God doesn’t care if the End is near

Little Boy and Fat Man were the nicknames of the two bombs dropped during World War II, and they stopped time on clock later found. In Watchmen, a little boy is near Jon and Janey when a fat man steps on it and breaks it. Jon’s father warns him that watchmakers are no longer needed since time is relative and the future is in atomic and nuclear physics. This advice is packed with irony because atomic physics are precisely what can bring about the end, and time really will not matter anymore.

Dr. Manhattan is the most interesting character in Watchmen. He is a godly figure much like the Judeo-Christian god. He is responsible for many good things on Earth, he brings stability to the energy crisis. And for America, he is their most powerful weapon. Good for America, perhaps bad for the entire world. Yet, he is instrumental Adrian’s plan to summon an alien invasion in New York City to create an illuminated world. Jon’s energy is what makes this false attack possible. He doesn’t experience time chronologically; he experiences everything at the same time. So as he agrees to work with Adrian he already knows what the results of the partnership will be. He is so detached from humanity, in all senses of the word, that he does not try to change the future.

This depiction of god is frightening. God is an all knowing entity that plans everything. Everything happens for reason, or maybe the reason is that only humans can create destiny and all this god does is allow it to happen. When the End of the World comes, will he care enough to go through a judgment and safe us? This makes me thing of John the Revelator and how I have thought of his book as a type of cautionary tale, and after re-reading Watchmen I think of his book a type of comfort. It is painting a scenario in which a god that has created an entire universe full of wonders cares enough about 6 billion organisms inhabiting a tiny planet in a tiny system. Humans have this incredible ability to think so they must the center of the entire universe even though they are only a tiny spec of it.

Posted in Grecia Huesca, October, October 5 | 1 Comment

questionable deities

Hi everyone,

This is quite an enticing and engaged series of responses. I have pasted in, below, sections from each of your posts because they stood out as key points that I hope prompt further discussion in class. Sam and Andreas get special commendation for bringing Rosen into their discussions so astutely. Their comments demonstrate an effective way to draw on a critical analysis in an effort to widen its scope. That said, I would like to hear from Sam in class a more fully developed rationale for his reading of three aspects of god rather than the 3 deities that Rosen argues for.

Andreas provided a wonderful analysis of learning to read graphic narrative—not something that one knows how to do without practice—and applies it smartly to the argument that Rosen makes in her opening about the Book of Revelation (and remember, Andreas—there really is no s on the end!).

Mac’s comments toward the end of his post made me wonder—in the recent economic crisis, didn’t we have a handful of Adrian Veidt types willing to risk financial ruin and destruction for their self-interest? I liked what he said about the worldview of The Road in contrast to Watchmen, but wonder here whether the generalization is too large. Who is the audience in this regard?

Jon’s reading of Christ and Anti-Christ for Jon and Adrian is perceptive in many respects, but, as with Sam, I’d like to hear an argument made on this score. In particular, take up (in class) why we benefit from this reading more than the one that Rosen gives us.

Here are the passages I found most provocative:

Sam: “Which brings me to the crux of Rosen’s analysis: that of the different apocalyptic deities she sees in Watchmen’s primary characters. As I re-read the text, I saw more and more not three separate godheads embodied in Ozymandias, Dr. Manhattan, and Rorschach, but rather three aspects of an omniscient world savior, and the weight such a figure must inevitably bear. Each copes with their terrible power in pursuit of a different virtue: Ozymandias, reformation; Dr. Manhattan, transcendence; and Rorschach, justice.”

Andreas: “Widening the gutter, if you will, has allowed for a plethora of self-proclaimed prophets to fashion what ISN’T SAID in the New Testament’s final volume, into events and teachings that work with their own whims and goals. What isn’t said, is as powerful as what is said—and in the case of the Book of Revelations this statement could not be more universally applicable. Relying on heavy imagery through a graphic narrative, having a distorted and non-sequential sense of time and space, and acting like a comic in its use of the “gutter” concept—the Book of Revelations can be said to essentially derive its mass appeal from its nature as a proto-Christian, archaic pseudo-comic book.”

Mac: “Ultimately, perhaps the only truly unbelievable thing about Watchmen is that its Doomsday is orchestrated by one individual driven by selfish motives. Ozymandias, “king of kings,” is an homage to the black-and-whiteness of evils past. Now, as we discard postmodern notions for even more, apocalyptic fiction has become even more vague, as evidenced by our next reading, Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. The Road, and its contemporary ilk in apocalyptic fiction, like Don DeLilo’s White Noise, affix no certain definition to the downfall of the status quo. Moore’s vision of the apocalypse is horrifying in it calculation, but these days, there isn’t a countdown clock or a “red button” in engaging apocalyptic myth – post millennial audiences are disengaged from the tangibility of defined affectations. Now, the world ends in a dizzying haze of nothingness or undefined horror. As a concept, it is no longer manifested empirically in our culture.”

Jon: “one wonders if we are meant to think of the two figures in this way – Christ-figure and antichrist – or if there’s supposed to be some confusion, the message of which is to say that life is not always clear.
The world may never know the answer to these things, but ultimately I’d like to choose the message of confusion – that we must remember that both saints and sinners bleed, so to speak, and that we must ultimately be careful, and avoid blind faith in those who would be heroes; skepticism and faith can go hand in hand, just they must be mixed carefully.”

Posted in Lee Quinby, October, October 5 | Leave a comment

Ticking Towards Midnight

When we examine the West’s history through a certain self-reflective lens, the apocalypse seems to loom in cycles.  We as a people recognize ourselves standing before the abyss, and either step back in moderation or step out to take the plunge.  As with Cromwell’s Roundhead Puritan revolutionaries in seventeenth century Britain, an ardent belief in the End of Days –and an incorporation of its prophecy into the era’s story – can spur great change in the time that remains; and as of yet we appear still to reside in that interstitial period.

Modern America, the oft-messianic frontier that Cromwell’s kin settled nearly four hundred years ago, has since its inception been at the center of apocalyptic speculation – and, many would agree, has paved the road to actualization of an apocalypse whose horror is beyond the most awful visions of St. John.  Both the Powers-That-Be and their adversaries belie this perspective in our politics and ethics, and our literature seems more enmeshed with the dilemma than the potential consequence.  It takes an outsider – a Jeremiah, in the ancient tradition – to call to conscience the scope of what society’s apocalyptic fixation has wrought upon this still-existent world.

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Book of Revelations: New York Time’s Comic Book Best Seller for 2000 Straight Years?

I must confess that I have never been much into the comic-book form of literature. While I have enjoyed many movies that have been results of comic books, I have not actually ever read one myself. I mean. Sure I’ve read the occasional cartoon, or skit…but never an entire book where boxes with pictures serve as the driving force of the narrative. You might ask what kind of childhood I had. My answer is…you don’t want to know.

Now, confronted with that somewhat uncommon reality, I was somewhat at odds of how exactly to take in the reading of Watchmen. I read the blurbs in the pictures, and then glanced at the illustrations, and moved forward to the next little box. But I was feeling that the story was dry—a picture is worth a thousand words, sure…but which words were they… I was only seeing the actions that the written dialogue pointed out. Some of the boxes (or frames) seemed juxtaposed oddly; some didn’t seem to follow sequentially. I began to think I was doing it wrong. (Aha) So I glanced over at the Rosen piece, and I believe I found my answer.

When Eisner defines comics as a “Sequential Art”, and Rosen mentions “closure” and the role of the “gutter”, I began to make sense of how to string together the various frameworks of a comic book, and how to fill in the blanks. The very nature of the comic book form, provides a time dimension for the reader’s understanding. It is generally understood, notes Rosen, that “in learning to read comics, we learn to perceive time spatially, for in the world of comics, time and space are one and the same”.  The role of closure, or the act of the reader filling in the blanks between each panel (i.e. filling in the gutter with one’s own machinations), is to facilitate the reader’s own individual understanding of the comic book. The fact that a picture, in and of its own nature, is more malleable than a set of descriptive phrases—couples with the dubious role of the gutter in supplementing that very imagery, provides for an experience which is wholly adaptable to the reader’s own universe. Rosen’s comparison of the Book of Revelations to the comic form is at once astute, and revelatory. But of course—the incredibly illustrious concepts of the Whore of Babylon, the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, the New Jerusalem, and of course the seven groups of 7even plagues visited unto mankind are all like panels of a comic book. The Book of Revelation has the same odd time-signature as does a comic book, and especially because it describes a vision which is to occur in the future, which was received in the present, and covers the scope of several months in the past. According to Rosen, the sudden movement from locale to locale is both present in Revelation as well as in many comic-book forms. In this manner we notice that the book of revelations has manipulated its audience for centuries, and has created a massive global ideological phenomenon through employing the same “gutter” and “closure” principles that apply to comic books. What is actually revealed in Revelations, or rather, what LITTLE is actually revealed, serves only to further supplement its intoxicating effect on peoples and cultures. Widening the gutter, if you will, has allowed for a plethora of self-proclaimed prophets to fashion  what ISN’T SAID in the New Testament’s final volume, into events and teachings that work with their own whims and goals. What isn’t said, is as powerful as what is said—and in the case of the Book of Revelations this statement could not be more universally applicable. Relying on heavy imagery through a graphic narrative, having a distorted and non-sequential sense of time and space, and acting like a comic in its use of the “gutter” concept—the Book of Revelations can be said to essentially derive its mass appeal from its nature as a proto-Christian, archaic pseudo-comic book.

Examples of how people have filled in the blanks of the “gutter” in the Book of Revelations can be seen in Kirsch’s “History of the End of the World” and doesn’t really need further mentioning considering how widespread it has become. From number crunching to date setting, from traditionalism to post modernism, from the Sybilline prophets to the modern day Jehova’s witnesses, the evidence of the power of a narrative which rests on Divine Truth, claims knowledge of revelation, but doesn’t actually reveal much of anything is suggestive of the Book of Revelations profiteering off of the philosophy of “filling in the blanks”, as does any good comic book.

Skipping ahead to another interesting aspect of Rosen’s piece, we see a quote: “Perhaps Evil is the humus formed by virtue’s decay, and perhaps it is from that dark sinister loam, that virtue grows strongest”. This quote is suggested as referencing a post-modern view of the New Jerusalem, where there is no longer a “new heaven and new earth”, but instead a “new understanding which encompasses both good and evil, seeing them as part of the same thing”. In both Swamp Thing and Watchmen we notice the recurrence of postmodern ideals such as the one mentioned above, the lack of moral absolutism, a change in the perception of time (i.e. time is not linear, but rather cyclical), the placement of the antichrist as a non-deity, as well as a less literal notion of what it means to have an “apocalypse”. The use of the term identity apocalypse, as well as Moore’s adroit use of the words “The world? The world isn’t ending. It’s the multiverse that’s ending” to maneuver his way out of corporate bonds are indicative of an entirely postmodern view of the Book of Revelations—one which is grounded in a metaphorical translation of the imagery presented therein.

All in all, in understanding all of this, I am now able to proceed with a proper reading of Watchmen. With the above astute observations in mind, I am now able to pick out traditional elements of apocalypse, versus the postmodern eschatological worldview—and I am certainly less puzzled when it comes to figuring out exactly how to derive full meaning from the comic book form. I will attempt to post an update as to how all of the above relates to Watchmen itself, as soon as I am done with the book.

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The Lingering Power of Watchmen

I first read Alan Moore’s Watchmen three years ago – at the time, it was a profoundly effective piece of media, and from my experience, it defied categorization as a work of fiction based on the its innate tactile and visual qualities.  I have always enjoyed the comic as a literary form, but Watchmen made me reconsider the medium entirely.  Simply put, I’d never read anything like Watchmen, and it has since taken on very powerful connotations in my own breadth of literary consciousness.

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Posted in Mac Warren, October, October 5 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments