Isn't it weird how many stories lately feature villains trying to tap into alternate or simulated realities to reunite with loved ones? Let's take a tour of this multiverse full of dead relatives and what they have to say about our cultural moment.
The Worst Filing System Known To Humans
-Punk
(5)
A Song of Ice and Fire
(2)
Affect
(9)
Alienating My Audience
(31)
Animation
(28)
Anime
(19)
Anonymous
(3)
Anything Salvaged
(15)
Art Crit
(42)
Avatar the Last Airbender
(2)
Black Lives Matter
(1)
Bonus Article
(1)
Children's Media
(6)
Close Reading
(90)
Collaboration
(1)
comics
(30)
Cyborg Feminism
(3)
Deconstruction
(10)
Devin Townsend
(2)
Discworld
(1)
Evo Psych
(1)
Fandom Failstates
(7)
Fanfiction
(28)
Feminism
(24)
Fiction Experiments
(13)
Food
(1)
Fragments
(11)
Games
(29)
Geek Culture
(28)
Gender Shit
(2)
Getting Kicked Off Of TV Tropes For This One
(11)
Gnostic
(6)
Guest Posts
(5)
Guest: Ian McDevitt
(2)
Guest: Jon Grasseschi
(3)
Guest: Leslie the Sleepless Film Producer
(1)
Guest: Sara the Hot Librarian
(2)
Guest: Timebaum
(1)
Harry Potter
(8)
Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality
(3)
Has DC Done Something Stupid Today
(5)
Hauntology
(6)
Homestuck
(18)
How Very Queer
(35)
hyperallthethings
(10)
hyperanimation
(1)
Hypercomics
(11)
I Didn't Ask For Your Life Story Sheesh
(24)
Illustrated
(37)
In The Shadow Of No Towers
(1)
It Just Keeps Tumblring Down Tumblring Down Tumblring Down
(9)
It's D&D
(2)
Judeo-Christian
(9)
Lady Gaga
(5)
Let's Read Theory
(3)
Lit Crit
(20)
Living In The Future Problems
(11)
Lord of the Rings
(4)
Mad Max
(1)
Madoka Magica
(1)
Magic The Gathering
(4)
Manos
(2)
Marvel Cinematic Universe
(17)
Marx My Words
(15)
Medium Specificity
(15)
Meme Hell
(1)
Metal
(2)
Movies
(33)
Music
(26)
Music Videos
(21)
NFTs
(10)
Object Oriented Ontology
(4)
Occupy Wall Street
(3)
Pacific Rim
(2)
Paradise Lost
(2)
Parafiction
(6)
Patreon Announcements
(15)
Phenomenology
(4)
Poetry
(6)
Pokemon
(3)
Politics and Taxes and People Grinding Axes
(13)
PONIES
(9)
Pop Art
(6)
Raising My Pageranks Through Porn
(4)
Reload The Canons!
(7)
Remixes
(8)
Review Compilations
(6)
Room For You Inside
(2)
Science Fiction Double Feature
(32)
Self-Referential Bullshit
(23)
Semiotics
(3)
Sense8
(4)
Sociology
(12)
Spooky Stuff
(45)
Sports
(1)
Star Wars
(6)
Steven Universe
(3)
Surrealism
(11)
The Net Is Vast
(36)
Time
(1)
To Make An Apple Pie
(4)
Transhumanism
(9)
Twilight
(4)
Using This Thing To Explain That Thing
(120)
Video Response
(2)
Watchmen
(3)
Webcomics
(2)
Who Killed The World?
(9)
Reload the Canons!
This series of articles is an attempt to play through The Canon of videogames: your Metroids, your Marios, your Zeldas, your Pokemons, that kind of thing.
Except I'm not playing the original games. Instead, I'm playing only remakes, remixes, and weird fan projects. This is the canon of games as seen through the eyes of fans, and I'm going to treat fan games as what they are: legitimate works of art in their own right that deserve our analysis and respect.
Showing posts with label Gnostic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gnostic. Show all posts
Sunday, April 30, 2023
A Multiverse Around The Corner (Where Your Dead Friends Live)
Monday, July 29, 2019
Eve Laughed At Their Decision
Yes, the Christian symbols in Neon Genesis Evangelion mean something. Rei Ayanami is the key... but does the word of her creating god give us enough room to find our own meaning?
Monday, June 17, 2019
Complicated and Messy: Kingdom Hearts, Plot, and Being A Teen Queer
Monday, June 10, 2019
Evil Be Thou My Good, or Why Dirk Strider Is Literally Satan
Homestuck was a Gnostic story. The Homestuck Epilogues are a satanic one. Dirk Strider is the devil. To understand, we'll have to consult a poet who's of the devil's part: John Milton.
Sunday, July 31, 2016
StIT Reviews: Gnosticism Take 2 and Let's Read Theory: Reader Response
I'm hard at work bashing together the last elements of A Bodyless and Timeless Persona, my upcoming book about theme in Homestuck, and as a result tonight's article has a bit of an odder format than usual. It's a mix of my review series, which highlights some of the shorter pieces I've written for my $1 Patreon backers, and my Let's Read Theory series, where I go through theory texts and try my best to translate them into less academic language and consider applications for the ideas.
The material I'm posting tonight is united in both its applicability to Homestuck, and its interest in the way that we interact with language, meaning, and interpretation as readers. Carrying over gnosticism as a theme of course makes sense. I already did it once back when I posted my last couple of Homestuck articles, because core to my understanding of the comic is the gnostic nature of its narrative. The leap to language isn't all that hard once you've got that starting point. The word was with God and the word WAS God, remember? Language is deeply embedded in the traditions that Gnosticism is a part of.
But along with this is the reality of elisions and gaps that come from interacting with texts that are fragmentary, apocryphal, and originally to be read with a repertoire that modern readers simply don't have. This is where the idea of reader response becomes relevant, and the two texts I'm covering tonight, in audio posts accessible to everyone for free over on my Patreon, are foundational to this body of theory. Stanley Fish's "Is There A Text In This Class?" questions how we can do criticism, or do really anything at all, if language doesn't have an inherent set of meanings. He considers the way that language might be thought of as contextual, allowing us to still communicate despite the arbitrary nature of words. Wolfgang Iser considers the possibilities of interpretation opened up by considering a text not as a finished work of art in itself, but as the starting point for a game of imagination between word and reader, where the "literary work" emerges only in the subjective readerly experience. These texts can help us to understand the different levels on which a complex and avant-garde text like Homestuck operates, and the way it takes advantage of the gaps and contextual demands of language, and I think they also help us to explore the interpretive openness that often appears in Gnostic-like texts.
To explore that, let's consider another modern Gnostic comic, one that was allegedly part of the inspiration for The Matrix and one that blew my tiny fragile eggshell mind as a slimy teen:
Grant Morrison's The Invisibles
Monday, May 30, 2016
StIT Reviews: The Gnostic and the Satanic
Many of my articles are driven, to a greater or lesser extent, by necessity. I have to weigh writing an article against considerations like: can I fill out a full 3000-4000 word piece on this topic? Or: does anyone but me give a shit about this thing? Or: has anyone but me even HEARD of this thing?
So, frustratingly, I often find that there's stuff I'd like to write about that just doesn't fit the usual format of StIT. Nevertheless, there's loads of stuff I want to cover, and I have enough of a readership now that I want to make people aware of smaller projects that they might otherwise miss.
With that in mind, I'm going to start putting out articles like the one you're about to read: articles that are composed of smaller reviews or spitballing about particular topics, linked by some sort of loose theme. These are articles not intended to scoop up new readers but as something for longer-term readers of the blog, stuff designed not to get hits but to open up space for me to explore stuff I'm passionate about in a fairly off-the-cuff way.
The following reviews are just four of a nine that I've written so far. The rest can be viewed by my backers on Patreon starting at the $1 tier. I'll be adding more reviews periodically, but right now this exclusive body of work contains writing on Grant Morrison's Action Comics, a summary of China Mieville's theories of Weird and Hauntological horror, some discussion of squid people, and a review of the first two books in the Song of the Lioness quartet from my perspective as a transgender person.
If this stuff seems interesting, I welcome you to become a backer to see all the reviews.
It's kinda like a direct line into my brain as I respond to what I'm reading.
Oh, and hey, you know what I have banging around in my brain a lot?
Gnostic Christianity.
Particularly since Homestuck just ended with a conclusion that was, as I predicted four years ago, Gnostic as fuck.
So let's talk about some stuff that's engaged with Gnosticism in interesting ways.
![]() |
| Panel from Lady of the Shard |
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)



