Abstract :
In The Amber Spyglass, Philip Pullman extends the psychological
depth of literature for young readers by presenting in palpable terms
a confrontation with death met by the human capacity for dealing
creatively, through story, with personal mortality. Pullman’s portrayal
of the power of storytelling is placed within the context of the
Platonic tradition and neo-Platonic, 19th-century Romanticism. The
co-protagonists’ descent into the Land of the Dead, Lyra’s freeing of
the ghosts by the power of story, and their shared emergence into the
sunlit land of the living draws on key elements of 19th-century Romanticism,
specifically, the ideas of two poets: Percy Bysshe Shelley’s
concept of the creative imagination as ‘the instrument of moral
good,’ and John Keats’ notion of ‘negative capability’ and his metaphor
of the world as ‘a vale of soul-making.’ All told, Pullman’s fantasy
portrays young protagonists transcending the dualism of good
and evil and learning to live creatively in the face of life’s contradictions,
complexities, and, most potently, their own mortality
Keywords :
His Dark Materials , ‘negative capability’ , Imagination , Romanticism , storytelling.