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Revision as of 01:41, 11 August 2006 by 125.184.92.118 (talk) (→Plot summary)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)His Dark Materials is a trilogy of novels by the fantasy fiction author Philip Pullman, comprising Northern Lights (released as The Golden Compass in North America and was published in 1995), The Subtle Knife (published in 1997) and The Amber Spyglass (published in 2000). The trilogy has also been published as a single-volume omnibus in the United Kingdom, titled simply "His Dark Materials".
The trilogy follows the coming of age of two main characters, Lyra Belacqua and Will Parry, as they wander through a multiverse and a backdrop of epic events. The story begins in Northern Lights with fantasy elements such as gypsies, witches, and armoured bears. As the trilogy progresses, it acquires allegorical layers of meaning, introducing a broad range of ideas from fields such as metaphysics, quantum physics, philosophy (especially religious philosophy), and Biblical symbolism.
Although the series is marketed to children, the audience includes many young adults and adult readers. Pullman has specifically denied targeting the books at any particular age group.
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Characters
Lyra Belacqua is a wild, tomboyish 12-year-old girl who was brought up in the fictional Jordan College, Oxford. She prides herself on her capacity for mischief, especially her ability to lie with "bare-faced conviction". Because of this ability, she was given the surname Silvertongue by Iorek Byrnison. Her constant companion is her dæmon Pantalaimon, who settles upon the pine marten as his final form at the series' conclusion.
Will Parry is a sensible, morally conscious, highly assertive 12-year-old boy from "our world" who serves as the bearer of the Subtle Knife. He is very independent and responsible for his age, having looked after his mentally unstable mother for many years. He is strong for his age, and knows how to remain inconspicuous. At the end of his adventures he discovers the name and form of his dæmon, Kirjava, a cat.
Lord Asriel is the father of Lyra, although she initially knew him as her 'uncle'. He opens a rift between the worlds in his pursuit of Dust. His dream of establishing a Republic of Heaven to rival The Authority's Kingdom leads him to use his considerable power and force of will to raise a grand army from across the multiverse to rise up in rebellion. In the end, he sacrifices himself to destroy the Regent Metatron, together with his estranged lover, Mrs. Coulter. Stelmaria the snow leopard is his dæmon.
Mrs. Coulter is the coldly beautiful, highly manipulative mother of Lyra and former lover of Lord Asriel, who serves the Church in kidnapping children for research into the nature of Dust. She has black hair, a thin build, and looks younger than she is. She later captures Lyra and secludes her away, perhaps seeking to protect her. Later in the story Mrs. Coulter switches sides regularly between the Authority and Lord Asriel's Republic. Her maternal instincts finally win out in the end, as she uses her duplicitous core to deceive the Regent Metatron, working together with her former lover to pull him down into the abyss. Her dæmon, never named, is a golden monkey with a cruel, abusive streak. Though he often communicates with Mrs. Coulter, he is rarely heard to speak.
Mary Malone is a physicist and former nun from the same world as Will whose studies of Dust (referred to as Shadows in her world) draw her into Lyra's adventures. She lives for a time amongst the mulefa, and constructs the Amber Spyglass in an effort to discern why Dust appears to be leaving the universe. Mary relates a story of a lost love to Will and Lyra, serving as the catalyst for their coming of age and the halting of Dust's exodus. With effort, she discovers that she too has a dæmon, which, though unnamed, takes the shape of an Alpine Chough: Lucifer's form upon entering Eden in the original Paradise Lost.
Iorek Byrnison is a massive armoured bear who regains his armour, his dignity, and his kingship over the Panserbjørne through Lyra's help. In gratitude, he dubs her "Lyra Silvertongue". A powerful warrior and armoursmith, Iorek repairs the Subtle Knife when it shatters and goes to war against The Authority when Lyra and Will are threatened.
John Faa and Farder Coram are leaders of the community of river gyptians. When the gyptians' children are kidnapped by the Church to serve as experiments in the frozen outpost of Bolvangar, they mount a rescue expedition, bringing Lyra along. John Faa is also the name of several historical gypsies and a romantic hero in a ballad about gypsies.
Lee Scoresby is a rangy Texan aeronaut who pilots a balloon for Lyra and the gyptians in their expedition North; he is also a friend of Iorek Byrnison, and comes to aid Lyra in a number of her battles. His loyal dæmon Hester takes the form of a hare. He dies while fending off enemy soldiers in an effort to save Stanislaus Grumman.
Stanislaus Grumman, also known as John Parry, or Jopari. He is Will Parry's father, an explorer, and a former officer in the Navy. He leaves our world on an expedition into the far North, in which he finds one of the many trans-dimensional windows, leading to the world from which Lyra Belacqua originates. When he gets there, he becomes a shaman, and receives a ceremonial hole in his skull. Lee Scoresby gives his life to save him, and, eventually, he meets up with his son, but he is shot down by a vengeful witch and former lover. Grumman's pseudonym is a possible allusion to Stanislaw Ulam, the renowned nuclear physicist.
Serafina Pekkala is the beautiful queen of a clan of Northern witches. Like all witches, her goose dæmon Kaisa can travel much farther apart from her than the dæmons of normal humans. She comes to the aid of Lyra and her friends on a number of occasions.
Roger Parslow is a young boy, Lyra's best friend and loyal follower at Jordan College. His death at the hands of Lord Asriel tears open a bridge between the worlds, through which Lyra and Asriel travel in a search for the origins of Dust. Guilt-stricken over Roger's death, Lyra determines to travel through the Land of Dead to apologize and release him; in doing so, she and Will succeed in liberating the lost souls of the dead, allowing their essence to merge with the particles of Dust that permeate the universe. His dæmon was Salcilia, who frequently took the form of a terrier.
Influences and criticism
The three major literary influences on His Dark Materials acknowledged by Pullman himself are the essay On the Marionette Theatre by Heinrich von Kleist (which can be found here), the works of William Blake, and, most importantly, John Milton's Paradise Lost, from which the trilogy derives its title as well as many of its basic ideas. Pullman's stated intention was to invert Milton's story of a war between heaven and hell. In his introduction, he adapts Blake's line to quip that he (Pullman) "is of the Devil's party and does know it." The novels also draw heavily on gnostic ideas, and His Dark Materials has been a subject of controversy, especially with certain Christian groups. The verse from Paradise Lost in which the phrase "his dark materials" is used follows:
- Into this wilde Abyss,
- The Womb of nature and perhaps her Grave,
- Of neither Sea, nor Shore, nor Air, nor Fire,
- But all these in thir pregnant causes mixt
- Confus'dly, and which thus must ever fight,
- Unless th' Almighty Maker them ordain
- His dark materials to create more Worlds,
- Into this wilde Abyss the warie fiend
- Stood on the brink of Hell and look'd a while,
- Pondering his Voyage...
Christianity and the Church are often criticized by the characters. For example, Ruta Skadi, a minor character calling for war against the Magisterium in Lyra's world, says that "For all of history...it's tried to suppress and control every natural impulse. And when it can't control them, it cuts them out." (see intercision). She extends her criticism to all organized religion: "That's what the Church does, and every church is the same: control, destroy, obliterate every good feeling." In another passage Mary Malone, one of Pullman's main characters, states that "the Christian religion…is a very powerful and convincing mistake, that's all.".
Pullman has, however, also found support from other Christians, most notably Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who argues that Pullman's attacks are focused on the constraints and dangers of dogmatism and the use of religion to oppress, not on Christianity itself. Pullman himself has said in interviews and appearances that his argument can be extended to all religions.
Some have called His Dark Materials the antithesis of The Chronicles of Narnia, the seven-book fantasy series by C. S. Lewis, although Pullman denies any conscious connection. This image has been reinforced by Pullman making public statements accusing Lewis of being "blatantly racist" and "monumentally disparaging of women" in his novels
In terms of popularity, the trilogy is sometimes compared with fantasy books like A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle, the Young Wizards series by Diane Duane and the Narnia books themselves.
On the other hand, critics feel that within the books the Christian God is described as a false god, and the afterlife turns out to be a terrible place where people are tormented by "harpies" (only somewhat similar to the Greek harpies); the false god drifts apart after being released near the end of the story. Moreover, some claim there is no distinction between "bad" and "good" Christian practice: nearly all the Christian characters are portrayed as bad individuals, or are portrayed in a more positive light only after they give up their previous affiliation with the Church (although there are, in fact, many 'good' Christian characters - but most of them are unimportant in the story as a whole). Cynthia Grenier, in the Catholic Culture, interprets this way: "In the world of Pullman, God Himself (the Authority) is a merciless tyrant, His Church is an instrument of oppression, and true heroism consists of overthrowing both."
Awards
The Amber Spyglass won the 2001 Whitbread Book of the Year award, a prestigious British literature award. This is the first time that such an award has been bestowed on a book from their "children's literature" category.
The first volume, Northern Lights, won the Carnegie Medal for children's fiction in the UK in 1995.
On May 19, 2005, Pullman was invited to the British Library in London to be formally congratulated for his work by culture secretary Tessa Jowell "on behalf of the government"; he is to receive the Swedish government's Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award for children's and youth literature. The prize, second only to the Nobel Prize in Literature, is worth £385,000.
The trilogy came third in the 2003 BBC's Big Read, a national poll of viewers' favourite books, after Lord of the Rings and Pride and Prejudice. It was the only book in the top five not to have a screen adaptation at that time, and apart from Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, by far the highest ranking entry written in the last twenty-five years.
Adaptations
- His Dark Materials has been made into a radio drama on BBC Radio 4 starring Terence Stamp as Lord Asriel and Lulu Popplewell as Lyra. The play was broadcast in 2003 and is now published by the BBC on CD and cassette. In the same year, a radio drama of Northern Lights was made by RTÉ (Irish public radio).
- A theatrical version of the books was directed by Nicholas Hytner as a two-part, six-hour performance for London's Royal National Theatre in December 2003, running until March 2004. It starred Anna Maxwell-Martin as Lyra, Dominic Cooper as Will, Timothy Dalton as Lord Asriel and Patricia Hodge as Mrs Coulter with dæmon puppets designed by Michael Curry. The play was enormously successful and was revived (with a different cast) for a second run between November 2004 and April 2005.
- A film adaptation, titled His Dark Materials: The Golden Compass, is slated for release in 2007 by New Line Cinema, the company behind the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy. The film will take the title of Northern Lights in the UK.
The film will be directed by Chris Weitz who also acts as screenwriter. Weitz felt himself unable to deal with the "technical challenges" of the film, and so was replaced for a time by Anand Tucker, but Tucker ultimately left the project due to creative differences. Prior to his departure from the project Weitz suggested that its film treatment might minimize the explicitly religious character of The Authority so as to avoid offending some viewers, and sparked a fan backlash that some believe was the real reason for Weitz's leaving. Pullman has now stated that "All the important scenes are there and will have their full value."
As of 2006, the film is in pre-production, and actors have not been cast. On March 14, 2006, open auditions for the role of Lyra were announced . The production hopes to cast unknown British actors for the roles of Lyra and Will, and to stay as true to the book as possible. It is not known how the most recent reversal of directors will alter the course of the auditions that have already taken place.
Terminology
Esoteric renaming
To enhance the feeling of being in a parallel universe, Pullman renames various common objects of our world with historic terms or new words of his own, often reflecting the power of the Church in Lyra's world. The alternative names he chooses often follow alternate etymologies, while making it possible to guess what everyday object or person he is referring to. Below are some of the significant renamings.
- Anbaric: Electric. From amber, which the ancient Greeks in our world thought was the source of electricity. The English word "electric" is based on the Greek "ηλέκτρινος", meaning "amber".
- Atomcraft: Research into particle physics, specifically using uranium.
- Brytain: A phonetically identical respelling of the country Britain.
- Cauchuc: Rubber and possibly also plastic, from the Native American word cauchuc or caoutchouc meaning the sap of the rubber tree.
- Celestial Geography: Celestial navigation.
- Chapel: A scientific laboratory.
- Chaplain: The head of a scientific laboratory.
- Chocolatl: Sometimes hot chocolate, sometimes "a bar of chocolatl" (a chocolate bar). From the nahuatl (Aztec) word for chocolate.
- Chthonic Railway Station: A tube-station (subway station). "Chthonic" is from Greek χθονιος, meaning pertaining to the earth; earthy.
- Coal-silk: Carbon-fibre (coal as in carbon, silk as in soft, like carbon-fibre coats). An artificial fibre similar to rayon, which was once known as art-silk in our world.
- Corea: A phonetically identical respelling of the country Korea, which was formerly used.
- Eireland: Ireland, as referred to in the Cittàgazze universe. Presumably a mixture of Ireland's Irish-language (Éire) and English-language names.
- Electrum: An occasionally used latin word for Amber; see "anbaric" above.
- (Experimental) Theologian: A physicist. From "Natural Theology" meaning science.
- Gyropter: a helicopter.
- Gyptians: Boat-dwelling "Gypsies". In reality, the word "Gypsy" is derived from "Egypt". Gypsies were once thought by "native" Britons to have come from Egypt due to their darker skin. Pullman is clearly referencing this etymological heritage.
- Lascar: An East Indian. This is a real, though archaic, English word.
- Marchpane: Marzipan. In reality, "Marchpane" is an archaic word for "marzipan".
- Muscovite: A Russian, a reference to the Grand Duchy of Moscow.
- Naphtha: Oil (as in oil-lamp, rather than naphtha-lamp), named after a petrochemical like kerosene.
- Nipponese: Japanese. From Nippon, the Japanese-language name for Japan.
- Oratory: An individual church.
- Philosophical: Having to do with the study of physics. In our own world, physics was once a part of philosophy.
- Poppy: Opium, which is made from poppies.
- Roman: Specifically, the Latin language.
- Skraeling: A Native American/First Nations (Inuit) person, particularly one from Greenland. Natives of Greenland were once named similarly by the Vikings of our world (see Skræling).
- Tartar: A Mongol.
Pronunciation
The pronunciations given in italics below are, for the most part, drawn from BridgetotheStars.net. The pronunciations in both the radio plays and the audio book readings of the trilogy (by Pullman himself) are those given, some of which are technically incorrect under standard pronunciation rules. The transcriptions surrounded by square brackets are in the International Phonetic Alphabet, as spoken in Received Pronunciation.
- Alethiometer: al-eth-ee-OM-et-er
- Æsahættr: ASS-at-ter
- Aurora Borealis: uh-ROR-uh bor-ee-AH-lis
- Chthonic (see above): kuh-THON-ick orTHON-ick or . See chthonic for details.
- Cittàgazze: chee-tuh-GAHT-s(z)ay (as Italian)
- Dæmon: DEE-mon
- Iorek: YOR-ick
- Iofur: YO-fur
- Kirjava: KEER-yah-vuh
- Lyra: LIE-ruh
- Mulefa: m(y)ool-EFF-uh
- Panserbjørne: PAN-ser-byorn-eh (early UK editions had "Panserbørne")
- Pantalaimon: pan-tuh-LIE-mon
- Quantum: KWON-tuhm
- Salmakia: sal-MACK-ee-uh
- Serafina Pekkala: seh-ra-FEE-nuh pek-KAH-luh
- Tialys: tee-AH-lis
- Torre degli Angeli: TOR-ay DAI-(y)-lee A(H)N-juhl-ee (as Italian)
- Xaphania: zaf-AY-nee-uh
See also
- Sally Lockhart, another series by Philip Pullman
- The Doctor Who episode Doomsday has many plot similarities.
References
- "The Man Behind the Magic: An Interview with Philip Pullman". Retrieved 29 March.
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- ^ Heat and Dust (interview)
- http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,726739,00.html
- http://www.sd68.k12.il.us/schools/orchard/LMC/fantasy.htm
- Catholic Culture Philip Pullman's Dark Materials
- http://www.hisdarkmaterials.org/article-715.html
Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials and The Book of Dust | |
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Further Reading
- Lenz, Millicent (2005). His Dark Materials Illuminated: Critical Essays on Phillip Pullman's Trilogy. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0814332072.
External links
- Scholastic: His Dark Materials, the UK publisher's website.
- Randomhouse: His Dark Materials, the U.S. publisher's website.
- Philip Pullman, author's website.
- His Dark Materials: BridgeToTheStars.Net, a fansite.
- His Dark Materials.org, a fansite.
- BridgeToTheStars.Net His Dark Materials Wiki by Bridge to the Stars
- The BBC's His Dark Materials pages
- The Archbishop of Canterbury and Philip Pullman in conversation, from "The Daily Telegraph".
- BridgetotheStars.net An interview with Chris Weitz and a report on this interview from "The Times", December 2004.
- Production images from the 2003-4 National Theatre stage adaptation