In Oprah: The Gospel of an Icon, Kathryn Lofton holds up a lustrous mirror to the polymorphously perverse dynamics of…
Oprah: The Gospel of an Icon
“What is Oprah?” Kathryn Lofton asks at the outset of her book.
“A noun. A name. A misspelling. Oprah is a person we know because of her publicity, a pioneer we recognize because of her accolades, and a personage we respect because of her embodied endurance, her passionate care, her industrious production. . . . What is Oprah? Oprah is an instance of American astonishment at what can be.”
Investigating the various elements of the Oprah franchise—from Oprah’s Book Club, to Oprah’s Favorite Things, to The Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy Foundation, and beyond—Lofton analyzes the phenomenon of Oprah in light of categories inherited from religious studies, uncovering in turn, the ways in which the products of the Oprah Winfrey empire present a clear reflection of modern religious life.
In this forum discussion, scholars from multiple disciplines bring their expertise and perspectives to Lofton’s arguments and case studies. These essays continue to pry at the relationship between Oprah, the phenomenon, and religious life in the modern era.
zzDivine pervasion and the change that isn’t
Pervasive presence—or just ordinary ubiquity—is one of the main strategies in Oprah’s attempt to serve as a guide through the…
O tedious selfhood, O aftertaste of splinters
It’s striking to me how often, with what little resistance, the many scholarly forums this book has now generated have…
O is for Ozarks
O is for Oprah. O is for Ozarks. Can the second embrace the first? Though Lofton stays away from the…
Oprah the Omnipotent
Lofton tells me she shares with Jonathan Z. Smith the view that difference is the beginning of any good conversation.…
Every moment an Aha! Moment!
Kathryn Lofton’s Oprah: The Gospel of an Icon is a work, first and foremost, of cultural anthropology. The back cover…