Duncan Macleod on the Gold Coast

Archive for the ‘Reading’ Category

Blind Faith by Ben Elton

Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

Ben Elton provides a cutting critique of cultural trends at the beginning of the 21st century in this novel set after the flood. Global warming has led to much of Britain being submerged. FaceSpace culture has led to the disappearance of privacy. The Temple (combine massive manipulative Evangelical rallies with Mormon and Anglican structures) are in control of law and order. Trafford, the protagonist, discovers privacy, vaccination, books, humanism and evolution. Somewhat reminiscent of 1984 and Brazil the novel presents darkness and hope together.

Blind Faith by Ben EltonThis post-apocalyptic world combines elements of technology from today with a loss of standards of living. It’s hot in the UK - so hot that people have virtually given up wearing clothes. Modesty is a thing of the past. Turning up at a physical work space is a novelty. Trafford works for the government, in NatDat, finding new kinds of ‘degrees of separation’ between members of the population.

Vaccination, regarded as a dangerous meddling with nature, has been abandoned. And so the infant mortality rate has skyrocketed in the face of measles, mumps, tetanus, cholera, smallpox, bubonic plague and so on.

Every moment of life, including every sexual encounter, is captured on the WorldTube in a combination of exhibitionism and voyeurism. All foods are sweetened. Women are pressured into breast enlargements. Marriage is not as important as ‘getting married’.

Elton provides a tongue-in-cheek critique of the “Save the World” rock concerts and Evangelical faith gatherings. Faith Festivals in Blind faith are held in Wembley Stadium, with global satellite coverage.

“It was most inspiring to live in a world where ‘people power’ could mean so much, where a single concert could change the world irrevocably for the better, where things could be improved just because the people wanted them to improve. Simply by massing, cheering, listening to music and eating enormous amounts of takeaway food, everyone knew they could make a real difference”.

Time and time again Trafford and his newly found friends reflect on the contrast between reasoned humanism and irrational blind faith. The God of the Temple, Everlasting Love, is portrayed as one who is responsible for both wonderful miracles and the terrible suffering experienced by grieving parents. This is the God who created everything in six days. “Any God who kills a child to punish its parents is not worth worshiping!” Trafford argues.

Elton provides important warnings for us today. It is too easy to sacrifice a capacity for privacy in the quest to develop an online identity. Is it possible to retain the ability to write material that only we will ever read? With the move towards utilitarianism on the internet will we know when we’ve lost the capacity to reflect deeply, to think, to celebrate life, to form our own fantasies? Or will our superheroes of the future be the people who tell us to make money, become famous and look young and sexy?

The dark controlling nature of the religious institution in Blind Faith is only too possible when power and faith are combined in an environment of fear and ignorance. We have the Spanish Inquisition, John Calvin’s merciless rule in Geneva, and the complicity of Martin Luther in the quelling of the Peasants Revolt to keep us humble and alert.

In reading Blind Faith it’s important to remember that satire, by nature, exaggerates and amplifies the follies of a society’s existing weaknesses. There are individuals and groups who even now exhibit the disturbing behaviours and beliefs described in the book. It’s our responsibility to live, think and act in a way that ensures that these distortions of faith and reason do not become the norm.

Problems with Atonement

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

Problems with Atonement by Stephen FinlanI’m writing a paper on the impact of modernism on doctrines of atonement and making my way through a few texts.

First book on my reading list is Stephen Finlan’s 2005 book, “Problems with Atonement: The Origins Of, And Controversy About, The Atonement Doctrine”.

Read the review at my theology blog, GodPost.

You Are The Time Person of the Year

Monday, December 18th, 2006

The newly released edition of Time Magazine has named members of the online community as “Person of the Year” for 2006. The editorial team recognizes the unique impact of bloggers and participants in forums such as Wikipedia and YouTube.

Time Person of the Year - You

Lev Grossman explains:

“Who are these people? Seriously, who actually sits down after a long day at work and says, I’m not going to watch Lost tonight. I’m going to turn on my computer and make a movie starring my pet iguana? I’m going to mash up 50 Cent’s vocals with Queen’s instrumentals? I’m going to blog about my state of mind or the state of the nation or the steak-frites at the new bistro down the street? Who has that time and that energy and that passion?

The answer is, you do. And for seizing the reins of the global media, for founding and framing the new digital democracy, for working for nothing and beating the pros at their own game, TIME’s Person of the Year for 2006 is you.”

Time Cover Person of the Year

The magazine on the shelves is featuring fifteen citizens of the ‘new digital democracy’, including a French rapper, a relentless reviewer and a real life lonely girl. There’s a story on the founders of YouTube, an essay on the connections between Web 2.0 and Andy Warhol, the rise of amateurs in new media, the capacity of digital cameras to change history, the second dot.com business boom, and an expose of the annoying downside of the internet.

I’m wondering how long it will take before Time really catches up on the global changes being brought about through the internet. Time continues to assume that its readers will be focused on what is happening within the borders of the United States. Blogging has taught me that while there are a lot of Americans online, the stories are often found elsewhere.

Alister Cameron, blogging consultant in Melbourne, put together this unofficial seal for those who share the Time Magazine award. Thanks Al!

Time Person of the Year 2006 - me!
Read the Time article
Get your own seal

Darren Rowse at ProBlogger lightly suggests that the online Time Magazine article is a classic case of ‘linkbaiting’. Every time someone links to the article (like I have just done) Time zooms up in the online ratings. Fair enough.

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