Abstract

The polarized initial reception of Philip Pullman as a “new atheist” has gradually yielded to more nuanced scholarly positionings of his work as inspired by a heterodox, even “heretical,” Christianity. But in his new series, Pullman responds decisively to both “new atheist” and “heterodox Christian” interpretations, while widening the scope of his critical representations beyond Christian—indeed, beyond Abrahamic—religion. What emerges in the completed books of the incomplete new series, The Book of Dust, is a “secret commonwealth” of supernatural beings inhabiting multiple universes. These are all manifestations of Dust, the spiritual sentience of matter itself, which provides the basis for mystical visions and shamanistic beliefs, as well as religious orthodoxies. Rejecting the latter for the former, the second book in particular, The Secret Commonwealth, suggests an endorsement of spiritual quest. To motivate acceptance of this interpretation, we begin by reviewing the critical reception of His Dark Materials, especially in relation to its theological implications. After that, we turn to the representation of reductionist positions in The Book of Dust, especially the authors presented in The Secret Commonwealth, Gottfried Brande and Simon Talbot. Then, we investigate the representation of the Abrahamic religions in that work, intrigued less by the obvious parallels between Pullman’s imaginary religions and Christianity and Islam, than by his positive representation of mysticism. Finally, we examine his representations of shamanism and animism, soul belief and hermetic doctrines, and his allusions to Zoroastrianism, before summing up. Pullman is an a-theist in the sense of being without a god, not in the post-Enlightenment sense of a rejection of the supernatural/spiritual. His imaginary universe celebrates spiritual quest and ontological multiplicity, against all forms of speculative closure.

Highlights

  • Knighted for his services to literature in 2019, Sir Philip Pullman is one of the most influential cultural figures in the English-speaking world

  • Pullman’s reputation for atheism inflects the interpretation of his fantasy works, which are popularly regarded as literary representations of a materialist philosophy

  • We propose, the new series endorses mystical forms of spiritual quest that transcend doctrinal boundaries, that is, a spirituality without God, which we describe as an a-theism

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Summary

Introduction

Knighted for his services to literature in 2019, Sir Philip Pullman is one of the most influential cultural figures in the English-speaking world. We challenge the consensus reading of Pullman’s fantasy works, in light of the relationship between his first series, His Dark Materials (hereafter, HDM) and his new (incomplete) series, The Book of Dust (hereafter, TBoD). We propose, the new series endorses mystical forms of spiritual quest that transcend doctrinal boundaries, that is, a spirituality without God, which we describe as an a-theism To present this interpretation, we begin by examining the initial reading of Pullman’s HDM as a work of militant atheism, in light of the representation of atheist writers in TBoD. Literature 2022, 2 recent book of TBoD, The Secret Commonwealth, to evidence the argument that Pullman’s new work clarifies a theme of spiritual quest that has been present in his fantasy all along

The New Atheism
Heterodox Christianity?
Empty Reductionism
Beyond Abrahamic Faith
Alchemy and Animism
The Secret Commonwealth
Full Text
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