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Religious Revivals and the Great Awakening of Religion & Comics

[Part Two of “What Makes a Scholar’s Pull-List?”]

Panel from _Manifest Destiny_, art by Matthew Roberts
Panel from _Manifest Destiny_ by Chris Dingess with art by Matthew Roberts

American historians sometimes call the waves of religious fervor in the 18th and 19th century our country’s “Great Awakening.” It is a powerful image–convinced that God’s spirit was calling Christians to renew their commitments–Americans flocked to open-air revivals to hear fiery sermons by orators like George Whitefield. Among the innovations of this era was what would become evangelicalism, that variety of Christianity that emphasized the individual, emotional “born again” experience of admitting one’s sinful nature and accepting Jesus’ offer of redemption.

Why this historical introduction? I have tried to consider various explanations for how my assortment of monthly comics came to be.  Are my subscriptions simply the products of obscure personal quirks? Am I distracted by certain styles of art or attracted to certain writers? No matter how I tried to explain why I had certain comics on my list to be set aside monthly when they arrive, I found that the list defied me.

Continue reading Religious Revivals and the Great Awakening of Religion & Comics

Review of HOLY F*CKED #1: “Provocation for Provocation’s Sake” [Redux]

HOLY F*CKED #1Earlier this year, I reviewed Nick Marino and Daniel Arruda Massa’s miniseries Holy F*ck. Throughout the run, I consistently found the series to be missing that certain something. The artwork was consistent and the writing delivered several gags that were independently funny without fully meshing with each other. My final verdict was that the series as a whole seemed directionless, almost scattershot. But I also kept wanting more. I find myself in that same situation as fall starts creeping in.

Last week, Marino and Arruda Massa returned with the first issue of Holy F*cked. With that, we are cast once more into the lives of Jesus, Satan, and the nun Maria, who have all found happiness in Los Angeles. Jesus has gotten real big into skateboarding (I am certain that although this hasn’t really been explained, it will eventually play a big role). Jesus and Satan are living together, and pretty early on we find out that the devil is pregnant. For her part, Maria works in a soup kitchen, regaling the homeless with old war stories.

Of course, we know that their bliss can’t last. Anansi, the African spirit that most often takes the form of a spider and is connected with knowledge, overhears the news and reports it to Hercules. Hercules is thirsting for revenge: after Jesus and his cohorts defeated Zeus, Mount Olympus deteriorated from a prosperous, “grand utopian metropolis” to a wasteland. And so, out of rage and jealousy that the man who took away his family is about to start his own, Hercules resolves to murder Jesus Christ. Setting his plan in motion, he goes to Earth and, disguised as Thanatos Kostas (a play on the Greek personification of death and a word meaning roughly “constant”), a newcomer to town who is passionate about charity work, he infiltrates the soup kitchen.

That, more or less, is the story.

Continue reading Review of HOLY F*CKED #1: “Provocation for Provocation’s Sake” [Redux]

Cyclops in Homeric Myth and Marvel Comics

Scott Summers, CyclopsIn a piece last year for Nomos Journal, I explored how the ancient Greek myth of the Cyclops compared in Homer’s Odyssey to the modern graphic novel The Encyclopedia of Early Earth by Isabel Greenberg (December 2013). Homer’s account became the definitive text in the West for the mythical concept as well as the hypothetical, physical characteristics of this creature. As I argued in that piece, however, whenever a myth gets re-appropriated and re-produced by a different culture, it is subject to modification. While some see a loss of the original “essence” of a myth, others view this change as a positive thing insofar as it is by this modification that myth remains dynamic and relevant for a different people and time.

The graphic novel is a prime example of how ancient stories remain relevant for a modern audience. The explosion in graphic novel production in recent years has given us plenty of data for the types of modifications that occur in these ancient myths. By investigating which types of modifications occur, we can find out what particular cultures value, and what they do not. Elements of ancient myth that conform to modern values will be retained or strengthened, in other words, while elements of ancient myth that are irrelevant to modern culture and sensibility will be minimized or removed. With an attention to what is retained/removed and highlighted/diminished between the two permutations of a given myth, we can identify more concretely different cultural values.

It was with this understanding that I compared Homer’s Cyclops Polyphemus to Greenberg’s graphic novel depiction of the Cyclops in her own imaginative re-telling of parts of the The Odyssey. It turned out that, save for some basic characteristics in form (large, monstrous, and one eye) and landscape (seemingly isolated and generally undeveloped), the episodes were hugely different. There was no dialogue in Greenberg, no contrast between a civilized, social Greek (Odysseus) and an uncivilized or minimally civilized solitary brute (Polyphemus).

The episode in Homer revolved around the concept of hospitality, a socially constructed obligation that Polyphemus flouts and thereby rejects society. Homer also focused on the combination of teamwork and cunning in Odysseus’s escape, two characteristics that defined what it meant to be a citizen in Greek democratic society. Greenberg’s hero uses no teamwork, no cunning, and escapes purely through humorous, dumb luck as a bird poops in the Cyclops’s eye, thereby giving the protagonist time to escape. Greenberg’s hero is a ‘better lucky than good’ protagonist on an individual quest for romantic love, a distinctly modern concept.

Cyclops of ASTONISHING X-MEN

Compared to Homer’s Odysseus, Greenberg’s hero – with a romantic goal, lucky escape, lack of crewmates, and lack of socially constructed value such as hospitality – fully reflects modern, Western culture’s value of individualistic identity over and against Homeric Greece’s socially constructed identity.

But there is another prominent Cyclops in the modern graphic novel, the Scott Summers of Marvel Comics’s X-Men fame. If my above argument is correct, that Greek concepts of socially structured identity become effaced when translated into modern culture, we should expect that a comparison of Homer’s Polyphemus and Marvel’s Cyclops yields the same result: some core similarities in terms of physical form, perhaps, but large-scale differences in interactions and identity. Continue reading Cyclops in Homeric Myth and Marvel Comics

The Cthulhu Cosmology in Hellboy

Hellboy by Mike MignolaAround this time last year, S&S’s own David McConeghy penned a compelling piece for Sacred Matters on the integration and, arguably, augmentation of H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu gods in the narrative structure of Mike Mignola’s Hellboy — the comics series, its spin-offs, and its cinematic adaptations.

McConeghy hails this aspect of the Hellboy franchise in saying:

[I]t is foremost a comic that embraces the gothic as Lovecraft did in the interwar years in New England. The comic delights in paranormal abilities that connect to worlds beyond our own. It celebrates the prophetic as a link to authentic religious pasts long forgotten. It satisfies our desire to live in a demon-haunted world but feel protected by honorable, if flawed, guardians.

Hellboy and Cthulhu
DeviantArt image by 007Alfredo

Part of Hellboy‘s success, he suggests, is Mignola’s employment of Rudolph Otto’s mysterium tremendum es fascinans, “the mystery that both repels and attracts us.” The titular hero of Hellboy is a product of that same dark mystery he both seeks to confront and defend us from: “Thank goodness for Hellboy,” acknowledges McConeghy, showing the fictional character’s engagement with a fictional religion as compelling stage for real-life religiosity.

Congratulations Are in Order

Here’s to S&S’s own Andrew Tripp and Elizabeth Coody for the recent completion of their respective degrees!
10818479_10103105330764060_3955091181240171730_o Andrew earned his doctorate from Boston University’s School of Theology and can be see above with his Dean, Bryan Stone. 11392865_10205739301774825_6816019726001676994_nElizabeth, likewise, completed her doctorate at the University of Denver/Iliff School of Theology and can be seen above with her parents.

Huzzah for the new S&S doctors!