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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Anonymous Kristor said...

It is by this love that the sun and stars are moved, and that the communion of saints proceeds, and the sacrament is confected, and that the church, and the temple, and the atom, and the world all cohere.

15 January 2012 at 06:26

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Peter S. said...

The notion of looking to the “Harry Potter” series for deep spiritual wisdom has, for a long while, struck me as a sketchy undertaking at best. What partially converted me on this point is that John Granger, who you cite above and who is perhaps the foremost authority on the inner meaning and spiritual interpretation of the Potter opus, has persuasively argued that the series was, in all likelihood, significantly influenced by the intellectual perspective of the Traditionalist School, specifically Titus Burckhardt’s “Alchemy: Science of the Cosmos, Science of the Soul” and Martin Lings’ “The Sacred Art of Shakespeare: To Take Upon Us the Mystery of Things”.

Granger, who is thoroughly familiar with the writings of the Traditionalist School, has persuasively read Rowling’s series as a seven-stage alchemical opus in the context of the larger English alchemical literary tradition, a tradition that includes Chaucer, Shakespeare and Yeats, among others. He states:

I think there are several reasons for believing that Ms. Rowling has used Burckhardt as a source more than Jung or McLean in the alchemical artistry of her wonderful books.

The first is that the use of alchemy in the English literary tradition is about personal transformation that is less about the soul and self-understanding than about the spirit and human perfection. The tradition is spiritual, religious if that term does not appeal you, and neither Jung nor McLean speak to this ultimate end of the Great Work. “Real world” alchemy, be it Arabic, Chinese, Hindu, or Western, was always ancillary to work done within the prevalent religious tradition; Albertus Magnus, Thomas Aquinas, and Luther, for example, were alchemists themselves or expressed their admiration of the alchemical effort. Alchemy has a transcendent goal that great English writers have tapped into for their edifying purposes in writing.

Neither Jung nor McLean, I think, are as clear about this as Burckhardt [viz. Titus Burckhardt, “Alchemy: Science of the Cosmos, Science of the Soul”]. Each seems, to my cursory reading, to take a contrary stance to this position and to neglect the literary usage element entirely. Burckhardt’s fellow Sufi and Traditionalist after Schuon, Martin Lings, in contrast, explains in great depth the uses of alchemy in Shakespeare’s plays and the Bard’s noetic meaning [viz. Martin Lings, “The Sacred Art of Shakespeare: To Take Upon Us the Mystery of Things”].

I think Ms. Rowling is writing within this tradition rather than departing from it to write a strictly psychological or didactically alchemical series. What she has said in interviews about her faith, the formulaic elements in the books that point to this faith, and specific story elements that are from Burckhardt’s book all suggest that the Traditionalist perspective is her cornerstone, if she is familiar with both the Jungian and more New Age perspectives.

http://www.hogwartsprofessor.com/alchemy-jung-burckhart-or-mclean/

15 January 2012 at 16:16

Blogger George Goerlich said...

I think we can see this very explicitly in Frodo's journey as well. It seems very much to have been of sacrificial love.

6 December 2012 at 19:44