Light and dark in The Golden CompassAn upcoming children's film, The Golden Compass, is based on a trilogy which is highly critical of Christianity. Around London at the moment you can see double-decker buses carrying what we in the trade call a "superside" (a poster along the nearside of the top deck of the bus) advertising the upcoming film The Golden Compass. For reasons unexplained -- and which Philip Pullman on his site says he lacked the clout to resist at the time it happened -- this was the title which an American editor gave to the first book in the trilogy His Dark Materials, a book known in the original English as Northern Lights. Since the film version was made in Hollywood, the reprinted British editions of the book are clumsily trying to include both titles on the front cover to tie in with the film.
For the purposes of international readership, I shall use the name Golden Compass throughout this article, although I'm aware that, for example, in Spain the title is Las Luces del Norte while in Latin America it is La Brújula de Oro! The three books in question: The Golden Compass, The Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass have won prestigious awards, including the Whitbread and Carnegie and recently even the Carnegie of Carnegies. In a nationwide survey here in Britain under the banner "The Big Read", Pullman's work came in third out of hundreds of books voted for by the public, falling behind only those titans of popular literature Pride and Prejudice and The Lord of the Rings, and coming in several places ahead of the highest-rated Harry Potter book. There has even been a seven-hour long production at the National Theatre.
The books are undeniably popular, then, which suggests that they reach out to something deep-seated in readers young and old. (The Whitbread Prize was in the overall category, the first time this category has been won by an ostensibly children's book). But concerns have been expressed by Christians in particular about the fact that the books are anti-Christian and anti-religious in general, as well as fostering a somewhat precocious relationship among two just-adolescents. So what is there in the books to get excited about? And is there anything for parents and educators to worry about? In a moment we'll attempt the almost impossible task of summarising in just one paragraph the plot and significant characters of the 1250 pages in the trilogy. But first, a précis of what I'm going to say below: the three books provide a tremendously imaginative epic, very human despite some of the fantasy-inspired creatures within. They touch on issues close to people's hearts: the fate of the world, the origins of man, what happens after death, and the love between men and women. They uphold and encourage a range of virtues, although perhaps they overemphasise the role of physical love. But they are heavily coloured by the author's avowed disdain for organised religion, and in particular for the Catholic Church. If you share his distaste, or are indifferent, I imagine you'll think the books are well worth reading and that the powers of evil might as well be the Church as anyone else. If, on the other hand, you think the author is one-sidedly portraying the institution of the Church and religious people in general as self-serving or naive, deceived or deceiving, then you'll probably admire the books' epic scope but ultimately find them flawed and bitter. Two youngsters in multiple worlds For those who know nothing whatsoever of the books, the important thing is that the overarching story is written on a grand scale, bridging multiple worlds. It involves two young protagonists who alone can save everything. They're aided and thwarted by realistic and fantastical characters alike, including Lyra's own parents, the most morally complex characters in the books. The youngsters have to grow in skill and in stature and virtue as they move towards their goal, even though they're not really sure what it is. At this level, and for many people I imagine the book simply operates at this level, it's not at all hard to see what appeals. So what's all the fuss about? Why are Christians concerned? And why isn't anyone else? Well, in the overview above, the thing I've not spelt out is this. There is a thick black line down the middle of the book. On one side of this line are characters who are sympathetic, virtuous, loyal, cheerful, brave, heroic, faithful. On the other side are self-serving, power-seeking, conniving, deceptive rogues. There's nothing terribly new in that: "Harry Potter" arguably takes much the same approach, as does "The Lord of the Rings". It's the stuff of the mytho-epic story. The difference here is that, without exception, those on the side of darkness are agents of the Church or of what passes for God in Pullman's universe. And conversely there is not one single person of a religious bent, who displays any virtue, any sign of goodness whatsoever. A chilling view of God Is this a surprise? Not really. Pullman himself on his site, says: "I don't know whether there's a God or not. Nobody does, no matter what they say. I think it's perfectly possible to explain how the universe came about without bringing God into it, but I don't know everything, and there may well be a God somewhere, hiding away." Well, that is an honest statement of a position: let us call it a fundamental agnosticism. And there's nothing wrong with that. I'm sure Mr Pullman will have engaged in discussions with non-agnostic friends over the validity of his position. But he doesn't stop there. "Actually, if he is keeping out of sight, it's because he's ashamed of his followers and all the cruelty and ignorance they're responsible for promoting in his name. If I were him, I'd want nothing to do with them." And now we've moved out of the arena where people who hold different views on the question of God can engage in healthy debate and into a battle of words. Pullman's not anti-God, as such. He just thinks that anyone who's pro-God has got it wrong and is doing the wrong thing. This is a view endorsed or echoed by most of the sympathetic characters in the books. John Parry, to take one example, has been lost in Lyra's world for 10 years, hasn't seen his wife in all that time, yet has remained faithful to her in spite of the powerful advances of a witch. He's just braved a snowstorm in a hot air balloon and fought off a troop of mercenaries to reach the owner of the Subtle Knife, who turns out to be the son he's hardly met. You could hardly imagine more of a hero. The advice he gives: "We've had nothing but lies and propaganda and cruelty and deceit for all the thousands of years of human history. It's time we started again..." as he encourages Will to take the knife to Lord Asriel in his fight to destroy The Authority and build the Republic of Heaven here on Earth. In an interview reproduced on YouTube, Pullman is asked what his agenda is, and what he expects young people to get from his book. And his answer sounds reasonable enough. He's "telling a story", hoping that people will "think about things" after reading the book. The books celebrate "qualities such as kindness, and love, and courage, and courtesy too, and intellectual curiosity" and attacks "cold-heartedness, tyranny, closed-mindedness, cruelty". Can't really argue with that, can you? Except that it's not so simple. In the course of that particular interview, he very carefully skirts round exactly whom he finds responsible for the qualities we are to attack. But the book makes it clear that it's the religious institutions who are responsible for all these things. And for nothing good. Reviving hoary prejudices So the combined effect of 2,000 years of Christianity (there's absolutely no reference to any other world religion in any of the books) is nothing but scheming cardinals with torture chambers, ready to send out a priest-assassin having absolved him pre-emptively of the sin he is about to commit? No question of art, culture, philosophy? No mention of the centuries of self-giving by religious orders caring and educating? (The only religious in the book is a former nun who has rejected her vocation and her faith). No word on the social work the Church has undertaken the world over? "If the cap fits..." some critics might say. But does the cap fit? Most readers will never know, because they'll implicitly believe what the noble and attractive characters tell them, and despise the position represented by the rest. Of course, you could argue that the Church of Lyra's world is not the Catholic Church of ours, although it's clearly intended to present itself as such in the grotesque caricature which English Protestantism has spent so many years nurturing. Furthermore, the "Authority" it worships is no God but an aged and infirm angel, lost in the final battle when its angel carriers drop the litter in which it is being carried. The reality of a Creator God is left quietly to one side by the closest thing to a morally neutral character: King Ogunwe, an African commander allied to Lord Asriel. In the course of an explanation about the Angels, he says "It shocked some of us to learn that The Authority is not the creator. There may or may not be a creator: we don't know." Instead, it's the Dust of Lyra's world, the elementary particles of Dark Matter, which constitute the self-aware basis for all sentient life. Where they come from is never explained, but their role is a central plot device. What might have been
There are other aspects which might be of concern to parents, especially Christians. You can read my own notes on the series at goodtoread.org. I doubt that anyone would claim that the books are flawless, and certainly not Pullman himself, but they're certainly very attractive. In the course of preparing this article, I reread all three books, read through the material on his own and other websites, and heard recordings from interviews he's given. And I find myself firmly in agreement with a lot of what he says. He gives the impression of a down-to-earth modesty and encourages reading and a broadness of spirit. He's keen to tell a story which will leave his readers thinking about the deeper things of life, about what's right and what's wrong, and about virtue. And I can't argue with that. The saddest thing is that this could have been a different series and just as attractive. I believe that many of the people complaining about the books would find themselves in total agreement with much of what Pullman himself believes. Or, at least, would be willing to consider an honest and open debate on the issue. But his sincerely-held, and I'm afraid to say bitterly-held, belief seems to be that the institutions of the Church which some hold to be the arbiters and promoters of truth and justice here on Earth are exactly the opposite. And that is the story he's telling. Tim Golden is a computer programmer in London. He also is the editor of the Good-to-Read website. |
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Comments (24)
Andrea said...well my comment for that as a first year student...is that its up for the reader or the watcher of this story to understand the story well and to know what side would she/ he believe.
Philippines | Tuesday, 27 November 2007 at 9:55 pm
David Page said...The Catholic Church is an organization that includes both Mother Teresa and the Magdalene Laundries, both Caritas and the Duplessis Orphans. I see it not as evil, but as Schizophrenic. I’m just starting The Golden Compass, so I’ll post again in about a week.
United States | Tuesday, 27 November 2007 at 10:30 pm
That Lesbian Down The Street said...I suppose it’s a fair review. Myself, I read and liked the books, though I’m awaiting the movie with a hint of disdain.
Overall, a nice critique, I think. Mr. Golden makes his position clear without outright bashing the book; and that’s what most reviews in todays world lack, in my opinion.
I really liked the books, though, so I’d advocate reading them for yourself. (and definitely don’t let the movie color you view on the books.)
Have a nice day, all^^
-- | Wednesday, 28 November 2007 at 11:58 pm
Straight Up the Road said...If pullman is already leaning towards the importance of human virutes, it will only be a matter of time till he discovers the complementary and deeper level of the supernatural virtues such as Faith,Hope and Love...(I hope)
-- | Thursday, 29 November 2007 at 3:48 pm
MAS said...I’ve been warned to keep children away from this film. It may turn them against God. Some say it will have a destructive influence on impressionable young minds.
United States | Saturday, 1 December 2007 at 4:32 am
Ian said...I feel the same way about this series as I do about the “Dark is Rising” series. A great epic fantasy true. But ultimately unfulfilling, unsatisfying. I just re-read “The Dark is Rising” after recalling fond memories from my school days - prompted by the upcoming film (sad to say the trailer makes it look like cheap knock-off rubbish though). While I was absolutely entranced as a teenager, it now left me a bit cold. It contains the same kind of mildly cynical view of the world that pulls away at our traditional ideas of an ultimate truth and purpose while not actually presenting anything as an alternative. Not a little nihilistic at the end of the day. The kind of fiction that just adds to the momentum (in young people’s minds - and also maybe the not-so-young) of the question “What’s the point of it all? Nothing? So why not just end it...?”
New Zealand | Sunday, 2 December 2007 at 6:17 pm
David Kolf said...I don’t know how many dupes I know that went to see The Da Vinci Code just because they wanted to “see for themselves what everyone was talking about”. Bovine, driven by big-budget marketing teams. So what if you miss one?
Japan | Sunday, 2 December 2007 at 6:47 pm
Tim Roberts said...I haven’t read the books, and don’t intend to. They’re clearly an excellent read - my wife has read them, and confirms this - so why am I depriving myself of this treat? Because I dislike the world view, and distrust the judgement of the writer. Of course, it’s fiction - the Magisterium isn’t the Church, so why am I fussed? But the writer is drawing parallels - they are there in his mind, and we are invited to see and adopt them. Indeed, they impose themselves, on those not armed against them. So what the writer says - truthfully - about the Magisterium, its servants and agents, he is in a manner asserting - falsely - about the Church and its members. This is a very effective mode of attack - how do you rebut it?
The other reason for my distrusting his judgement is that he loathes C.S. Lewis’s books (to be fair, literary criticism apart, the value of which he acknowledges), and for me Lewis is a hero.
United Kingdom | Sunday, 2 December 2007 at 8:55 pm
JohnK said...A technically “good” story, but its hateful philosophy is hardly original:
“As is well known, priests are the most evil of enemies—but why? Because they are the most powerless. From their powerlessness, their hate grows into something immense and terrifying, to the most spiritual and most poisonous manifestations. Those who have been the greatest haters in world history and the most spiritually rich haters have always been the priests—in comparison with the spirit of priestly revenge all the remaining spirits are, in general, hardly worth considering.
“In opposition to the aristocratic value equations (good = noble = powerful = beautiful = fortunate = loved by god), the Jews, with a consistency inspiring fear, dared to reverse it and to hang on to that with the teeth of the most profound hatred (the hatred of the powerless), that is, to “only those who suffer are good; the poor, the powerless, the low are the only good people; the suffering, those in need, the sick, the ugly are also the only pious people; only they are blessed by God; for them alone there is salvation. By contrast, you privileged and powerful people, you are for all eternity the evil, the cruel, the lecherous, the insatiable, the godless—you will also be the unblessed, the cursed, and the damned for all eternity!
. . . We know who inherited this Judaic transformation of values . . .” (Friedrich Nietzsche, “On the Genealogy of Morals,” Essay 1)
Most people outgrow Nietzsche when they enter adulthood and learn to deal with their fellow human beings as other than stereotypes. The real threat of Pullman’s books is that they make Nietzsche’s poison palatable and broadly disseminate it to children and those who never put childish thoughts behind them.
United States | Sunday, 2 December 2007 at 10:53 pm
Mikhael Keel said...I hope it will turn out well… I wonder if the film would catch the attention of Christians or even those in other religions about all this article talks about with those after the ‘but’s weighing more than its former.
Philippines | Monday, 3 December 2007 at 1:05 am
Carmina said...Thank you for your article it helps me a lot.
Life is too short that I like to choose well things I do in order to make the best of it. So if something doesn’t bring me closer to God I just choose not to waste time on it. In that sense, I choose not to see the “Golden Compass” nor to read the books that inspired such film. I have better things to watch and to read.
Merry Christmas to all!
Switzerland | Monday, 3 December 2007 at 6:50 pm
Nicholas said...Nothing new again, just like in the Da Vinci Code, conjure up anything that goes against/contradicts the normal and you are “in the money”! People generally prefer things that they are not used to, going against the norm!
However, all hope is not lost, for like the Catholicism under attack due to its wrongly assumed “monotony”, people will, with time, get used to “different views” expressed in the likes of The Golden Compass, Da Vinci Code et al!
That is, the same weapon used against Catholicism will be the same to destroy them!
Merry Xmas to U’ll
United Kingdom | Tuesday, 4 December 2007 at 8:00 am
Ikenna said...even though Pullman may deny it his “children books” are loaded with a lot of metaphysical insinuations that are beyond childs play. Parents and adults should be wary. It worth noting that, in spite of himself, he relys on the christian cosmology like Tolkien and the others to build his own cosmology as used in the book. A story of a fallen angel who disguises decieved humans as being the creator sounds a lot like christian story of the devil to me.
Nigeria | Wednesday, 5 December 2007 at 8:21 pm
David Page said...Ikenna said: “It worth noting that, in spite of himself, he relys on the christian cosmology”
It’s also worth noting that Christianity relies heavily on the Pagan mythology that preceded it.
United States | Thursday, 6 December 2007 at 2:01 pm
JohnK said...“It’s also worth noting that Christianity relies heavily on the Pagan mythology that preceded it.”
A charge both specious and spurious, and substantively refuted by the works of C.S. Lewis, Ronald Nash, E. O. James, Bruce Metzger, Günter Wagner, and Hugo Rahner, amongst many others.
-- | Thursday, 6 December 2007 at 10:07 pm
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