
We are excited to share a Research Essay Publication entitled;
Grace against the Game: Theological Reflections on Moral Agency and Redemption in Squid Game
by Jonathan James O. Canete, 𝙅𝙤𝙨𝙚𝙥𝙝 𝘽. 𝙌𝙪𝙞𝙣𝙩𝙤, Gregory Ching
Mr. Joseph B. Quinto, PhD, is a faculty member from the BSU-College of Arts and Humanities, Department of English.
Abstract:
“The Netflix series Squid Game has become a global cultural parable of survival, violence, and despair. This article asks: What becomes of grace when compassion is punished and moral agency is distorted by coercive systems? Drawing on Karl Rahner’s anonymous grace, Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s costly grace, and Simone Weil’s theology of affliction and attention, then anchoring these in Johann Baptist Metz’s “dangerous memory” of victims—this study interprets fleeting acts of mercy, friendship, and self-sacrifice as theological interruptions within a world structured for dehumanization. Through close readings of key scenes, such as: Ali’s trust, Ji-yeong’s sacrifice, Sae-byeok’s dignity, and Gi-hun’s refusal to kill, the paper argues that Squid Game reveals grace not as triumph, but as interruption; fragile acts of fidelity that resist nihilism and bear witness to humanity amid violence. Situated within the dialogue between theology and popular culture, this reading treats the series as a secular parable of grace-in-fracture, where divine fidelity is glimpsed in the persistence of compassion under impossible conditions.”
We hope you will explore the key findings of this work and share or cite it to spread knowledge and insights to the wider academic community.
You can find the full publication here: https://online.ucpress.edu/jrpc/article-abstract/doi/10.1525/jrpc.2026.2852767/217391/Grace-against-the-GameTheological-Reflections-on?redirectedFrom=fulltext
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