Sunday, October 13, 2019
An Analysis Of The Video Like A Prayer By Madonna :: essays research papers
 An Analysis of the Video "Like A Prayer" by Madonna    Madonna first arrived in the national popular culture in 1984 with  her song "Borderline". She moved very quickly in the ensuing years  to make several records (many of which have gone multi-platinum)  and to take several world tours with sold-out concerts, and has  caused quite a bit of controversy in what she has done in the  public eye. Examples include posing nude for Penthouse magazine  (and announcing afterwards that she was not ashamed for doing it),  marrying (and subsequently divorcing) actor and media-avoider Sean  Penn, creating a fashion trend (which was primarily popular with  teenage girls), and making truly atrocious movies which the  critics hated and the people refused to see (the only two  exceptions are Dick Tracy and Truth or Dare, her controversial yet  fascinating self-documentary about her tour of the same name). It  seems that Madonna seems to enjoy attention, good or bad, and it  seems like she feeds on her own controversy. Her songs, and the  music videos which accompany them, are no exception to this.  However, the things she does and the images she projects requests  contemporary society to reflect on itself, and to possibly  re-create itself in innovative and inventive styles. Perhaps she  always breaks with convention because she sees things in a  different light than the rest of society. This essay shall focus  on the video which accompanies the title track from her 1989  album, "Like A Prayer," which certainly had its share of  controversy.  Probably the most startling image in the music video was that of  several burning crosses on a lawn or a hill. These crosses were in  the background, while Madonna was facing the camera and singing.  When I saw the music video for the first time, this particular  section of the video made me sit up and intently watch my  television screen. The first things I thought about were, "She's a  very outspoken woman for doing this! Boy, she's got a lot of  nerve! I believe she was raised Catholic, and she's making a  mockery of the Catholic Church by doing so! The Pope would be  offended, to say the least!" The radical approach to dispose of  any religion (or a person's religious or pious fervor) is at least  shocking. The cross is the symbol of Christianity and all it  stands for. Seeing the cross engulfed in fire -- which symbolizes  (and is) a destructive force -- would be very disturbing for  anyone to see, Christian or not. I sat up and took notice, and I'm  not even Christian -- I am Jewish. Furthermore, the fact that    					    
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