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From
ISI:
Now, I admit that I prefer the imagination of the Tolkien or Lewis
variety. Narnia takes traditional fairy tale themes and weaves them into
a new story, and Lewis’s own Christian faith is evident in the works
themselves. Tolkien’s epic is even more clearly Christian in formation
and structure; in addition, his language creation introduced generations
of readers to Old English, Old Norse, and other languages. And some of
the set pieces, such as the siege of Gondor, echo historical events, in
that case the siege of Vienna by the Ottomans in 1683.
So in a real sense these more recent works are clearly in
conversation with the older tradition in a way that allows us to enter
into a larger moral universe. Aragorn is the same kind of person as, say, King Arthur; the temptation of the Ring is like the doctrine of original sin, and so forth. Indeed, in his recent book Beyond Tenebrae, for example,
Birzer argues for a tradition of Christian humanism that includes
Tolkien and extends to writers like Flannery O’Connor, Walter Miller,
and even to a degree Margaret Atwood.
And the examples need not only be
contemporary. I often think of a collection of Sicilian folk music I
listened to: one selection, recorded in the 1950s, featured a traveling
puppeteer reenacting scenes from Orlando Furioso to an audience of largely unlettered paesani.
A conservative must be able to articulate why that is more enriching
than the same person reenacting, say, the destruction of Alderaan or
Wakanda.
But while I would like to think that Narnia and Middle-earth
will outlast some of these more ephemeral cultural products, I am not
sure that will be the case. How long things last relates in some sense to how true they are to
human experience, but history has a long arc. It’s possible that in the
near future you may use Slytherin as an adjective for a certain
type of person the way we now say “doubting Thomas.” And we won’t
remember the genealogy of either.
We see that already in some online political commentary, where
everything is related to the Harry Potter “universe” rather than some
older touchstone. And conservatives have long admired Miller’s A Canticle for Leibowitz,
and what is that book other than an exploration of how even the
strongest pillars of a civilization get forgotten, reworked, or lost?
Nor do I think the “organic” argument works. Organic is too freighted
with the idea that cultures have “natural” forms, usually coincident
with some variously defined people or race. But that is not the whole or
even the entirely true story. Culture is derived from many sources, some as gift or by adoption as
much as through internal growth. In the case of Europe, parts of Africa
and elsewhere, Christianity is a core component, although it is an
import that originated in the Near East.
Beowulf may serve as an example. That poem exists in only a
single manuscript copy, and was rediscovered and published in a first
edition only in 1815. Before that, evidence of its influence and
circulation is almost nonexistent. To say this poem is “organic” is not
particularly illuminating about its value or role in our culture. (Read more.)
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