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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger Francis Berger said...

My literary blind zones never cease to amaze me. I'm ashamed to admit that I have never heard of Enid Blyton. Having said that, I appreciate your observations concerning the difference between sin (and hypocrisy) and being on the right side of the spiritual war.

You have often drawn attention to how important this differentiation is in this time and place, and I think it's something all Christians must bear in the mind when confronted with media attacks against figures like Blyton (I am assuming that your post was a response to these current attacks).

As you have so pointed out many times, an individual can be quite "sinful" in terms of behavior and still be on the side of Good in terms of belief, attitude, discernment, love, etc. Conversely, virtually sin-less behavior is no guarantee that an individual is on the side of God and Creation.

This is indispensable!

19 June 2021 at 07:00

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@Frank - Last I heard, nearly 60 years after her death; Enid Blyton was still the best selling English language author (in the UK, maybe beyond) among children who have just learned to read - up to about age 8. This despite a continual drip-drip of criticism against her books - saying they are out-of-date, too dull for modern kids, morally simplistic etc. (as well as all the leftist political stuff). It seems that somehow kids keep 'finding' her books; despite the efforts to hide them.

19 June 2021 at 07:09

Blogger Hrothgar said...

I entirely concur with your obvservations on Blyton and the true reasons behind the Left's incessant attempts at "cancelling" her. This antipathy has recently been coming out in the open for all to see, but seems to have been present since at least the middle part of her career (when her success started becoming difficult to ignore) within Establishment inner circles.

If the nature of their true affiliations were overlooked, it would seem extraordinary that such a popular children's writer - one moreover whose values (as expressed through her work) were absolutely congruent with those of the vast majority of the population at the time - should have been recieved a long-standing "ban" from broadcast on the BBC as early as the late 30s, on the most tissue-paper thin and (intentionally?) vague of pretexts, that she somehow lacked "literary merit".

So far as I can tell she seems popular in the English-speaking Commonwealth countries, besides being quite widely translated. My currently Antipodean-dwelling neice tells me that her books are very plentiful in the NZ/Australian second-hand bookshops, though I imagine new editions would be harder to find due to ongoing cancellation attempts from the local Establishments. If anything, she may be even more popular in India, where her readership is apparently growing, and which seems the most reliable source for new editions of her works nowadays, especially the lesser-known ones (as anyone who has tried to purchase any lately will soon find out).

This of course gives the lie to the Establishment's present insistence that their long-standing disdain stems from her "racism", "xenophobia", old-fashioned out-of touch British snobbishness, etc. Curious how these very tendencies in their more evil manifestations, though essentially absent from Blyton, were quite in vogue among the leading lights of the Establishment themselves at the time, as we are not now supposed to remember. I presume that modern Indian children would quickly be put off by such things if they they were really so evident in her work. But since The Establishment have long been very useful servitors of the Father of Lies himself (I wonder when it became an effective requirement to join their ranks?) the narrative shift is not too surprising.

19 June 2021 at 17:57

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@H - she somehow lacked "literary merit".

This is mostly because the people who say it are incapable of making any judgment of literary merit.

Another factor, as I said in an earlier piece, is that she wrote for younger children than the other 'childrens classic' authors - so that the books are rather too simple for adults to enjoy. But - so what!

19 June 2021 at 18:26