His Dark Materials
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Satanic?
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Lizzy
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Feb 18, 2008 04:39PM

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I think any believer of the omnipotent Jewish God or omnipotent Christian God or omnipotent Muslim God who gets offended by a young adult fantasy novel about a girl who kills a god is missing the point of having belief in an immortal god in the first place.
What's the fun in believing in a kick-ass divine being if you're going to get your knickers in a twist when somebody writes a book where somebody "kills" a god?
What's the fun in believing in a kick-ass divine being if you're going to get your knickers in a twist when somebody writes a book where somebody "kills" a god?

People get all worried that this book is going to make their children not believe in God or change what they believe already--It's a fictional story! Besides the God in his book isn't divine at all, he's old and weak!
What religion is there on this earth where God is weak and old and could actually be killed??
Reading these books would not likely be harmful to anyone, let alone children. Children are young human beings with developing minds and for the most part can read a book and accept that not all content is absolute truth and/or reality.
What is forbidden, perhaps, is the stimulus of thought. Perhaps the fear of what those young minds might come up with on their own--and that those thoughts might differ from their own--this is terrifying to some.
To read a book and encounter ideas not often presented in your immediate environment, or to learn about another culture, or to enter a fantasy world where unimaginable and impossible things happen; this is a beautiful thing that brings us back to books time and time again. If a child reads this series and it brings questions of the faith into which they were born, then the opportunity for discussion arises. I do not see how this can be harmful, and am not clear on the definition of harmful is in this case.
And frankly, at this point, any discouragment against reading is evil. From comic books to the classics, let the children feed their brains!
What is forbidden, perhaps, is the stimulus of thought. Perhaps the fear of what those young minds might come up with on their own--and that those thoughts might differ from their own--this is terrifying to some.
To read a book and encounter ideas not often presented in your immediate environment, or to learn about another culture, or to enter a fantasy world where unimaginable and impossible things happen; this is a beautiful thing that brings us back to books time and time again. If a child reads this series and it brings questions of the faith into which they were born, then the opportunity for discussion arises. I do not see how this can be harmful, and am not clear on the definition of harmful is in this case.
And frankly, at this point, any discouragment against reading is evil. From comic books to the classics, let the children feed their brains!


Excellent point!!!
With regards to the argument of whether the fact that Lyra killing the Authority makes this book Satanic:
1. I would like to point out that she didn't intentionally kill the Authority, although I suppose that is beside the point!
2. Would you consider Nietzche to be Satanic? I mean he too talks blatantly about the death of God!


Except for the part where children do not know the difference between reality and fantasy. Young children might have a problem with this but most likely they can not read. Or would not be able to read at this level.
I never read anything by Friedrich Nietzsche but I doubt that he worships Satan. I have never taken philosophy. Being an atheist is not the same as being a Satanist.


In fact, I think a message can be that while faith and ideals of a faith may remain absolute (be it Christianity or anything else), the human systems constructed to support and/or promote faith-based ideas can become corrupt and push more controversial ideals in the name of faith. One example from this triology is the practise of cutting. A sort of forced soul removal, for the sake of some spiritual, scientific goal. They targeted a vulnerable population and kidnapped children living in the lower eschelons of the hierarchical society of their world.
Rather, it is important to have a sense of personal ethics and mores which adhere to the general tenets put forth in most of the major religions (e.g. thou shalt not kill, treat others as you would be treated yourself) and also which extends to scientific experimentation and research. A sense of right and wrong comes from personal experience and teachings. Preventing children from reading certain books does not advance this process in our youth.
Such ideas do have a place in literature, and for children who are at the appropriate reading level I do not feel this should be on a restricted or banned reading list.
Rather, it is important to have a sense of personal ethics and mores which adhere to the general tenets put forth in most of the major religions (e.g. thou shalt not kill, treat others as you would be treated yourself) and also which extends to scientific experimentation and research. A sense of right and wrong comes from personal experience and teachings. Preventing children from reading certain books does not advance this process in our youth.
Such ideas do have a place in literature, and for children who are at the appropriate reading level I do not feel this should be on a restricted or banned reading list.

His personal religion or lack thereof has NOTHING to do with a little girl and a compass..




Secondly - Satanic: Atheism, or anti-christianity particularly, are considered Satanic in root, as Satan has pulled the atheistic mind away from God. This is not my belief, but it is the belief of many christians.
Now on to the book:
This trilogy is an evisceration of christianity. Let us not be pleasant or deluded about this. The entire structure of the plot leads not to the death of the authority but to the OVERTURNING of the knowledge myth. Adam and Eve were not wrong to eat from the Tree of Knowledge, the serpent is not satan but Wisdom itself. The serpent, being wisdom, understands that knowledge contains all the beauty of joy and sadness, all the sweetness and devestation of Love, the duality of good and evil - all are contained in knowledge. Therefore Adam and Eve, by eating of the tree are GROWING UP.
This is the central tenet of the book. This is what Mrs. Coulter is trying to "cut" away. This is Lyra's mission. Not to kill God, but to overturn the terrible interpretation of the tree of knowledge. When she and will come together they are embracing the beauty and love that they can only feel if they GROW UP.
The series is the ultimate adolescent novel trilogy. It is about embracing adulthood, it is about embracing knowledge. It is about love and beauty, and the eternal. It is very religious.
but make no mistake - it is about the destruction of Christianity's core values of the Fall of man, of the morally corrupt church, of the demonization of sexuality. All these things must fall if we see the Tree of Knowledge and the Serpent as the OPENING of man rather then the FALL of man.
Oddly enough, the former is roughly how Judaism sees the tree and the serpent. I don't know enough about islam to comment about its vision of the tree and the serpent.
peace.

Maybe these books are trying to destroy Catholicism's core values, but ours are just fine.

and you are correct, the attack is more aimed at european christianity. Pullman has said in interviews that much of his material for the series is in parrallel with Milton's Paradise Lost, but drawing different conclusions then Milton of course.
cheers.

This is a book in the FANTASTY it is not reality. If you want to bash Christianity please take this up on a book that is about religion. Not a fun children's book. I find this to be offensive.

I am sorry you are offended, but you have completely missed the point. Write a letter to Philip Pullman if you do not believe me.
Here is an example of a fantasy: Lord of the Rings. i.e. it has no relation to historical/social events of its time or other times. It is a tale out of time and out of our world.
Pullman on the other hand wrote an allegory - a fable of figurative meaning. It is not a literal evisceration of the european church, but a metaphor, an analogy. It conveys it's meaning subtly via alternate quantum realities.
In fact the quantum factor of these books is vastly important to their understanding - one of the worlds that Lyra stumbles into is in fact our own, with a correlative relationship to the events of all the other quantum worlds, but without a Lord Asrael to blow a gaping hole in the veils separating them.
seriously, offended or not, you are missing the power and beauty of these books if you disavow their allegorical content.

By the way I found the books confusing and the though very very muddled. It was a struggle to get through.



I also love the way the story is set within several different worlds and the storylines are very intricately inter-woven without contradicting each other. I find that the book is sort of focusing on the War in Heaven and how it has changed the world as a whole along with all its dimensions. It's also using Dust as a representation of how many people in the world don't have a good friend, so they just keep to themselves and go through depression and insomnia alone, and the world is, in a sense, rotting because of it. Now it seems like finding a person with a friend is rare and strange because it's so hard to trust people these days.
If these books are satanistic at all, it is the fact alone that they "kill" God. I see not how this is satanic at all, if he was suffering inside that little crystal box, then they were doing him a favor by not prolonging his suffering.

As far as being dangerous to children? Give me a child that will read this and understand what it is being said and I will show you a child who can find no danger in a thought experiment. This book is sold as a young adult or children's book but it is not an easy read.
Also, nobody made a fuss about the book until the movie came out. It was like nobody even cared that God was being killed until they could see it on film. I mean to the point where the Catholic school where my mom works owned the book in their library. Then when the movie came out and the Pope spoke out about it (or whatever) they had to pull it off their shelves. Why don't people read books without the movie??
Lastly, IT IS FICTION! It is interesting but did it shake my world? No. Because it's just not real.



So I think the church and not God is the target of this trilogy. Pullman is critical of organized religion and its inablity to foster knowledge, tolerance, and diversity.



I totally agree. It is a good book. It is fiction/fantasy. Not based in reality. If a child can not separate fiction/fantasy from fact they are not old enough to read these books. I guess neither are many adults here too.
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