TY - JOUR ID - 72794 TI - Religious Cinema and the Transfer of Religious and Revolutionary Values to Future Generations (Case Study: Analysis of the Content of the Gold and the Copper Film) JO - Contemporary Researches on Islamic Revolution JA - JCRIR LA - en SN - 2676-7368 AU - Mohammad Mirzaee, Hasan AU - Bahrainy, Nasrin AU - Majidi, Mohammad Reza AU - Hoseinzadeh, Mohammad Ali AD - M.A. Student of Sociology, Shahed University, Tehran, IRAN. AD - Assistant Professor, Department of English Language, University of Tehran, Tehran, IRAN. AD - Associate Professor, Department of Regional Studies, University of Tehran, Tehran, IRAN. AD - Board Member of Islamic Revolution, Association of Iran and Islamic Studies department, Tehran University, Tehran, IRAN. Y1 - 2019 PY - 2019 VL - 1 IS - 1 SP - 93 EP - 116 KW - Religion KW - Cinema KW - Religious Cinema KW - Youth KW - The gold and The Copper DO - N2 - The transmission of values in a country like Iran, which has a society and political system based on religion, has a twofold importance. Cinema in our country can be improved by localizing it - as one of the most basic and most impressive media of the modern world- based on the Islamic Revolution values and principles. It is evident that the continuous monitoring and evaluation of products in this area becomes more serious. The present study is an attempt to analyze the content of one of the cinematic products and evaluate different dimensions of religiosity used in it. By making use of the five dimension model of religiosity of Glock and Stark (doctrinal, ritual, experiential, cognitive, and the one related to outcome) and by implementing the quantitative content analysis, the thrust of this research is to evaluate the dimensions and categories of religiosity used in the "The Gold and the Copper" movie through a descriptive-analytic approach. The main question of the article is: What dimensions of religiosity lie in this film and how have they been reflected in it? The results illustrate that the ritual and doctrinal dimensions (45/7% and 29/5% respectively) have the highest degree of contribution of the religious categories used in the film, while the cognitive dimension has the lowest degree (7%). UR - https://jcrir.ut.ac.ir/article_72794.html L1 - https://jcrir.ut.ac.ir/article_72794_70ce99b3625de3b3967533072b3f1a24.pdf ER -