Mocking God and Celebrating Satan: Parodies and Profanities in Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials
Given its stance against organised religion, it is perhaps not surprising that Philip Pullman’s award-winning trilogy His Dark Materials has, alongside the plaudits and praise, invited controversy and debate. Jacobs ( The Weekly Standard , 2000 ), for instance, views the “anti-Christian” theme in Pu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Children's literature in education 2012-12, Vol.43 (4), p.293-302 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Given its stance against organised religion, it is perhaps not surprising that Philip Pullman’s award-winning trilogy
His Dark Materials
has, alongside the plaudits and praise, invited controversy and debate. Jacobs (
The Weekly Standard
,
2000
), for instance, views the “anti-Christian” theme in Pullman’s work as both misleading and dishonest, whilst Hitchens (
The Mail on Sunday
,
2002
) denounces it as atheistic “propaganda.” Of central concern to these critics, and others, is the impact of Pullman’s heretical understandings on impressionable young readers. I would suggest that such concern implies a somewhat questionable homogenisation of young readers, and fails to recognise the empowering potential residing in Pullman’s text. Indeed, by drawing on Mikhail Bakhtin’s theory of “carnival,” a literary mode which subverts official culture through laughter and role reversals, it can be argued that far from
indoctrinating
the reader or promoting uncontested atheistic understandings, the heretical disruptions and inversions in Pullman’s religious theme encourage an altogether more positive and plural response. |
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ISSN: | 0045-6713 1573-1693 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10583-012-9165-4 |