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The Secret Commonwealth
The Secret Commonwealth
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The Secret Commonwealth is a 2019 fantasy novel by Philip Pullman, the second volume of his trilogy The Book of Dust. The story is set twenty years or so after the events of La Belle Sauvage and ten years after the conclusion of the His Dark Materials trilogy.[2] Lyra Silvertongue is now an adult.[2]

Key Information

Setting

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The setting is a world dominated by the Magisterium, an international theocracy which actively suppresses heresy. In this world, humans' souls naturally exist outside of their bodies in the form of sapient "dæmons" in animal form which accompany, aid, and comfort their humans. An important plot device is the alethiometer, a truth-telling symbol reader.

Plot

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Lyra is a student at St Sophia's College Oxford, but still lives at Jordan College. Her rescuer of twenty years earlier in La Belle Sauvage, Malcolm Polstead, is now an academic.

Lyra has come to admire the works of two writers: Simon Talbot, a philosopher who asserts that rationality is all and that dæmons are a delusion; and the novelist Gottfried Brande who similarly denounces everything other than pure reason. Her dæmon Pantalaimon disapproves of both.

During a nightly excursion, Pan witnesses a man being murdered. A ticket inside the man's wallet leads them to a rucksack containing a journal and a notebook of addresses. The murdered man is Roderick Hassall, a botanist, and the journal that of his colleague Dr Strauss who had been studying a commercially-important rose whose oil is connected to Dust. Strauss keeps this information from the Magisterium, as they will certainly consider the rose industry to be heretical. The rose-growers' estates are being attacked by unknown "men from the mountains", and Strauss and Hassall decide to travel there.

The desert of Karamakan, where the industry is centred, is difficult to access and all visitors are forced to leave their dæmons behind. Strauss asks how people reunite afterwards, and is informed of a place inhabited by separated dæmons called "the Blue Hotel". The party reach a vast well-guarded red building, evidently of great importance. They are told that the price of entry is "a life", and Strauss is admitted. Hassall never sees him again, and returns home alone with Strauss's journal.

Jordan College's new master, a pharmaceutical executive, tells Lyra that she must give up her rooms. Agents from the Magisterium ransack them but fail to find the rucksack's contents.

Lyra and Pantalaimon have a blazing row. Pan insists that the books Lyra is reading have blinded her to the essential non-rational elements of life, while Lyra angrily scorns any appeal to emotion. Pan disappears, leaving a note saying "Gone to look for your imagination". Distraught, Lyra guesses that Pan may go to the Blue Hotel, and resolves to follow. Her old friends the gyptians arrange safe passage out of the country. Malcolm, meanwhile, is dispatched to Karamakan as an agent of the Oakley Street secret service organisation.

Marcel Delamare, Lyra's uncle and an ambitious Magisterium cardinal, learns that rose oil allows people to see Dust. He enlists the help of a young alethometrist, Olivier Bonneville (son of Gerard Bonneville) to find Lyra, but Bonneville defies him and sets off without authority.

Covertly attending a Magisterium congress in Geneva, Malcolm speaks to the philosopher Simon Talbot, without realising he has been recognised. Using the congress as a pretext, Delamare seizes ultimate power for himself. Malcolm learns that the "men from the mountains" are funded by pharmaceutical companies intent on controlling the supply of rose oil.

Pantalaimon confronts the author Gottfried Brande at his home in Wittenberg, but is forced to leave when Brande pointedly ignores him. He is caught by Bonneville, but manages to escape when Bonneville is briefly arrested by Magisterium agents. Pan meets a young refugee named Nur Huda el-Wahabi who has lost her dæmon, and they travel together to the Blue Hotel.

Lyra journeys across Europe and the East, following the addresses in Hassall's notebook and aided by Oakley Street and a loose collective of people who have been separated from their own dæmons. In Smyrna, Lyra is helped to adopt a disguise, and Malcolm just misses her. He is shot in the hip by a Magisterium agent, but is able to continue with difficulty. Lyra is sexually assaulted by some soldiers as she takes a train to Seleukeia. On arrival, she hires a guide, Abdel Ionides, to take her through the desert to the isolated area of ruins known as the Blue Hotel.

Bonneville, who has been tracking Lyra, is about to shoot her when he is prevented by Ionides who advises him to "leave her alive for now" as she will be the key to a great treasure to be found three thousand miles to the East. Lyra is greeted by Nur Huda, who tells her that "we have been waiting for you." The novel ends "To be concluded..."

Title

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The "secret commonwealth" refers to things that are outside the realm of rational thought, such as ghosts, fairies, and superstition.[3] Pullman took the title from a 17th-century book of the same name by the Scottish clergyman Robert Kirk, about encounters of country folk with supernatural creatures.[4]

Acknowledgements

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At the end of the text, Pullman notes that three character names are those of real people: Bud Schlesinger, Alison Wetherfield, and Nur Huda el-Wahabi. El-Wahabi was one of the victims of the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire in London.[5]

Reception

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The book was shortlisted for the 2020 Fiction Book of the Year in the British Book Awards.[6]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is a manuscript treatise composed around 1691 by Robert Kirk (1644–1692), a Scottish Episcopalian minister, Gaelic scholar, and folklorist, cataloging the Highland folklore traditions concerning invisible subterranean beings and their societal structures. Kirk, who served as parish minister of Aberfoyle in Perthshire, drew upon oral accounts from local seers and traditions to describe these entities—termed the "Secret Commonwealth"—as a middle order of spirits between humans and angels, possessing physical forms, organized governments, and customs akin to human societies, including marriages, dwellings in hills, and occasional interactions such as abductions or borrowings of household items. The work posits these beings as real, capable of influencing the visible world through second sight or magical means, while Kirk reconciles their existence with Christian theology by viewing them as fallen angels or preternatural creations subject to divine order. Circulated in manuscript form among Kirk's contemporaries but suppressed or withheld from print during his lifetime, possibly due to its controversial endorsement of popular superstitions amid the era's witch hunts and religious orthodoxy, the text achieved wider dissemination only after its first printed edition in , edited from a transcript by Sir Walter Scott's circle. Kirk's untimely death on May 14, 1692, following a walk near a fairy-haunted hill, spawned persistent local legends attributing it to retaliation by the offended spirits for divulging their secrets, with tales claiming his soul was held captive in a until freed by a kinsman's . As a for 17th-century Celtic beliefs, the has influenced subsequent scholarship, revealing tensions between authority and indigenous oral cultures in post-Reformation , though its claims rest on anecdotal testimonies rather than empirical verification.

Background and Publication

Author and Series Context

Philip , born on October 19, 1946, in , , is a British author renowned for his fantasy novels aimed at young adults. Educated at , where he earned a degree in English, Pullman taught English for over a decade before focusing on writing full-time. His early works include the adventure novel Count Karlstein (1982) and the Victorian thriller series beginning with (1985), but international acclaim arrived with the His Dark Materials trilogy, comprising Northern Lights (1995; published as The Golden Compass in the ), (1997), and (2000). The series, which explores parallel universes, daemons as external manifestations of souls, and critiques of organized religion through the tyrannical Magisterium, sold millions of copies and earned Pullman numerous awards, including the Carnegie Medal for Northern Lights. The Secret Commonwealth forms part of trilogy, a companion series to that Pullman describes as an "equel," expanding the universe with stories set before, during, and after the original trilogy's events. Announced in 2017, the trilogy delves deeper into themes of , known as "" in Pullman's cosmology—a particulate metaphor for and —and the societal tensions arising from its suppression. The first volume, (2017), is a depicting the infancy of protagonist during a catastrophic . The third and final volume, The Rose Field, was published in October 2025, concluding Lyra's arc into adulthood amid ongoing conflicts with authoritarian forces. As the second installment, The Secret Commonwealth, released on October 3, 2019, advances the timeline by twenty years post-, portraying a fractured , now a student estranged from her daemon Pantalaimon, navigating a world where research is commodified and mystical traditions erode under rationalist ideologies. This positioning bridges the youthful adventures of with mature explorations of doubt, ideology, and exile, while introducing antagonists like the opportunistic researcher Olivier Bonneville and intensifying the Magisterium's influence through figures such as Cardinal Sturrock. Pullman's series reflects his atheistic worldview, drawing from Milton's and Enlightenment philosophy to challenge dogmatic authority without endorsing unsubstantiated .

Development and Writing Process

Philip Pullman conceived The Book of Dust trilogy, encompassing The Secret Commonwealth, prior to the 2003 publication of Lyra's Oxford, planning three volumes to frame His Dark Materials: a prequel, an "equal" set during the original events, and a sequel exploring aftermath. While developing the prequel La Belle Sauvage (published 2017), Pullman envisioned Lyra as a young adult, generating "ideas and images" of her maturation approximately ten years before The Secret Commonwealth's release, around 2009. This sequel volume advances the timeline to roughly ten years after His Dark Materials, focusing on Lyra at age twenty amid evolving daemon-human relations and Dust's mysteries. Pullman's writing process eschews detailed outlining, favoring discovery through drafting—"writing into darkness"—to maintain excitement and uncover meanings organically, as he applied to probing Dust's via the narrative. Specific inspirations included the Lop Nor desert lake in , sparking concepts of a red building cultivating Dust-linked roses, alongside philosophical influences like William James's to depict Lyra's intellectual engagements through invented texts such as The Hyperchorasmians and The Constant Deceiver. He utilized recurring motifs from prior works, like roses symbolizing consciousness, to extend world-building while addressing unresolved queries from , including Dust's essence and post-theocracy societal shifts. The manuscript progressed amid Pullman's established routine of daily composition, supported by editorial collaboration, though exact duration between La Belle Sauvage and completion remains unspecified; the novel culminated in a 2019 release bridging prequel origins to trilogy closure. This approach allowed thematic depth on , , and political intrigue without predetermining plot resolutions, aligning with Pullman's view of as exploratory rather than prescriptive.

Publication Details

was first published on 3 October 2019 by David Fickling Books in the and in the United States, with simultaneous releases in , , and formats. The first edition contains 633 pages. Both publishers are imprints of . The edition carries ISBN 978-0-241-37333-0, while the edition uses 978-0-553-51067-6. A edition was issued in the on 3 November 2020 by Knopf Books for Young Readers. The audiobook, narrated by , accompanied the initial launch.

Title Origin and Literary References

The title The Secret Commonwealth for Philip Pullman's 2019 derives directly from the 17th-century manuscript of the same name authored by Robert Kirk, a Scottish Presbyterian minister and Gaelic scholar born on December 9, 1644, and deceased on May 14, 1692. Kirk's treatise, completed around 1691 but unpublished during his lifetime, compiles Highland on elves, fauns, fairies, and other entities, portraying them as a parallel "commonwealth" or society interacting with humans through abduction, , and herbal knowledge. Pullman has publicly acknowledged borrowing the title, describing Kirk's work as one of his favorite books and noting its influence on themes of hidden realities coexisting with the observable world. In Pullman's narrative, the phrase evokes the concealed domains of , rosak, and witches that underpin his , mirroring 's empirical yet credulous documentation of interactions—such as second-sight visions and fairy ointment enabling glimpses into their realm—which Kirk presented as verifiable through Gaelic testimony rather than mere . This reference aligns with Pullman's broader engagement with as a to rationalist denialism, where Kirk's text serves as a historical antecedent for exploring beyond materialist explanations. Kirk's own fate, claiming he was by fairies for revealing their secrets, adds a layer of mythic irony that resonates with Pullman's motifs of . Beyond the titular source, the novel incorporates literary allusions to 17th- and 18th-century works bridging mysticism and emerging science, including implicit nods to John Milton's Paradise Lost—a cornerstone of Pullman's oeuvre—for its depictions of fallen angels and intermediary beings akin to Kirk's fairies. Dialogues between characters like Lyra Belacqua and her dæmon Pantalaimon debate philosophy drawn from sources such as William Blake's critiques of Enlightenment reductionism, positioning the "secret commonwealth" as a realm endangered by over-rational inquiry, much as Kirk lamented the decline of fairy belief amid Presbyterian orthodoxy. These references underscore Pullman's synthesis of historical texts to critique modern scientism, without endorsing supernatural claims as literal truth.

Setting and World-Building

The Secret Commonwealth is set in a parallel universe akin to 20th-century , distinguished by metaphysical elements integral to its societies. Inhabitants possess daemons—animal-shaped external embodiments of their inner selves or , which remain fluid in form during childhood before settling into permanent shapes upon maturity. This world features advanced technologies like zeppelins and rifles alongside suppressed scientific inquiries, particularly regarding , a particulate that connects sentient beings and originates from a metaphysical . Dominating social and political structures is the , a centralized theocratic authority based in that enforces doctrinal conformity, stifles dissent, and polices knowledge of and related phenomena. Alternate historical divergences manifest in geographic and cultural variations, such as an England-like Brytain with Oxford's Jordan College as a scholarly hub, northern realms inhabited by intelligent armored bears, and clans of witches dwelling in remote, mist-shrouded regions. The narrative, occurring roughly 20 years after the trilogy's conclusion in 1995 within the story's timeline, depicts a society grappling with encroaching that diminishes perception of the "secret commonwealth"—an occult layer of existence populated by fairies, spirits, and other entities invisible to those bereft of imagination. World-building extends to economic dimensions, including trade in rare roses from Central Asian oases that harbor concentrations, and political fragmentation following upheavals, enabling influences and refugee crises. Pullman expands this framework through Lyra's from eastward across deserts and mountains, revealing interconnected multiversal threads while emphasizing causal links between human disbelief and the fading of presences.

Plot Summary

, now twenty years old and studying at St. Sophia's College in , grapples with a fractured relationship with her dæmon Pantalaimon, stemming from their traumatic separation years earlier during events that reshaped multiple worlds. Influenced by rationalist philosophy, Lyra has grown skeptical of mysticism and the invisible "secret " of spirits and , yet she becomes entangled in a conspiracy following the murder of scholar Olivier Bonneville, whose research into these unseen realms threatens powerful interests. The narrative intertwines Lyra's flight from —prompted by her encounter with a psychoactive substance derived from rare Eastern roses that causes to vanish—with Malcolm Makepiece's pursuit of her across and into . Malcolm, now a covert operative against the oppressive , uncovers links between the rose trade, Dust's elusive properties, and geopolitical machinations involving secret societies and economic control over . Their paths converge amid , philosophical debates on versus , and revelations about threats to the human- bond, culminating in confrontations that challenge the post-war order in Lyra's world.

Major Characters

Lyra Silvertongue is the protagonist, depicted as a 20-year-old undergraduate at St. Sophia's in Pullman's alternate , grappling with personal estrangement from her dæmon and drawn into investigations of murdered scholars and the illicit trade in rare roses from the East. Her journey takes her across and , evading authorities amid rising tensions between rationalist forces and mystical elements. Pantalaimon serves as Lyra's dæmon, manifested in the form of a pine marten, whose separation from her—stemming from traumatic events in prior narratives—creates central conflict, prompting independent travels and reconciliatory efforts amid threats from the . Malcolm Polstead, now a scholar affiliated with the covert anti- network Oakley Street, pursues inquiries into academic killings linked to suppressed knowledge of the "secret commonwealth" of invisible entities, while separately tracking 's path after her flight from ; he builds on his earlier role as a youth protecting infant during a . Dr. Hannah Relf, head of St. Sophia's College and an Oakley Street operative, aids in shielding from institutional persecution and coordinates intelligence against authoritarian encroachments, embodying scholarly resistance to doctrinal suppression.

Themes and Philosophical Elements

Nature of Consciousness and Dust

In Philip Pullman's , Dust—known scientifically as Rusakov particles—serves as the subatomic substrate of , manifesting as a field that coalesces around sentient life to enable thought, , and creativity. Unlike conventional particles, Dust exhibits properties of awareness itself, gravitating toward adults whose developing amplifies its presence, while evading children whose minds remain unformed by complex reflection. This formulation aligns with panpsychist tenets, wherein Pullman envisions not as an emergent of complexity but as an intrinsic quality of certain matter, challenging materialist reductions of mind to mere neural computation. Dæmons, externalized souls visible as animal companions, embody this Dust-mediated consciousness, representing the indivisible wholeness of inner life; their form reflects personality, and their proximity enforces intuitive self-knowledge. Pullman posits as nurturing human virtues—, , —while its suppression correlates with moral and intellectual atrophy, as seen in the Magisterium's doctrinal rejection of it as "." In empirical terms within the narrative, Dust detectors quantify its flux, linking fluctuations to emotional states and cognitive activity, thus grounding the metaphysical in observable phenomena akin to quantum fields. The Secret Commonwealth intensifies this exploration through Belacqua's estrangement from her dæmon, Pantalaimon, a deliberate rift born of ideological discord that fractures their shared and exposes vulnerabilities in Dust-dependent . The separation—unprecedented for adults, whose dæmons remain proximal post-puberty—induces dissociation, diminished , and impaired judgment, illustrating as a dynamic interplay rather than isolated . 's subsequent , navigating rationalist toward Dust's mystical corollaries (e.g., the unseen realm of spirits), critiques philosophies that prioritize empirical denial over holistic awareness, equating such views with societal fragmentation and authoritarian control. Pullman thereby uses to probe causal links between conscious integrity and ethical flourishing, warning that severing ties to its subtle influences erodes .

Rationalism Versus Mysticism

In The Secret Commonwealth, juxtaposes , embodied by influential philosophers like the fictional Hyperchorasmians, with the mystical realm of , , and unseen spirits, portraying the former as a reductive force that erodes human connection to wonder and intuition. The Hyperchorasmians advocate a materialist , dismissing as illusions and promoting empirical science over , which correlates with a societal decline where adult vanish, symbolizing a broader loss of inner vitality and empathy. This rationalist surge mirrors an Enlightenment-era shift in Lyra's world, where "chemistry and rational thought" dominate, leading to the suppression of mystical phenomena like the alethiometer's intuitive truths. Pullman critiques this "intolerant rationality" as akin to dogmatic in its life-denying rigidity, drawing on influences like to argue that excessive reason stifles the "secret commonwealth" of fairies, ghosts, and subconscious insights essential for perceiving reality's fuller dimensions. Lyra's personal arc exemplifies this tension: separated from her dæmon Pantalaimon, she grapples with rational demystification—questioning Dust's existence through scholarly doubt—versus reclaiming mystical "Second Sight" to navigate threats, underscoring Pullman's view that pure blinds individuals to causal interconnections beyond measurable data. Arguments between Lyra and Pantalaimon over and highlight how rationalism, while advancing knowledge, risks severing the human capacity for transcendent awareness. Ultimately, the narrative endorses a synthesis where complements rational inquiry, rejecting both extremes: the Magisterium's repressive faith and the Hyperchorasmians' denial of the unseen. Pullman posits that is indispensable for truth-seeking, as rationality alone cannot access the "spiritual quest" realms of and hidden entities, a stance evident in the plot's resolution favoring intuitive alliances over ideological purity. This theme critiques modern scientism's overreach, emphasizing empirical limits without dismissing evidence-based methods, as seen in the book's exploration of as transformative rather than pseudoscientific.

Economic and Political Dimensions

In The Secret Commonwealth, political themes center on the expansion of authoritarian control by the , a theocratic that consolidates power through suppression of and alliance with ideological certainty. The organization employs threats from external "barbarians" to justify internal crackdowns and demagoguery, mirroring tactics used historically to maintain regime stability. This reflects Pullman's broader critique of power derived from unyielding conviction, where "certainty about being right" enables , distinguishing good from evil in human affairs. The narrative portrays the Magisterium as factional yet increasingly dominant, hoarding knowledge and targeting individuals associated with , a particle symbolizing . These political dynamics intersect with economic disruptions, particularly a "rose panic" in regions like and , where conflicts interrupt the trade in roses yielding a substance linked to daemon suppression and perception. This scarcity triggers a politico-economic crisis, exacerbated by multinational pharmaceutical interests and Magisterium-backed enterprises that exploit the instability for control over resources tied to Dust. by religious extremists further disrupts supply chains, leading to broader economic strain from refugee influxes fleeing eastern turmoil. The Magisterium's alignment with corporate banking and pharmaceutical sectors underscores a fusion of state power and market forces, prioritizing ideological conformity over individual freedoms. Pullman weaves in contemporary allusions to faltering and mass displacement, depicting tragedies—such as a capsized —as consequences of authoritarian overreach and regional wars. These elements highlight causal links between political , economic collapse, and humanitarian fallout, without endorsing simplistic narratives of victimhood or institutional benevolence. The book's portrayal favors decentralized against centralized authority, warning that unchecked or can erode the "secret commonwealth" of intuitive human experience essential for societal resilience.

Reception and Legacy

Initial Critical Response

The Secret Commonwealth, published on October 3, 2019, elicited a predominantly positive initial critical response, with reviewers commending its expansion of Philip Pullman's into more adult-oriented territory, including philosophical inquiries into reason, imagination, and personal estrangement. Critics highlighted the novel's thematic depth, particularly the strained relationship between Silvertongue and her daemon Pantalaimon, which serves as a for and maturation. In , the book was described as a successful evolution for into adulthood, revisiting her childhood losses while delivering stylistic elegance, narrative rigor, and sharp against intolerant and , though some alignment between Lyra's ruminations and Pullman's authorial voice was noted as occasionally blurring character independence. NPR's assessment emphasized the novel's scale—full of big ideas, characters, and sorrows—positioning it as a tale of spies, philosophies, and daemon realities that critiques modern darkness while prioritizing individual emotional arcs, despite minor quibbles over narrative messiness and an abrupt violent episode. Kirkus Reviews praised the exhilarating plot involving parallel journeys across amid authoritarian threats and a quest for a rare rose, skillfully weaving themes of change, love's complexities, evil's nature, and magical truths, with no major flaws identified in its integration of familiar characters and grand events. The New Yorker's brief notice focused on Lyra's undergraduate life and the novel's cosmology of daemons as externalized souls, underscoring the innovative depiction of her philosophical rift with Pantalaimon as a core driver of adult adjustment. Overall, early critiques positioned the work as a compelling, intellectually ambitious sequel that builds on (2017), though its darker tone and ambiguity distinguished it from the more youthful trilogy.

Fan and Reader Reactions

Reader ratings for The Secret Commonwealth, aggregated on , averaged 4.04 out of 5 stars as of late 2023, based on over 59,000 reviews, indicating generally positive but polarized responses among fans of Philip Pullman's series. Many readers praised the novel's expansion of the lore, particularly its exploration of ideological conflicts between and , with some describing it as a "thought-provoking" continuation that deepened the philosophical underpinnings of Pullman's world. On platforms like Reddit's r/hisdarkmaterials community, enthusiasts highlighted the emotional depth in depicting Lyra's estrangement from her dæmon Pantalaimon, viewing it as a mature evolution from the youthful adventures of earlier books. Criticisms from fans frequently centered on perceived deviations in character portrayal, with Lyra's embrace of extreme rationalism and severance from intuitive wonder alienating readers who preferred her as the defiant, truth-seeking protagonist of prior works; multiple reviewers called this shift "cringe-worthy" or "out of character," attributing it to forced ideological messaging. Others expressed frustration with the plot's slower pace and unresolved cliffhanger ending, feeling it prioritized setup for the trilogy's third volume over standalone satisfaction, leading to sentiments like "confusing and disappointing" in fan discussions shortly after its October 3, 2019 release. A subset of reactions noted the book's darker tone, including themes of depression and institutional corruption, as overly bleak for younger fans, though some reread enthusiasts reported improved appreciation for its critique of desensitized modernity. Aggregate data from The StoryGraph showed a slightly lower average of 3.89, reflecting similar divides among self-identified fantasy readers.

Ideological and Cultural Critiques

Critics have observed that The Secret Commonwealth extends Philip Pullman's longstanding critique of institutional religion—embodied in the oppressive , modeled on authoritarian structures—to include dogmatic , yet retains an underlying antipathy toward faith-based . The novel portrays extreme , exemplified by the CCD's suppression of alethiometers and the , as leading to spiritual impoverishment and personal disconnection, such as Lyra's estrangement from her dæmon Pantalaimon due to overreliance on reason, resulting in profound unhappiness. This shift targets "intolerant rationality" akin to or , which Pullman depicts as life-denying and reductive, echoing William Blake's warnings against mechanistic reason. However, religious commentators argue this balanced critique is superficial, as the symbolizes institutions while Pullman's subverts transcendent in favor of a humanistic "Republic of ," reflecting his ideological bias against despite borrowing from Christian sources like Milton and the . Ideologically, the book advances an unorthodox prioritizing individual freedom and moral autonomy over centralized power, critiquing both theocratic and technocratic as pathways to . Pullman's portrays traditional hierarchies negatively, aligning with his anti-monarchist views, while advocating a "" of citizens unbound by institutional . Some analyses note this as a defense against ideological , but conservative perspectives highlight inconsistencies, such as equating religious authority with rationalist extremism while promoting doubt as inherently liberating, potentially undermining cultural anchors like and . Culturally, the novel has faced scrutiny for its depictions of and ethnic groups, often casting aristocrats as manipulative or morally corrupt—echoing broader patterns in Pullman's oeuvre where figures like Lord Boreal embody elite villainy—and for ethnic stereotypes, such as warlike Tartars or trafficker-associated Turks. A particularly controversial element is the gang-rape scene involving and Middle Eastern assailants, which drew backlash for gratuitous violence and reinforcing Orientalist tropes of barbarism, amplifying perceptions of ideological bias in character portrayals derived from influences. These elements underscore critiques of the work's handling of power dynamics, where cultural "others" and elites serve narrative functions that risk perpetuating reductive hierarchies despite the author's intent to challenge them.

References

  1. https://www.[mdpi](/page/MDPI).com/2410-9789/2/1/2
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