Just thought this would be an interesting topic for discussion... Here's my theory:
Cittagazze (or was it Ci'gazze? I can never remember which is world and which is city
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Opinions?
Cittagazze isn't a world, it's a city in a world which doesn't, as far as we know, have a name. Worlds probably don't have names because most of the people who live in them don't know of the existence of any others, so they don't need to distinguish.Ok, this question has been bugging me for a while: Why is Cittagazze the only world with a name?
Does your edition of the book not explicitly say that Wills world is "our own world?"(and don't get me started on whether Will's world is the same as 'our' world - it isn't!)
No - does yours? In the text I mean. I think the publisher may have put in a note to that effect but that doesn't make it true.Does your edition of the book not explicitly say that Wills world is "our own world?"(and don't get me started on whether Will's world is the same as 'our' world - it isn't!)
The world that Will comes from is a literary construct, no more and no less than the world of Cittagazze, or the world Lyra comes from. Think about it for a moment - in the world in which you and I reside, is there or has there ever been a boy called Will Parry from Winchester with a schizophrenic mother called Elaine and a father called John who vanishes on an expedition to the Arctic? A department of the Clarendon Laboratory headed by a Dr Mary Malone? A member of the Security Forces called Sir Charles Latrom with a snake up his sleeve with his home in one of the buildings of the Oxford Brookes University in Headington Hill?Indeed, Wills world is 'our' world.
You mean it's...fiction?!!The world that Will comes from is a literary construct, no more and no less than the world of Cittagazze, or the world Lyra comes from. Think about it for a moment - in the world in which you and I reside, is there or has there ever been a boy called Will Parry from Winchester with a schizophrenic mother called Elaine and a father called John who vanishes on an expedition to the Arctic? A department of the Clarendon Laboratory headed by a Dr Mary Malone? A member of the Security Forces called Sir Charles Latrom with a snake up his sleeve with his home in one of the buildings of the Oxford Brookes University in Headington Hill?
Fair point, hoever Pullman himself has stated that Wills world is supposed to be ours, it has not divulged down a redically diffrent perhapse these people exist.
The world that Will comes from is a literary construct, no more and no less than the world of Cittagazze, or the world Lyra comes from. Think about it for a moment - in the world in which you and I reside, is there or has there ever been a boy called Will Parry from Winchester with a schizophrenic mother called Elaine and a father called John who vanishes on an expedition to the Arctic? A department of the Clarendon Laboratory headed by a Dr Mary Malone? A member of the Security Forces called Sir Charles Latrom with a snake up his sleeve with his home in one of the buildings of the Oxford Brookes University in Headington Hill?
The whole business of authorial intention is problematic to say the least. Read Roland Barthes on The Death of the Author.Fair point, hoever Pullman himself has stated that Wills world is supposed to be ours
It's called literary criticism...What your doing is nit-picking.
I'd go so far as to say that Will's world is it exists in your mind is not the same as Will's world as it exists in my mind. As a writer myself, I'm also responsible for populating a world not dissimilar from Will's (but coloured by my own personal prejudices). In the world of DI Verity Blanchard, I can assure you there is no Mary Malone at the Clarendon Laboratory (she's checked!)ITs a fictional story, so every world is going to be 'fictional' however Wills world is, for all intents and purposes, ours.
Indeed, the fact that is in writing at the beginining of the books gives a fairly strong idea of his intention though...
The whole business of authorial intention is problematic to say the least. Read Roland Barthes on The Death of the Author.
I'd say theres a major diffrence between the two...
It's called literary criticism...
If I really wanted to nit-pick, I'd point out that you should have written 'you're' and not 'your' in that sentence.
I'd agree, but the point of course here is what Pullmans intentions where and they appear to be very clear that Wills world was intended to be his version of our world (From his POV). Of course you're correct, every writer does this (I do it myself) but Pullmans intention was to portray our world as he sees it.I'd go so far as to say that Will's world is it exists in your mind is not the same as Will's world as it exists in my mind. As a writer myself, I'm also responsible for populating a world not dissimilar from Will's (but coloured by my own personal prejudices). In the world of DI Verity Blanchard, I can assure you there is no Mary Malone at the Clarendon Laboratory (she's checked!)
*Cowers*Oh naive one, who has not yet learned of the hazards of challenging the Enitharmon!
*vigorously slaps AUST*
I don't see how being the world that develops the Knife and made the first window is any basis for it to be the crossroads.
We can't know that. In our world, the Catholic Church was headed by Pope John Paul II. I agree with you that the author intended for Will's world to be ours but as I found, to my annoyance, what the writer intends isn't always what the reader experiences. Once you write something and put it out there it takes a life of its own which is unique to each reader.We can know, for example, that when Mary Malone was a nun, she was part of a Catholic church, headed by Pope John Paul II in Rome, even though this is never explicit.
I think that the whole is-it-our-world-or-not argument comes down to this uniqueness. Yes, Will's world is a portrayal by Pullman of our world, but it is a fictional construct, and not only is the fictional world interpreted by each reader personally and differently, but the real world is as well. None of our worlds are identical to each other, they are all coloured by our individuality.We can't know that. In our world, the Catholic Church was headed by Pope John Paul II. I agree with you that the author intended for Will's world to be ours but as I found, to my annoyance, what the writer intends isn't always what the reader experiences. Once you write something and put it out there it takes a life of its own which is unique to eachreader.
Perhaps I'm confused then, as I've seen the place(s) referred to as both Cittagazze and Ci'gazze. Maybe Ci'gazze is just a short form, but I always imagined that one of them is the name of the world as a whole and the other the name of the city.Cittagazze isn't a world, it's a city in a world which doesn't, as far as we know, have a name.
I believe the term 'world' is usually defined as the physical world in which we all live: as you said, the space around us. Earth and all that's on it, the sun, the moon, the stars... All that matter making up what we see and feel and live in and breathe and even eat every day. Perhaps I'm being closed-minded, but I don't believe the term 'world' can really be defined as experiences. That's a whole other kettle of fish to me.i would even go so far as to say that the term "our world" is wildly inaccurate, as even though we may share physical space, all of our experiences are personal and un-sharable.
Cittagazze means 'city of magpies' in Italian. Ci'gazze, as you say, is just a contracted form. Italian is very prone to shortening.Perhaps I'm confused then, as I've seen the place(s) referred to as both Cittagazze and Ci'gazze. Maybe Ci'gazze is just a short form, but I always imagined that one of them is the name of the world as a whole and the other the name of the city.
I could have sworn that someone said that that at one time you could only cut out of a world and into Citagazze and that to travel between worlds you had to travel via Cittagazze. Anyone remember this or am I nutty as peanut butter?I don't see how being the world that develops the Knife and made the first window is any basis for it to be the crossroads.
That's exactly why it is a crossroad. Presumably, nearly all the Knife-bearers came from that world so nearly all of the windows would open from Cittagazze to other worlds back to Cittagazze eventually. How else would they create their magpie culture? I think it's interesting that Will can pinpoint cutting through worlds down to an exact city. How would he recognize Tokyo of his world?
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