of art” and adds  that he wants “to challenge such attitudes” (p. 91). So far I’m on his  team! He then suggests the idea of maps of reality  (p. 95). In his own words: “We all know that a map is not the reality  it depicts, but is instead a representation of roads, rivers, landmarks,  and distances that can give us directions, point out the sights along  the way, and help us reach our destination. So popular art provides  stories, symbols, images, metaphors, and melodies that depict cultural  values and assumptions, behavioral norms, social roles, and gender  roles. In this way, the popular arts mediate between culture and life,  that is, our cultural conceptions and our social and environmental  realities.” (p. 95). It is hard to find middle ground between the two  paradoxical stigmas of superficiality and brain-rotting that popular  culture often has to suffer, and the one that Romanowski proposes is at  least both appreciative of popular culture and also somewhat elegant.
Sometimes  Romanowski does tend to present ideas that seem like a bit of a  stretch. For instance, he does seem to assume that because of mass  technology that “dramatically increased the distribution scale of art”  (p. 91), the “popular artworks are intended to reach mass audiences,”  and “for commercial reasons, then, producers like to cast a wide net to  reach and satisfy a large ‘popular’ audience” (p. 92). He adds to this  that, to cater to that audience, popular arts also make sure to “not  introduce new beliefs, but reinforce already existing ones” (p. 93). It  could be argued, however, that popular arts can in fact be  non-commercial and innovative, if artists seek the means of production  themselves. Musicians for example might want to make a record just for  the fun of making one, financing the production themselves and not  really caring about seeing their money back. Sometimes his judgments  seem even theologically biased, favoring a Protestant interpretation of  scripture, when for example he writes that “in contrast to the Hollywood  paradigm, scripture emphasizes the sovereignty of God, the human  sinfulness and inadequacy that demands dependence on God’s grace alone,  and the necessity of centering all of life on the goal of glorifying  God.” (p. 170). I’d like to see him take that one up with the Pope. His  cultural analyses sometimes are also debatable. When for instance he  writes about a scene from the movie Pretty Woman where “the woman is  doing the driving” and states that that “is a visual image suggesting  that the traditional roles for men and women are reversed” (p. 191), he  seems to treat symbols as having an absolute meaning that the viewer has  no choice but to recognize, consciously or unconsciously. I’m not too  sure the meaning of imagery or the reception of it can ever be that  fixed though.
Still,  I’m going to stick by my judgement that the book is indeed nuanced.  Sure, Romanowski offers a great deal of critical judgments but  ultimately he does leave the judgement up to the reader. The book  doesn’t tell you what to think, it rather invites you to think for  yourself and to apply critical thinking yourself. It offers examples,  ideas and methods, but that’s where it ends. The questions at the end of  each chapter I thought at first were a bit patronizing actually, but in  fact, they also seem to give you the idea that in the end it’s really  up to you to make up your mind about the value of popular culture. This  democratic approach I would say is commendable.
  
 

 
 
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