Pros: great storytelling, rich characters, exciting pace of plot
Cons: criticism of the book and three pages of theological ramblings are silly
The Bottom Line: Don't believe the right wing religious criticism. Read the book yourself. It's well written, and not at all promoting atheism. (And so what if it did?)
jcgrow's Full Review: Philip Pullman and Wtw Repertory - The Golden Comp...
The Religious Debate
Right wing Christian organizations are busy sending around an email declaring that good Christians must not go to see the movie The Golden Compass or to read the book upon which it is based. Why? They say that the book promotes atheism.
Thats ignorant nonsense. The Golden Compass does not promote atheism. I know. Ive read the book.
The Golden Compass is not an atheist book because, for all of its trappings of fantasy, it is founded in a Christian perspective.
From that Christian perspective, The Golden Compass plays around with some assumptions of the Christian religion, but in doing so, it only really ever achieves heresy. After all, a Christian idea thats reconsidered is still at base a Christian idea. Its not an atheist idea.
Atheism is not just rebellion against orthodox Christian ideas, or rejection of the authority of Christian church organizations. Such rebellion and rejection remains Christian, just as Martin Luthers followers remained Christian, though they rejected the authority and ideas of the Roman Catholic Church.
The Golden Compass is like a new Protestant Reformation, reworking Christianity, but not truly stepping away from it.
Atheism is simply life without belief in gods. It isnt rebellion against Christianity. Atheism is completely outside of Christianity, and other religions like it. Atheism leaves religions such as Christianity behind, and doesnt concern itself with them, except in as much as atheists defend their right to live outside of the ideas of religion.
Maybe Philip Pullman meant to write a book of atheist ideas. Maybe thats not what he meant to do at all.
However, whatever Philip Pullman meant to do, he did not write a book that promotes atheism. For most of The Golden Compass, there arent any religious ideas at all.
In the last few pages, one character engages in semi-coherent ramblings about Adam and Eve and The Garden of Eden, suggesting that the story is in some sense true. That places The Golden Compass within Christianity, not outside of it. The many supernatural beings and magical happenings throughout the book also lend it a spiritual character that is not at all typical of atheism.
Perhaps youve been told that The Golden Compass promotes atheism, but if you havent read the book, you dont really know that.
Ive read The Golden Compass, and Im telling you that from what Ive read, the book is not atheist, and doesnt promote atheism. For anyone to be provoked into becoming atheist by reading The Golden Compass would be extremely unlikely. Thats just not what the book is about.
Dont believe me? Thats your right - if youve read the book yourself, and know what youre talking about. If youre just relying on the word of a religious group to tell you what the book is about, then you dont really know what The Golden Compass is about.
The Quality Of The Story
The Golden Compass is a wonderfully written book, except for the few pages in which the author, Philip Pullman, tries to make some sort of link between his story and Judeo-Christian theology, invoking the story of Adam and Eve with adolescent psychological development and elementary particles of physics.
These couple of pages are absolute nonsense, and just don't make any logical sense. There's a great deal of potential in Pullman's concepts of alternate realities, in the sense of string theories speculations, but these concepts are left undeveloped, and the attempt to link them to Christian mythology comes off as just plain silly.
Forget these 2 to 3 pages, and follow the story for its own sake. It's worth the trip.
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