
11 'Is it the end of faith?' Greg Clarke at Melbourne Uni
11 'Does faith make sense?' Greg Clarke at Retro Cafe, Fitzroy
12 'Bash a Christian' Open Forum with Greg Clarke at Melbourne Uni
13 'Atheism & Belief: the difference Jesus makes' Greg Clarke in Melbourne
15 'Is Christianity the one true faith?' Greg Clarke debates Dan Barker at UOW
16 'Is the Bible an acceptable guide for morality?' Greg Clarke debates Dan Barker at UNSW
17 'Can you believe in God and Science?' Panel discussion in Melbourne
18 Philosophy in a Pub: 'Does God exist?'
On the road in search of freedom - reflections on Into the Wild
Simon Smart
| Baby this town rips the bones from your back Its a death trap, its a suicide rap We gotta get out while we're young `cause tramps like us, baby we were born to run (Bruce Springsteen ‘Born to Run’) |
| In the early 1980s when
Bruce Springsteen began to sing rousing anthems of busting out of town
and ‘cutting loose’, he hit on a winning formula. The ‘Boss’ understood
the romantic energy entailed in visions of freedom and escape⎯casting
off society’s expectations and responsibilities and just hitting the
road. ‘It’s a town full of losers and I’m pulling out of here to win,’
he sang in Thunder Road. Springsteen was picking up a well-used motif
of literature and art, recalling works like Kerouac’s On the road or
movies like the 1960s classic Easy Rider, or more recently The
motorcycle diaries. It seems the idea of a getaway is a theme many can
relate to. It was this same notion of escape that led Christopher McCandless to take to the road in 1990 on a journey that lasted two years and ended with his death in the Alaskan wilderness in August 1992. McCandless began his wanderings shortly after graduating from Emery University in Atlanta. Bright and talented, a career of white-collar affluence and respectability lay waiting. He ran the other way. McCandless’ story became the subject of John Krakauer’s book Into the wild. It was then adapted into the film of the same name in 2007, directed by Sean Penn and starring Emile Hirsch as McCandless. |
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| Many of us have felt the call of adventure and travel but this is no Contiki tour or even hard-core Lonely Planet wandering. When he left, McCandless gave all $24000 of his savings to charity and began with virtually nothing. He was pursuing the experience; the transcendence of life outside the box. He describes himself as ‘an aesthetic voyager whose home is the road.’ The romanticism of Lord Byron, quoted in voiceover, captures his imagination |
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| There is pleasure in the pathless woods; There is rapture on the lonely shore; There is society where none intrudes; By the deep sea, and music in its roar, I love man not less, but nature more. (Lord Byron Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, Canto IV, Stanza 178) |
| ‘I’m gonna miss you when
you go’, says Ron, and McCandless replies ‘I’ll miss you too, but
you’re wrong if you think that the joy of life comes principally from
human relationships’. McCandless can happily cast off attachments when
he feels the need. ‘The core of man’s spirit comes from new
experiences,’ he tells Ron. No-one, it seems, will get in the way of
his dream. And his dream lies in the Alaskan wilderness and the challenge of living alone – man in tune with nature. But it all ends tragically. After a full winter living in an abandoned bus, McCandless, having attained a degree of satisfaction and peace, finally decides to head back to civilisation only to be cut off by a raging river of melted snow. He is poisoned by berries he mistakes for an edible variety, and dies a slow and lonely death, succumbing to his own naivety. |
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| ‘there’s some kind of bigger thing we can all appreciate, and it sounds like you don’t mind calling it God, but when you forgive, you love, and when you love, God’s light shines on you.’ |
| 05-Aug-2009 04:20 PM jon | |
| good article, love bruce springsteen he rules, nice review here http://thecelebritycafe.com/cd/full_review/14493.html | |
| 30-Oct-2009 06:50 PM Anonymous | |
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