Gnosticism in popular culture

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Gnosticism

History of Gnosticism

Gnosticism
Mandaeism
Manichaeism

Syrian-Egyptic Gnosticism
Sethians
Thomasines
Valentinians
Basilideans

Fathers of Christian Gnosticism
Simon Magus
Cerinthus
Valentinus

Early Gnosticism
Ophites
Cainites
Carpocratians
Borborites
Thomasines

Medieval Gnosticism
Paulicianism
Tondrakians
Bogomilism
Bosnian Church
Catharism

Gnosticism in modern times
Gnosticism in popular culture

Gnostic texts
Nag Hammadi library
Codex Tchacos
Gnosticism and the New Testament

Related Articles
Gnosis
Pythagoreanism
Neoplatonism and Gnosticism
Esoteric Christianity
Theosophy

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[edit] Literature

[edit] Comics and illustrated narratives

  • The universe detailed in Neil Gaiman's Sandman series is broadly gnostic in cosmological structure, detailing the existences of seven archetypal figures that, at various times, control human action (their designated areas of power are reflected in their titles): Destiny, Death, Dream, Destruction, Desire, Despair, Delirium (who, at an unknown time in the past, was called Delight). These figures are likened to gods yet, being representative of human abstracts, ones that are not worshipped nor which are subject to the ebb and flow of belief; indeed, gods and goddesses from a wide variety of pantheons are acknowledged as their inferiors and, in some senses, subordinates. However, at the same time it is implied that the seven figures are intermediaries, acting on the behalf and at the behest of another, superior agency; though the exact identity of the figure that presides over them is ultimately unknown, it is implied that it is a primal creative force or God.
  • In the Marvel Comics universe, the origins of Earth are described using gnostic mythemes, including the notion of a subordinate creator of the universe. This view of the creation of the earth was expounded in the back-up features of the 1989 annual editions of their comics, all part of the Atlantis Attacks crossover.
  • Alan Moore, acclaimed writer of From Hell, Watchmen, V for Vendetta, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and Promethea, converted to Gnosticism in the late 1990s. His work, typically of Gnostic interests, demonstrates a keen engagement with the often-ambivalent relationship between subject and reality, consciousness (especially altered and enlightened states of consciousness) and revolt against constrictive systems of control. In Watchmen, Moore appears to explore (or at least evoke) the concept of Voegelin's 'Immanentization of the Eschaton' through a central character in the series, who hatches a monstrous plot to save the world through the fabrication of an alien invasion. Promethea explores Gnostic issues even more directly, though the vehicle of Kabbalistic, alchemical and other esoteric framing devices.
  • Grant Morrison's comic series The Invisibles draws on Gnostic mythemes (particularly those of Manicheanism), both in terms of overall structure and also through occasional direct reference. Morrison's other works, such as Animal Man and The Filth, also possess frequent moments of structural cohesion with Gnostic worldviews, though these make no direct reference.

[edit] Film and television

  • Such films as Dark City, Pleasantville, The Matrix, The Thirteenth Floor, eXistenZ, The Truman Show, Twelve Monkeys, Groundhog Day, The Island and Vanilla Sky can be compared to Gnostic cosmological myth in the presentation of a world that is illusory, that is created with the intention to deceive or restrict its inhabitants, and that is not configured to humanity's benefit save through the illuminating realization of its falsehood. Ultimately, the key to unravelling the illusion and perceiving reality without obscuration resides in a form of self-knowledge or enlightenment (often this perception is concurrent to a 'return' to a material or extended reality that persists beyond the illusion).
  • The MTV animated science fiction television series and subsequent movie, Æon Flux, contains many Gnostic ideas.
  • Hedwig and the Angry Inch makes reference to a pseudo-gnostic myth throughout; therein, the Gnostic reverence for the androgyne as symbolic of superior spiritual realities is contrasted with the protagonist's sexual and gender difficulties. Additionally, one of the main characters in the film is named 'Tommy Gnosis'.
  • In the anime (movie and series) and manga Revolutionary Girl Utena, there are Gnostic themes and visual symbolism. Much focus of the film's focus is directed to the dichotomy between light and dark and the interplay between the two though, at its heart, it is a passionately post-modern fairy tale. The operation of the colour scheme and drives of the individual characters harkens towards the search for a "true will" similar to that presented in Aleister Crowley's Thelema doctrine.
  • The anime series, movies, and manga Fullmetal Alchemist contain strong Gnostic elements. In the series, it's towards the latter half. The movies contain the strongest influences of the animation, and the manga contains heavy Gnostic influence throughout. This can be attributed to the influence of Gnostic thinking on certain real-world Alchemic systems.
  • The anime Big O can be considered a modern Gnostic drama, containing themes entrenched in Gnosticism. The series is set in a city where mankind has lost its memory, the action centering around a professional negotiator who has inexplicably gained memories of the previous world, thus gifting him with special talents that reveal themselves as the series progresses. The city he resides in is revealed in the latter half of the series to be a massive, elaborate stage, and the main character himself is revealed to be a sort of memetic clone of a previous negotiator whose primary function was to negotiate with the forces in control of the city. This essentially makes the main character a reborn Gnostic Christ figure.
  • Yet another anime with Gnostic influences is the series Last Exile. The influences are not particularly or immediately obvious. The setting is a degrading partially terraformed world dominated by hostile, elitist rulers called "The Guild" who maintain a dogmatic grip over the activities of two warring nations. Other Gnostic and/or contemporary Christian elements include an airship captain who is essentially crucified on a cross by rose vines (undergoing attempted interrogation in the process), an exiled Empress named Sophia who has an unrequited love for the aforementioned captain, and a reconciliation between conflicting worlds during the series' climax. There are also highly important sacred mysteries tied directly to the main plot, Greek (the language of many early Christian documents) featured as the written language of the series' inhabitants, and the theme of a forgotten world as the source of humanity (in this case, planet Earth).
  • One anime movie, Sol Bianca, contains strong reference to Gnosis. In it the Gnosis (or G'Nohsis as it is erroneously pronounced in the movie) is a tangible object reputed to be the Galaxy's greatest treasure. Upon attaining the Gnosis they discover it is an old optical storage disk containing information of a long lost source-world for humanity, which is revealed to be The Earth, long gone and even forgotten over the eons.
  • The popular science fiction show Stargate SG1 arguably demonstrated Gnostic elements in its later seasons, including the classical gnostic notion of evading or circumventing the constrictive material self in order to ascend to a higher state of existence. The parallels increased during the ninth season, with the introduction of the Ori, a race of ascended beings that deceive and oppress humanity for the purpose of deriving energy from humanity to fuel their level of ascension. However, the argument of outright Gnosticism in Stargate is extremely dubious at best, as there are many systems of spiritual belief that include a form of ascension. Also the theme of the Ori can be taken as a repetition of the original 'false gods' theme of the series simply taken up to a higher and arguably more intense level. Notably the Ori crusaders bear a stark resemblance to the Goa'uld.
  • The final episode of the 2005 series of Doctor Who, entitled The Parting Of The Ways, contains a highly gnostic storyline. The Emperor Dalek like the demiurge believes in his ignorance and madness to be god. Rose looks into the time vortex and gains knowledge of everything in the universe. Thus armed with this perfect gnosis - becomes effectively a goddess.

[edit] Music

[edit] Art

  • The art of William Blake is arguably expressive of a world-view that finds several parallels with gnosticism. Though it would be incorrect to state that Blake consciously sought to depict gnostic themes, several of his mythic figures, such as Urizen (as he is presented in the famous Ancient of Days) find correspondence in Gnostic myth; one might also note Blake's distrust of materialism, as expressed in such paintings as his portrait of Isaac Newton and, less overtly, his illustrations to Dante's Divine Comedy. Of note is also his illustrations to the Book of Job.
  • Artist Alex Grey frequently references Gnosticism in his work; he has, for example, painted a portrait of Sophia, a recurrent Gnostic figure, as part of his Sacred Mirrors series.

[edit] Computer, console and 'tabletop' games

  • The computer role-playing games Final Fantasy VII, Final Fantasy X, Final Fantasy Tactics, Final Fantasy Tactics Advance, Chrono Trigger, Chrono Cross, and Xenogears by Squaresoft as well as the Xenosaga series (now in the hands of an ex-Square team known as Monolith Soft) contain subtle Gnostic themes, if not outright references to Gnostic myth (as in the case of Xenosaga).
  • The Legacy of Kain series of games has many Gnostic elements, particularly in the character of the Elder God, as revealed in the most recent game in the series, Defiance.
  • The role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons makes references to gnostic concepts in its supplemental books, such as the Book of Exalted Deeds, which details Pistis Sophia, an archon and a patron of the game's martial-arts-wielding monks. The same is also true of the alternate role-playing system Kult.
  • The video game series Silent Hill presents several Gnostic mythemes, including the concept of the material world as Hell, in contrast to a superior, paradisial plane of existence, though inverted as the material world is shown to be normal, even pleasant, while the paradise is a world of flames, rusted surfaces, mutilated corpses, twisted demons, and anguish and torment.
  • The GameCube console game Tales of Symphonia contains variances and odd fusions of Norse and Gnostic themes. The beginnings of the game are fairly clichéd as a rag-tag team of heroes sets out on an adventure to encounter an angel at various locations to regenerate the world. There are also veritable concentration camps known as "Human Farms" run by a corrupt race of half-elves that are supposedly going to be destroyed by this regeneration. As the game progresses, it is revealed that the angels featured are not actually divine beings and the quest is based on falsehood unintentionally propagated by the church. It is revealed that there are two worlds, a declining world and a rising world. The declining world is a creation for the purpose of sapping the mystical energies of its inhabitants. The game's focus then shifts to the reconciliation or fusion of the two worlds and the defeat of the arguably demiurgical main villain named Lord Yggdrasil and his host of created angels. The plot somehow quickly turns into a creatively constructed fusion of Gnostic and Norse mythologies.
  • The PC Strategy Game Alpha Centauri contains what is an essentially gnostic storyline. Trapped in an alien world, the human race struggles to survive against an ignorant god (the planet). In the end - if the players faction acquires enough knowledge - humanity becomes one with this god to achieve perfect gnosis and "Ascend to Transcendence".
  • The name of the title character of the Simon the Sorcerer series of adventure games is identical to the name of Simon Magus, also known as Simon the Sorcerer in English, which presumably reflects an in-joke, seeing how, for example, Dungeons & Dragons (mentioned above) is directly parodied in the second installment of the series.
  • The videogame Dragon Warrior VII includes an monotheistic God who created the world and left the means for its restoration after the Demon Lord took it over. Elemental spirits are aspects of Him more in contact with men.

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