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shahirsaleheen 's review for:
Blood Meridian, or, the Evening Redness in the West
by Cormac McCarthy
Blood Meridian is truly unlike any work of art I've ever experienced. With stories with incredibly violent themes, either with physical bloodshed or violence of an oppressive higher force, there is oftern something within the story that the person engaging with the art can see representing the concept of hope. Most mainstream films, TV shows, books, and other forms of art have a resolution that finalizes the themes that offer the most amount of conflict to the engager. Blood Meridian chooses to force the reader to immerse themselves into some of the most sickening concepts mankind is able to concieve, like mass murder, kidnappings, genocide, and other unspeakable levels of violence. In many ways, the lack of any hopeful symbols within this story serves as a harrowing reminder that warfare never truly has a peaceful resolution with those who experience it.
The themes of Christianity and the way it is used as a symbol of inhumanity in this novel was truly one of my favorite recurring themes within the story. Every church was the site of immense human suffering and violence, and the sites of worship, like alter-christs were marked by gruesome acts of violence. The firsr turly climactic scene shows the Judge coming to a pastor's lecture within a tent, and turning the sermon into a chaotic spectacle. With this portrayal of Godlessness, it truly elevates the themes of humanity's lust for war, and it makes the Judge one of the most intriguing characters within the story. The Judge's perspective on humanity's desire for violence makes warfare feel like a spiritual experience, with his portrayal of war as a battle between wills, acting as an omnipresent ritual that dictates the fate of humanity. And it is with man's love for war that allows for the dominion of man over others, from Glanton holding ownership of the men within his gang, to the Judge holding ownership of natural events that occur within them.
The Judge is portrayed masterfully and and it is stomach-turning to thinking about how the Judge is based on a real historical figure; it truly adds to the disturbing themes of war within this novel as something incredibly present in the lives of people's past, present and future. His dance, a representaton to the commitment and excellence in the trade of the war, offers an interesting perspective on how violence shapes society. His speeches and lectures about man's desire for ritual seems like a foundational reasoning for his mission to be the most effective in war. As he excels the most in dance, it represents his supremacy as an otherworldly "god of war", with his final promise alluding to his future to continue to perpetrate man's desire of violence.
Another really amazing element in this story is how the concept of fate and destiny were explored, especially in Glanton's character arc. When his fortune was told with his experience with the Tarot cards, to me, it portrayed the idea that it is impossible to hold a monopoly on violence; the brutality one inflicts upon someone is returned to the brutalist in a manner unlike anything they may expect. The Judge establishes himself as an otherworldy figure when it comes to violence, and it clear that he is not of the physical world, and his description of how fate can only be managed by complete understanding and dominion of all phenomena. Glanton feeds into his destiny with every action of destruction he took. Simalarly, the concept of fortune telling added a more sinister layer to the plot of the story, since it foreshadowed many of the violent events in the story. McCarthy's ambiguity of whether the world is dictated by fate, as the Judge believes or by man's choice, as the Kid believes, makes for a very interesting conclusion.
The themes of Christianity and the way it is used as a symbol of inhumanity in this novel was truly one of my favorite recurring themes within the story. Every church was the site of immense human suffering and violence, and the sites of worship, like alter-christs were marked by gruesome acts of violence. The firsr turly climactic scene shows the Judge coming to a pastor's lecture within a tent, and turning the sermon into a chaotic spectacle. With this portrayal of Godlessness, it truly elevates the themes of humanity's lust for war, and it makes the Judge one of the most intriguing characters within the story. The Judge's perspective on humanity's desire for violence makes warfare feel like a spiritual experience, with his portrayal of war as a battle between wills, acting as an omnipresent ritual that dictates the fate of humanity. And it is with man's love for war that allows for the dominion of man over others, from Glanton holding ownership of the men within his gang, to the Judge holding ownership of natural events that occur within them.
The Judge is portrayed masterfully and and it is stomach-turning to thinking about how the Judge is based on a real historical figure; it truly adds to the disturbing themes of war within this novel as something incredibly present in the lives of people's past, present and future. His dance, a representaton to the commitment and excellence in the trade of the war, offers an interesting perspective on how violence shapes society. His speeches and lectures about man's desire for ritual seems like a foundational reasoning for his mission to be the most effective in war. As he excels the most in dance, it represents his supremacy as an otherworldly "god of war", with his final promise alluding to his future to continue to perpetrate man's desire of violence.
Another really amazing element in this story is how the concept of fate and destiny were explored, especially in Glanton's character arc. When his fortune was told with his experience with the Tarot cards, to me, it portrayed the idea that it is impossible to hold a monopoly on violence; the brutality one inflicts upon someone is returned to the brutalist in a manner unlike anything they may expect. The Judge establishes himself as an otherworldy figure when it comes to violence, and it clear that he is not of the physical world, and his description of how fate can only be managed by complete understanding and dominion of all phenomena. Glanton feeds into his destiny with every action of destruction he took. Simalarly, the concept of fortune telling added a more sinister layer to the plot of the story, since it foreshadowed many of the violent events in the story. McCarthy's ambiguity of whether the world is dictated by fate, as the Judge believes or by man's choice, as the Kid believes, makes for a very interesting conclusion.