Ghostly fundamentals
bjorn-are.davidsen@s.televerket.tele.no
bjorn-are.davidsen at s.televerket.tele.no
Mon Oct 10 11:48:03 CET 1994
Being rather heavily religious biased myself (I like it) I will try to make some
fundamental comments on ghosts and fundamentalists.
In general, I think much of the problem is outside the area of "fundamentalist
beliefs supported by the Bible" and very much more into "cultural prejudices
supported by a puritan tradition". This is not made any better by the main
cultural prejudices concerning comics (both in the US and I guess in all of
Scandanivia, at least in Norway), such as
1) They are for children and those in their early teens only
2) They should be sound and harmless and confirm in every part to the
American way of life
3) They can't - and shouldn't if they could - deal with serious issues like
life and death (and what comes after)
Dwight wrote:
>The lady seemed sincerely convinced that if children saw
>witches in popular media like comic books, they would be
>softened up for any Satanist recruiters who came by.
It always puzzles me when someone seems to mean that witches (or other
beings into or of the supernatural) could influence anyone negatively, just
by being shown. Had they been shown as neat and nice ladies I could
have understood it better, however it's long and far between positive
portrayals of witches, ghouls, demons or pagan gods in literature. And
when they are shown as good they seldom convinces anyone, although in
children's literature there has been some nice kid vampires lately, without
vampirism growing much in Norway.
> I exchanged a couple of letters with a fundamentalist Christian fan
>who was extremely upset about pagan goddesses appearing
>in a comic book he wanted to like...
How sad! He wil be missing a lot if not being able to enjoy Sandman, Lord
of The Rings, Silmarillion, the Narnia series, the Dive Comedy, Arabian
Knights or Norwegian Fairy Tales (highly recommended!) to mention but a few
> This is my comic book and what I say goes. And what I say is that
>she's a goddess. I almost hated to disappoint the guy, since he was
>trying so hard to like my modest little funnybook, but I can't please
>everybody.
>And Don Rosa doubtless feels the same way, so there you have it!
Keep on with your godesses! I think every author has the right to make stories
about any kind of character! And that every reader, critic and other author have
just as much right to critisise it (and try to make better stories) when those
characters or stories does not ring "true" or may give a false picture of reality,
paganism, godesses, cats or whatever.
Wilmer wrote:
>As for thefundamentalists who object to supernatural elements in Disney
>comics,they should be forced to watch all the witch cartoons such as Snow
>White and Sleeping Beauty, the fairy cartoons such as Peter Pan, the ghost
>cartoons such as Night on Bald Mountain from Fantasia, ad infinitum.
>Then, when they write their protest letters to the Powers That Be in
>Disney, they won't single out the comic books as the root of all evil.
>Anyway, these people probably regard the very concept of a talking
>duck as blasphemy.
I agree with you in full, except for the last sentence. My experience is that they
tend to really enjoy duck comics ("Donald Duck is so funny"), and to hate
people comics (except for Asterix, Peanuts and Calvin and Hobbes, which all
perhaps more are in the vein of cartoon comics).
Don:
I think I (or at least Geir) commented upon this when Lo$ 5 appeared in Norway,
however just to repeat myself (or Geir) I would like to say that I really enjoyed
your story! It's great fun! And convenient for talking about death and the afterlife
for one's children (who BTW are exposed a lot to these kind of things in other
comics, children books, fairy tales and real life)! And I guess noone (except any
Rosa fundamentalist camp) will take your portrayal of heaven serious (golfing
and all that). To me it's the CONCEPT that's important. It's Heaven or not
Heaven. It's not WHAT KIND OF which is being shown that makes my mind
wander and wonder. Heaven is one of those things (like life) where it really is
hard to say what it's all about, but where everyone has the right to think for
themselves. Which of course, also includes the right to think as fundamentalists,
or even as a none fundamentalist Christian, which incidentially is by far the most
common kind of Christianity...
I think (to go back to my historical lectures of last year) that art bashing has been
very seldom in the Christian world the last couple of thousand years. I think the
very few exceptions have been the iconoclasm in the Eastern Church in the 8th
century and the puritan movement in the Protestant world in the 17th century.
Now, where would USA have been without those Puritans?
Bjo/rn Are
Bjorn-Are.Davidsen at s.televerket.tele.no
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