"If an intellect which at any given moment knew all the forces that animate Nature and the mutual positions of the beings that comprise it... could condense into a single formula the movement of the greatest bodies of the universe and that of the lightest atom: for such an intellect nothing could be uncertain; and the future just like the past would be present before our eyes." -P. S. Laplace
"The Messenger" by Martina Hoffman
The Grapes of Wrath and Pratityasamutpada
Ancient Cultures often used specific types of characters (archetypes) to convey greater meanings in their mythologies. These archetypes are found in dreams and visions, as well as visual or verbal stories across the world. The many mediums of art each allow a unique way to understand the archetypes. It is now in the modern era that the perfect medium (graphic novels) for representing higher levels of consciousness, such as the Sanskrit term "Pratityasamutpada" which refers to the state of
all phenomena arising together in a mutually interdependent web of cause and effect.
Before comic books allowed authors to represent many different interweaving stories at once, Californian author John Steinbeck laid the groundwork in his intricate novels which spanned multiple generations. In the context of the West, but with philosophy of the East, Steinbeck mastered the art of illustrating with words. His epic tale of transmigration, The Grapes of Wrath, follows the Joad family, which represents a sample of the whole (the Microcosm), who leave their drought-ridden Oklahoma plains in search of California's lush vegetation. Between the chapters about the Joad family, Steinbeck inserts 'intercalary chapters,' or segments about the entire group of migrating farmers (the Macrocosm). When situation after situation challenges their ability to solve problems alone, the characters come to realize they are interdependent with each other. The character who represents the total lack of compassion, or Vanity, is Rosasharon, whose hair is described as being arranged on her head in the shape of a tiara or a crown. Her realization that their survival depends on not only the relationship between her and her family members, but also the need to relate with other families allows her to compassion to blossom in the novel's final pages as she offers her lactating breast to malnourished men. The intercalary chapters begin to relate more and more to the Joads and their journey until it becomes completely clear that the microcosm family is inseparable with the macrocosm migration. It is her gradual understanding of interdependence and pratityasamutpada that opens Rosasharon's compassionate floodgates. In this way, she becomes a cultural archetype of transformation.
The Garden of Earthly Delights by Hieronymus Bosch: Heaven, Earth, Hell
East of Eden and Transcending Opposites
Using the Salenas Valley in California as archetypes of good and evil (between the dark mountain range and the light mountains), the themes of East of Eden encompass the transcending of cycles, fate and evil. Although it is set in the 1800s, the title of the book derives from the Biblical "land of Nod" situated east of the Garden of Eden after the banishment of Adam and Eve for their knowledge of reproduction and good and evil. After Cain kills his brother Abel, God is translated as saying to him "You will conquer evil." But after bringing the book to a group of Chinese Religious Researchers, they find there was a mis-translation of the Hebrew word Timshel: it actually means "Thou Mayest." After many similarities of generations between "A"-lettered name brothers victimized by the "C"-lettered name brothers, Cal is led to hope in the final page of the book for overcoming his evil by his father's final word on his deathbed: the simple yet empowering message "Timshel!" It is without a doubt Steinbeck's mass-scale war cry for the breaking of negative cycles and karma in favor of altruism, love and compassion.
Philosopher Gary Zukav writes in The Seat of the Soul that "The remedy for an absence is a presence. Evil is an absence and, therefore, it cannot be healed with an absence. Hatred of evil does not diminish evil, it increases it. A compassionate heart is more effective against evil than an army: it can engage evil directly- it can bring Light where there is no Light."
Although the novel does not continue past the word Timshel, we are led to believe that Cal has or will reach the state of release from the causal-effect world of karma and duality of opposites by applying the idea of absolute freedom of choice to his life.
J
ohn Steinbeck Alan Moore
The Parliament of Trees and the Akashic Records
Expanding on the ideas of overcoming cycles, Alan Moore includes the characters of Cain and Abel in the world of Saga of the Swamp Thing (later to re-appear in Neil Gaiman's The Sandman series). They serve as archetypes for the eternal struggle of good against evil. Another prominent archetype in The Swamp Thing is death and rebirth. In Germanic mythology, and commonly Norse, the World Tree Yggdrasil represented the Macrocosm (the universe) as a Microcosm. In Alan Moore's Saga of the Swamp Thingissue 35, The Swamp Thing (formerly Alec Holland) becomes initiated by Constantine (Hellblazer) on a path of inner realization. Constantine explains that the Swamp Thing has unlimited capabilities that he does not realize he can access. It is not until the Swamp Thing travels to the land of his future gravesite, The Parliament of Trees, that he understands the interconnected nature of good and evil.
Alan Moore cleverly incorporates many elementals and green monsters of folk lore (such as England's Jack-in-the-Green) in the Parliament of Trees.