Monday, September 24, 2007

Let's Try That Again, Shall We?

Sorry, folks. My bad. Here's the post again, with the correct links.

Movies that are "so bad they're good" make their appearance on excuse me, ghidorah via part 2 of our kitsch survey. Fans of Grade Z horror, various exploitation films, plain old psychotronic, and whatever category Hillbillies in a Haunted House falls into will be pleased, I think, especially if they are Christians who have wondered why they love such unlovable films and why they harbor such a warm regard for film giants like Tor Johnson (a gen-yoo-wine film giant, if there ever was one).

There is, after all, a certain feeling which may be expressed as "What happens to me if the Lord returns and finds me sitting here watching Werewolf in a Girls' Dormitory ?" There would appear to be no good reason to grant two hours of precious life to such a film. But then, why the delight? Why the sheer joy of discovery? Why the tender hearted fannish devotion to cult film stars? Hmmmm... Maybe I should run my mouth about this for about an hour and then upload it to iTunes so that others may listen to my ravings! And, in fact, I did just that.

I am hard at work on a new website which will act as an umbrella for various of my little projects including excuse me, ghidorah. It has been difficult to find whatever niche market exists for my book, The Magic Eightball Test: A Christian Defense of Halloween and All Things Spooky, and this new website will, I hope, do the trick. I can't help believing there are thousands of people out there in the fundamentalist and/or evangelical subculture who are inundated with anti-Halloween theologizing, who feel that somehow dumping Halloween and Autumn is tantamount to dumping part of their soul, and who, therefore, go either one way or the other. Either they stick with their particular fortress mentality form of Christianity -- because they love the Lord -- and trash all their pop-cultural pursuits as "the devil's bidness" or they stick with the symbols that speak to them -- because they want to cling to what rings true whether they understand it or not -- and turn their back on churchianity.

Now, how many books do you know which would help somebody out in such a situation? Brother, there ain't any! Except for my own little ink and paper attempt to point out the fallacies of the fundamentalist/evangelical cultural mindset while, at the same time, totally affirming orthodox, historic, supernatural Christianity. It doesn't have to be "God or Godzilla". Brother, it can be "God and Godzilla"! In fact, our pop-cultural symbols speak to us because they bring the moral imagination to life -- and the moral imagination enriches our sense of what is at stake as powers and principalities duke it out in our lives. "God and Godzilla" is simply better, because faith enriched by imagination is better.

If you see what I mean.

So, anyhow, the new website is ChristianHalloweenFan.com. It will be up sometime around the first of October.

Of course, my book is always available at Amazon and other fine internet booksellers. Though I recommend purchasing it directly from lulu.com -- it gets printed by a different printing company in that case and I think the quality is better.

Lastly, I do apologize for a faint hissing which pops in and out during the podcast. I am experimenting with my microphone. I will endeavor to correct that problem and upload a revamped version of the same podcast. But don't let that keep you from listening to it ASAP. It's not that noticeable. Right click or control click the title to this post (above) to download the podcast or head over to iTunes which should be updated to include this addition pretty soon.

NEW EPISODE - Kitsch Part Deux


Movies that are "so bad they're good" make their appearance on excuse me, ghidorah via part 2 of our kitsch survey. Fans of Grade Z horror, various exploitation films, plain old psychotronic, and whatever category Hillbillies in a Haunted House falls into will be pleased, I think, especially if they are Christians who have wondered why they love such unlovable films and why they harbor such a warm regard for film giants like Tor Johnson (a gen-yoo-wine film giant, if there ever was one).

There is, after all, a certain feeling which may be expressed as "What happens to me if the Lord returns and finds me sitting here watching Werewolf in a Girls' Dormitory ?" There would appear to be no good reason to grant two hours of precious life to such a film. But then, why the delight? Why the sheer joy of discovery? Why the tender hearted fannish devotion to cult film stars? Hmmmm... Maybe I should run my mouth about this for about an hour and then upload it to iTunes so that others may listen to my ravings! And, in fact, I did just that.

I am hard at work on a new website which will act as an umbrella for various of my little projects including excuse me, ghidorah. It has been difficult to find whatever niche market exists for my book, The Magic Eightball Test: A Christian Defense of Halloween and All Things Spooky, and this new website will, I hope, do the trick. I can't help believing there are thousands of people out there in the fundamentalist and/or evangelical subculture who are inundated with anti-Halloween theologizing, who feel that somehow dumping Halloween and Autumn is tantamount to dumping part of their soul, and who, therefore, go either one way or the other. Either they stick with their particular fortress mentality form of Christianity -- because they love the Lord -- and trash all their pop-cultural pursuits as "the devil's bidness" or they stick with the symbols that speak to them -- because they want to cling to what rings true whether they understand it or not -- and turn their back on churchianity.

Now, how many books do you know which would help somebody out in such a situation? Brother, there ain't any! Except for my own little ink and paper attempt to point out the fallacies of the fundamentalist/evangelical cultural mindset while, at the same time, totally affirming orthodox, historic, supernatural Christianity. It doesn't have to be "God or Godzilla". Brother, it can be "God and Godzilla"! In fact, our pop-cultural symbols speak to us because they bring the moral imagination to life -- and the moral imagination enriches our sense of what is at stake as powers and principalities duke it out in our lives. "God and Godzilla" is simply better, because faith enriched by imagination is better.

If you see what I mean.

So, anyhow, the new website is ChristianHalloweenFan.com. It will be up sometime around the first of October.

Of course, my book is always available at Amazon and other fine internet booksellers. Though I recommend purchasing it directly from lulu.com -- it gets printed by a different printing company in that case and I think the quality is better.

Lastly, I do apologize for a faint hissing which pops in and out during the podcast. I am experimenting with my microphone. I will endeavor to correct that problem and upload a revamped version of the same podcast. But don't let that keep you from listening to it ASAP. It's not that noticeable. Right click or control click the title to this post (above) to download the podcast or head over to iTunes which should be updated to include this addition pretty soon.

Saturday, September 01, 2007

Defending Harry


Some friends of mine and I were commenting on a Harry Potter related article by Fr. Alfonso Aguilar (over at the National Catholic Register), so I thought I would post those same comments here -- by way of adding my two cents. If you want to read Fr. Aguilar's take on Rowling's series, take a whack at this link. If you are fascinated by Ben Caldwell's cartoon of Ginny, Colin Creevy, Oliver Wood and Lupin visit Caldwell's awesome site. As for my two cents, here you go:

I appreciate the levelheaded approach Fr. Aguilar has attempted. I especially appreciate his actually having read each and every book in the series! However, his logic falls apart when he insists the series is essentially pantheistic and that Harry's progress as a wizarding student depends on his grasp on some inner illumination -- so that one finds a sort of gnosticism behind the magic.

For example, Fr. Aguilar writes:

"Consider now the concept of man implicit in J.K. Rowling’s narrative. Humans, called 'muggles,' are divided into three categories: ordinary 'muggles' with no magical power who disdain the magic world (the despicable Dursley family); 'muggles' who fancy the magic world but cannot reach it (Hermione Granger’s parents); and the witches and wizards.

"The ideal is, no doubt, to become a good witch or wizard. What’s the way? Train yourself to look into yourself to find the magical powers within you.

"Good training requires masters who help make you aware of the magical ('divine') forces in your spirit. These are the professors at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Albus Dumbledore, the school headmaster, is the main spiritual guide."

That's just silly. The magical forces in question are not presented as in some sense "divine" and Albus Dumbledore is hardly a spiritual guide. He helps Harry to deal with moral challenges, true. But so far as knowledge of magic is concerned, his assistance is actually rather minimal. As for the other instructors at Hogwarts, they seem to provide the same matter-of-fact prosaic recitation of facts that one might find in a muggle classroom during Social Studies. My point is: magic is interesting, exciting, and fun in the Potter books. It is also hilariously mundane. Hermione is not a superior student because she has a greater intuitive grasp of some mystical inner light. She's a better student because she actually reads the textbooks! She pursues subjects beyond the bare minimum reading requirements. She would rather read "Hogwarts: A History" than watch Quidditch.

As in the real world, Hermoine's intelligence is shown in her ability to integrate this knowledge, to make connections between the various subjects. The pattern here is that of a liberal education, not an initiation into some mystical path thru the self. In fact, that's one of the jokes built into the series -- that something like magic, which one might assume would be crammed to the gills with mysticism, is no different from Geography or Social Studies. That's why it's funny when Ron and Harry cram for a test or when Professor Trelawny tries to force matters into a floridly mystical mold.

I can imagine the sort of look you might get if you told Professor McGonnigle she was a "spiritual guide"!

Of course, there are such things as intuition, passion and emotion. Hermione is surpassed by Harry at times when these factors come into play. Hermione, for example, has trouble casting a compelling patronus spell. Harry possesses a better integration of head and heart. But that is hardly Gnosticism.

I think that while Fr. Aguilar veers off-course a comment made by my wife, Susan, begins to look all the more on target: one is either born a wizard or not and this very basic ingredient in the series removes the element of esotericism one might normally associate with magic. Fr. Aguilar makes it sound as though anyone can be a wizard if they are shown how to tap into their inner light. This simply is not true. Lily's sister, Petunia, simply cannot be a wizard no matter how much she might wish it. That's part of her bitterness toward Harry. Likewise, Crabbe and Goyle ARE wizards - and it ain't due to their sensitivity to inner illumination or to hidden knowledge attained thru arcane, mysterious rites. We're talking Crabbe and Goyle here, people.

The wizarding world is hidden, but for practical reasons: witch hunts and heresy trials and the sort of tragedy that befell Dumbledore's sister.

Also, Fr. Aguilar says this:

"In Potter’s world, the divine is, in my opinion, pantheistic. The only transcendent reality that exists is (white) magic. A fictional story, of course, does not have to present the Christian truths nor the Christian God. The question is whether or not there is room for a Christian God in the story. In Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, God does not show up, yet he may fit in the background as the one who gave Gandalf certain powers and a new life. Gandalf did not get them by himself.

"Not so with Harry Potter.

"Once the magic reigns as the ultimate level of reality, a personal God cannot fit in. Magical powers form the highest aspiration."

That is simply ridiculous. The existence of an afterlife is very plain in the Potter books. That is (quite literally) a trancendent reality and it pertains to muggles and wizards alike. Magic is not "the ultimate level of reality". Voldemort's ultimate condition makes it very clear that magic is subordinate to something far greater.

In fact, magic is in no way presented as a kind of transcendent reality or even as a "summum bonum". For wizards, magic is simply a part of mundane reality on a par with muggles and technology. Magical powers do not "form the highest aspiration" -- people don't "aspire" toward magical powers in the Potter books. You've either got it or you don't. And even if it were possible for a character to "aspire" in such a way -- does this mean one cannot desire magic powers and simultaneously desire the beatific vision? Both hopes could exist in a story without cancelling each other out. At any rate, the existence of magic in the Potter series does not supercede or rule out the existence of a personal God. That doesn't even make sense. This guy teaches philosophy?

Granted, character details which might provide a glimpse into, say, Hermione's faith would be nice -- Hermione saying her prayers, Hermione lugging a "Strong's Exhaustive Concordance" around along with that copy of "Hogwarts: A History", Hermione giving Ron and Harry a stern reprimand with quotes from her Extreme Teen Challenge Bible, Hermione leaving Keith Green tracts in the Gryffindor common room. But I don't find myself disappointed with the Three Investigators mysteries because we never see Jupiter Jones take on the role of C.S. Lewis style apologist or impatient with Nancy Drew because she doesn't seem to have a Quiet Time.