Dr Who and Religion
Moderator:Metacrock
- KR Wordgazer
- Posts:1410
- Joined:Wed Jan 23, 2008 3:07 pm
I don't know Scribe-world, but perhaps I should define what Sayers means by Story vs. Reading. The Story is the self-expression of the Author to the world. The Reading is what happens when the Story enters into and is entered into by beings other than the Author, who understand or try to understand, interact with and interpret it.
Wag more.
Bark less.
Bark less.
Re: Dr Who and Religion
Likely, the best tip we ever got - handed down from this prof through one of her students - was to carefully re-situate your reader after every chapter ending or scene break, ie don't disorient readers who may (or may not) have just picked up your story again after an indefinite period.KR Wordgazer wrote:I don't know Scribe-world, but perhaps I should define what Sayers means by Story vs. Reading. The Story is the self-expression of the Author to the world. The Reading is what happens when the Story enters into and is entered into by beings other than the Author, who understand or try to understand, interact with and interpret it.
The “One” is the space of the “world” of the tick, but also the “pinch” of the lobster, or that rendezvous in person to confirm online pictures (with a new lover or an old God). This is the machinery operative...as “onto-theology."
Dr Ward Blanton
Dr Ward Blanton
Re: Dr Who and Religion
why would I say I love dr who if i'm not a fan?KR Wordgazer wrote:Sigh. I guess no one else here is a Doctor Who fan. But I would think it might be interesting to talk in general about fictional characters with deity-like characteristics. What other characters fit the bill? What is the allure of such characters, and what are the weaknesses of using them in film or literature?
Any takers?
I can't believe that no one here reads anything but philosophy!
I took about 27 hours in lit at graduate level a lot of that involved lit crit. in fact most of postmodernism at that time was lit crit. but that stuff was over 20 years ago.
Have Theology, Will argue: wire Metacrock
Buy My book: The Trace of God: Warrant for belief
Buy My book: The Trace of God: Warrant for belief
Re: Dr Who and Religion
The messiah confronts his ancient enemy; (A Particular nasty version of Krishnamurti's "thinker" imho.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGzUNlP4WUY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGzUNlP4WUY
Re: Dr Who and Religion
hey that's pretty good. one of my favorite Tom Baker's.Superfund wrote:The messiah confronts his ancient enemy; (A Particular nasty version of Krishnamurti's "thinker" imho.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGzUNlP4WUY
Have Theology, Will argue: wire Metacrock
Buy My book: The Trace of God: Warrant for belief
Buy My book: The Trace of God: Warrant for belief
-
- Posts:37
- Joined:Sun Nov 22, 2015 3:45 pm
Re: Dr Who and Religion
They said the same of Charlie Brown and Superman.KR Wordgazer wrote:In a television series run by atheists and which criticizes religion, the main character in many ways is a religious figure, even a kind of Messiah. Check out this article:
http://www.themarysue.com/doctor-who-theism/
Any thoughts?
Dr Who is someone who goes around "fixing the Universe" and also defending the Earth.
Re: Dr Who and Religion
I appreciate this thrread is neary a year old, but I was on thiese fora then, so here is my belated response.
Dr Who as messiah?
Dr Who as messiah?
Fair comment, and this is a problem with the modern show. Not that I object to messiahs on TV (it is fiction afterall), but because it loses the dramatic impact if he is all powerul. For once I agree with Metacrock that the fourth doctor was the best. He (like all the original doctors) was not powerful, and while he knew a lot, there were plenty of things he did not know.As the centerpiece of the show, The Doctor operates like a monotheistic deity (i.e. Jesus Christ) who possesses incredible power, knowledge, and an uncanny ability to resurrect himself in the face of death. He often travels many miles to spread truth and illuminate the minds of those who are lost.
Re: Dr Who and Religion
We don't have TV - ya hear that, Pixie? - but a friend visiting from Ottawa hooked us up with some episodes last summer, which had me thinking about this thread. I forgot to post about it, however.
Seems like they want to move the latest Dr. away from his Messianic/Savior/Good Guy role somewhat. One episode had him stand aside and let mankind decide for themselves if they wanted to blow the moon out of the sky when it turned out to really be a huge egg from an long-lived interstellar creature that was about to hatch. Another once had him trying to humanize a Dalek by using his own consciousness, but then discovering that (for the Dalek anyway) his real deepest impulse was a intractable hatred of the entire species that leads the Dalek to go on a murderous rampage against his own kind.
Seems like they want to move the latest Dr. away from his Messianic/Savior/Good Guy role somewhat. One episode had him stand aside and let mankind decide for themselves if they wanted to blow the moon out of the sky when it turned out to really be a huge egg from an long-lived interstellar creature that was about to hatch. Another once had him trying to humanize a Dalek by using his own consciousness, but then discovering that (for the Dalek anyway) his real deepest impulse was a intractable hatred of the entire species that leads the Dalek to go on a murderous rampage against his own kind.
The “One” is the space of the “world” of the tick, but also the “pinch” of the lobster, or that rendezvous in person to confirm online pictures (with a new lover or an old God). This is the machinery operative...as “onto-theology."
Dr Ward Blanton
Dr Ward Blanton