Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Satan in Milton and Lewis
Friday, December 4, 2009
Pretending to be an Athiest to Catch an Athiest who is not an Athiest
I love Random Characters named after days of the week...
Thursday, December 3, 2009
1420 in the Shire
Biblical Names in Wise Blood
Enoch Emery - Enoch, father of Methuselah
Genesis 5:4 - Enoch walked with God, and he was not, for God took him.
Asa Hawks - King Asa of Judah
1 Kings 15:9 - In the twentieth year of Jeroboam king of Israel, Asa began to reign over Judah.
Creating His Own Wise Blood
In Case You Were Wondering
And in the words of the genius that is Walker Percy
"What? said the dog."
Will and Allie Sitting in a Tree
Merry Christmas
A Dark Lord to rule over thee.
On the second day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Two Graying Wizards, and a Dark Lord to rule over thee.
On the third day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Three stone-cold trolls, two graying wizards, and a Dark Lord to rule over thee.
On the forth day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Four happy hobbits, three stone cold trolls, two graying wizards, and a Dark Lord to rule over thee.
On the fifth day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Five Pippin blunders, four happy hobbits, three stone-cold trolls, two graying wizards, and a Dark Lord to rule over thee.
On the sixth day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Six names for Strider, five Pippin blunders, four happy hobbits...
On the seventh day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Seven swords a swiping, six names for Strider...
On the eighth day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Eight Elven cloaks, seven swords a swiping...
On the ninth day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Nine Ringwraiths riding, eight Elven cloaks...
On the tenth day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Ten orcs to fight, nine Ringwraiths riding...
On the eleventh day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Elven braids on Gimli, ten orcs to fight...
On the twelfth day of Christmas Tolkien gave to me --
Twelve Rohan Guards, elven braids on Gimli, ten orcs to fight, nine Ringwraiths riding, eight Elven cloaks, seven swords a swiping, six names for Strider, five Pippin blunders, four happy hobbits, three stone-cold trolls, two graying Wizards... and a Dark Lord to rule over thee!
Learn Tengwar (Elvish)
Here it is:
http://www.omniglot.com/writing/tengwar.htm
Tolkien's knowledge of languages never ceases to impress me!
Frodo = Jesus?
In the Bible Christ describes himself as gentle and lowly in heart (Matthew 11:29). Let’s face it, in Middle Earth you don’t get more lowly that a Hobbit of the Shire. Christ is the unexpected redeemer (most Jews expected a conqueror upon His first coming). I’m willing to bet that if you told any human in Middle Earth that it would be the job of a hobbit to unmake the ring of power and destroy Sauron, he would have laughed hysterically. It is the unexpected things that so often benefit us the most.
A Different Take on Descent into Hell
Here's the link:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/0061230871/?tag=mh0b-20&hvadid=151219807&ref=pd_sl_6644pey66h_e
Maybe one of you would like to buy it. As for me, I've done enough descending into hell for one semester.
Fantastic Williams
Because Williams so often swings back and forth from the mundane and everyday to the surreal and fantastic, I was having trouble keeping up. There were moments when I though I knew what was going on, only to have that shattered by some sudden change from normalcy to supernatural.
Interestingly enough however, I actually began to appreciate what Williams did once I read the article I was assigned to present in class. Once I read it, I discovered that the idea of the fantastic is exactly what Williams is driving at in the book. He wants his stories to seem believable like they could in fact happen to you or me.
This is quite different from the rest of his inkling counterparts, especially Tolkien who establishes a realm entirely different from our own that leaves us wanting to play a part but knowing ultimately that we can’t. Williams, on the other hand, leaves the possibility of the fantastic occurring in reality open. It makes his story seem more believable, whether the reader wants it to be or not.
Name Your Band after O'Connor Characters?
Follow this link:
http://www.myspace.com/hazelmotesband
Character Parallels in O'Connor
Consider the two female characters that in a way bookend the novel. At the beginning of the novel, Mrs. Wally Bee Hitchcock is portrayed as a southerner of the old-school that doesn’t quite seem to be in tune with reality. Now compare Mrs. Hitchcock to Hazel’s landlady at the end of the novel who when met with the fact that Hazel is punishing himself, exclaims that no one does that these days and insists to him that there is only one kind of clean.
Then there is the cab driver in the second chapter of Wise Blood. Though a minor character in the story, he does point out something interesting about Hazel. When Hazel asserts that his hat does not mean that he is a preacher, the cab driver quickly retorts that it’s not so much the hat but the look in his face. When we flash forward towards the end of the novel, we see Hazel’s dialogue with the patrolman. When Hazel asks why he pulled him over, the only reason he gives is that he doesn’t like his face. Maybe this is a stretch, but I think O’Connor is saying something with these comments about Hazel’s face. It makes me wonder if the patrolman saw the same thing that the cab driver saw or if by that point in the novel something in Haze’s face had changed so that he wasn’t quite the preacher he was in the middle.
The more I think about it, the more I think that some sort of connection can be drawn between Mrs. Leora Watts and Lily Sabbath. Perhaps I’m reading too much into this relationship as well, but it is interesting that Hazel loses his virginity to Mrs. Watts and Lily desires to lose her virginity to Hazel.
Second Coming of Golf
http://www.cybergolf.com/golf_news/the_second_coming
Golf Courses?
I really did not enjoy this book and have not spent a whole lot of time thinking about it, with it being the end of the semester and all that, but what would be the benefit of beginning a book called The Second Coming at a golf course?
The only thing that I have been able to come up with is that it is the perfect place to begin having flashbacks. Golf is a boring game, regardless of what my husband thinks, and there is nothing to do while golfing but think and trip over bunkers. Will Barrett has every right to trip over his own feet and have flashbacks, golf is something that is meant to be played by the individual. This book is so much a thing that takes place in the mind that it only makes sense that you would have this book begin at a golf course. When playing golf you are not even supposed to talk if anyone is about to swing to hit the ball. Of course! Golf is the perfect game to be playing at the beginning of this very individual centered book. It all makes perfect sense now...sort of.
Strawberries
Enoch Emery. Child in a Man's Body.
Wise Blood was a somewhat bizarre book but was such a fun read. The characters were strange, but not so terribly strange that you could not identify with them at least a little bit.
My favorite character in the book was definitely Enoch Emery. He was a strange little perverted man who possessed an almost lover-like devotion to Hazel Motes. It did not matter how mean Hazel was to him, even to the point of hitting Emery over the head with a rock and leaving him in a field. He just kept coming back, which I thought was an odd mix of pathetic and adorable.
He was not a good man by any stretch of the imagination. He was the creeper from the Sunday paper who peeks around the bushes at work watching women swimming in a pool. But even that is somehow written in a way that does not creep you out as much as makes you giggle a little bit at how very ridiculous a character he is. He is written in as what seems to be a child in a grown man's body. He sits with the rest of the kids waiting to see King Kong only to find out it is a man in an ape suit. He is not the main character in this book but I think he is one of the stars.
Harry Potter is not Jesus
Too many Chirst figures,
I think that far too many authors, secular and Christian, but Christian especially, write too many Christ characters into books. It seems like every book has some type of Christ that can be found within it's pages. I think it makes the books that do the Christ figures well, less powerful just by the sheer amount of people who find it useful for their purposes to throw Christ in some way onto their pages. The story of Christ is a good one, and it translates well into a lot of fiction, but sometimes, it does not.
I personally think that Descent into Hell was one of these books that tried the whole Christ thing and epically failed. Stanhope takes on the struggles of his friend selflessly and willingly, but it makes me ask, so what? Who cares if Stanhope takes this burden on? He even says that the burden is not so great because it has nothing to do with him except for that he is taking it from her. What sacrifice is it to take someone's burden when it does not burden you?
So as a warning, stop writing Christ into books if there really is not a place for Christ to fit into the story. Or else.
Pandemic Preperation, Perelandrian Style
This is a swine flu preparedness page put together by a nature research site called Perelandra Ltd. Enjoy!
http://www.perelandra-ltd.com/Pandemic_Preparation_W1725.cfm
We are not in Narnia anymore.
This is what I was expecting from Perelandra, and it definitely did not deliver. I realize that it was not written for the same reason as Narnia and is not the same type of story that Narnia is. I still had wrong expectations and they truly did get in the way of me enjoying this book.
It started off in an odd way and I think that also went in to making it a weird book. I mean a guy going to some other guys house only to be told that he has to help the other guy into a coffin and send him off into Outer Space with an alien that is in the house but he just cannot see it. Well, sorry Lewis, you lost me with the coffin into Outer Space.
One of the other things that really threw me off was the way of the Perelandrian lady. She was an adult, beautiful by Ransom's estimation, but so very childlike that it just was not believable.
Almost forgot. Ransom's race through the ocean on the back of turtles or whatever they were, not believable. Just saying. Could not suspend my disbelief for this book, probably to my detriment.
Adela 2.0
So, my fear of the coffee shop (mentioned in my earlier Williams post) was turned into somewhat of a success. I coined a term that has been used by Dr. Mitchell as well as some of my fellow classmates every once and a while for the rest of the semester. This term is Adela 2.0, which is probably the best way to describe Wentworth's obsession with his imaginary Adela Hunt. If anyone knows anything about technology, usually the idea of an upgrade, or moving from 1.0-2.0 is a good thing. You know that after a year or so of using your upgraded technology, when you look back at the original it is blank and bland. Go inform Wentworth of this, he cannot for the life of him figure out why he would want to turn his upgrade in for the original.
Descent into Hell isn't lying
Hold on, just had a little thought there. Of course there would not be many good people by any measure in an actual descending into hell. It would be ludicrous to have a bunch of saints sitting around talking about how great they are and how good God is if they are all descending into hell. Now I know that is most likely not what Charles Williams was thinking as he wrote it, but it certainly makes me feel better about hating all of his characters!
Now that I have had this personal discovery of why I think I hate all of the characters, my memory is fading from a red hot hate of this book to a much more gray neutral feeling. Charles Williams, I do not hate your book anymore, now we can be Facebook friends.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Want All Natural Ingredients?
http://www.perelandranatural.com
Two Reasons I Dislike Perelandra
There is a part of me that just doesn’t like Lewis’ Perelandra, and I’m not entirely sure why. Don’t get me wrong, I appreciate the imagination and creativity involved in portraying a utopia such as Perelandra. It’s just the idea of a book revolving around a utopia that gets me. The world is just too perfect and innocent, as personified by the Green Lady. It had a static nature to it that didn’t satisfy me. Yes, I know the book has a plot, but something inside me likes the idea of a fall followed by redemption rather than there be no fall at all. I want there to be a Christ figure. One could argue that Ransom is that figure, but he serves more as one to stop a fall rather than a redeemer from one.
Another reason for my dislike of the novel is my expectation before I read it. Since I had always heard the trilogy referred to as a space trilogy, I expected a story more reminiscent of Star Wars or Star Trek, complete with futuristic technology and intergalactic struggles. Instead, what Lewis gives in Perelandra is just the opposite, a primitive world with no struggle whatsoever. This did actually interest me at first. If anything I was caught off guard, but in the end I was still left wanting some sort of struggle that was more than just the end of the un-man.
Perhaps I want the inhabitants of Perelandra to experience and undergo what we as humans have had to experience as a result of our fall. Without a fall, we would not be able to fully grasp the greatness of God. Similarly, I think Perelandrians’ view of Maleldil is lacking since they lack a fall. Light is much brighter when viewed from a dark perspective. All in all I think my dislike for the story Perelandra is a good thing because the book made me appreciate the redemption found in reality.
Whiskey Priest Music
http://www.myspace.com/whiskeypriest
A Glimmer of Hope
Graham Greene’s The Power and the Glory was interesting to me. To be honest, it took me a while to get into it. It in a way had a post-apocalyptic feel to it as though the world, or at least the Christian world, is on the verge of extinction. Even the fact that it is set in
The bottom line is: I liked The Power and the Glory. The idea of being the last glimmer of hope in a world of darkness really appealed to me. Though quite the imperfect type, I do think the priest can be viewed as a type of Christ, one who carries redemption with him.
Classically Greene
I went looking for pictures of Graham Greene so that I could put a face with the book and here you have it. If you Google Image his name you will see at least half a dozen pictures that look like they are in exactly the same position, he is just in different clothes. Apparently, this is the classic Greene pose. He definitely looks like a thinker!
The Power and The Priest's Evil Daughter
No one likes to see a lonely little girl. Least of all, me. Not much from this book has stayed with me this long, but that surely has. The Whiskey Priest's poor daughter who did nothing to deserve what she was living, but because of her father's sins is paying a dear price. Knowing that her mother and father are both ashamed of her because of what she stemmed from is just painful to read.
So many times our actions leave behind things and people that may resemble the Priest's daughter. Greene probably did not pluck her character out of the clouds. His writing of the character of Brigitta is something that he likely saw on a daily basis, much the same way that we do.
To a certain extent, I think that Brigitta is taken as a somewhat humorous character, very silly in some of the things that she says and the actions that she does, but I think that she is also a character that is not a product of her choosing.
G.K. Chesterton's Quotable Moments
"Misers get up early in the morning; and burglars, I am informed, get up the night before." - Tremendous Trifles.
http://chesterton.org/acs/quotes.htm
This is definitely a site to at least skim through. Some of them will give you a little smile here at finals week!
The Start of the End
So often we are just like these policemen, we make decisions that we think are appropriate to the group of people that we are in league with. Sometimes the decisions that we make are such that all they do is keep everyone socially comfortable Sometimes these decisions are similar to those within The Man Who was Thursday, in that they keep everyone locked up in fear and lies. Let's all think about this book the next time we go to make a decision that will only keep us and those around us from seeing what's really going on. I don't want to be a policeman anarchist.
Music and Wise Blood
Namarie
Wise Blood character Analysis . . . I hate most of them
Saruman the White,,, Pathetic
Dopplegangers are all around us
The Dark Tower (Book four in the Space Trilogy)
The Evil of Imagination
GK Cherterton and Guinness
Revolt is Revolting
The Apology
The Good in Evil
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Our Axis Tilted.
C.S. Lewis has been influential in my Christian growth from the time I was eight years old. I suppose that is why it has been so difficult for me to write on him, for his writing has helped shape me into who I am today. I learned something new about Lewis, however, when we were studying Perelandra. I will attempt, here in my last blog, to do justice to one of my favorite authors of all time. This new understanding in a way ties this whole semester together...
When I hear the title Perelandra, one instance - to me, one of the most amazing in the entire trilogy - that rings through my mind in found in the beginning. When Lewis, the self-named friend of Ransom, enters the house, he encounters the Supernatural. In the presence of something otherworldy and mysterious, someone totally outside of his understanding, his very perspective is altered.
What one actually felt at the moment was that the column of light was vertical but the floor was not horizontal - the whole room seemed to have heeled over as if it were on board ship. The impression, however produced, was that this creature had reference to some horizontal, to some whole system of directions, based outside the Earth, and that its mere presence imposed that alien system on me and abolished the terrestrial horizontal...it was...
...profoundly disturbing. It would not fit into our categories...
This is the realm the great Christian authors of the 20th Century beckon us to enter.
G.K. Chesterton did it through the Absurd.
Graham Greene finds Grace in Despair.
Charles Williams displayed the Fantastic.
C.S. Lewis shows us the horror of the Terrible Good.
J.R.R. Tolkien tells a Myth to call us to Truth.
Flannery O'Connor gives the Grotesque.
Walker Percy portrays the Mystery of the Unspeakable.
All used distortion; all show us our world, our society, our faith, and our own souls, through forcing us to enter into a completely new horizontal. They cause us to face the Divine and have our own perceptions destroyed. We are left disillusioned, unbalanced, and tilted off of our axis. We realize that it is we ourselves that are off-centered. In the face of the never-changing, unexplainable Truth, His vertical brings us to an entire new existence of being. We cannot be the same after encountering Him.
We cannot be the same after reading authors such as these.
They portray GOD in ways that do not fit into our categories.
We are left disturbed...exactly where we should be.