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03-13-10, 06:10 AM
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#1
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Arrives By Sub
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: George Town Tasmania
Posts: 3
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Xena: Some Reflections
XENA
After I had finished teaching ancient history in the early 1990s to matriculation students and just before retiring from full-time teaching in 1999, Xena: Warrior Princess appeared on the lighted-chirping box. The problem of religious plurality has been explored not only in philosophical and theological works, but also in popular culture. Xena: Warrior Princess explores this issue par excellence. The series ran for six seasons with the syndication beginning in 1995. By the time the series concluded in 2001 I had retired from full-time teaching in Western Australia, had taken a sea-change to Tasmania and was on a pension.
The beautiful and relatively unknown Lucy Lawless stars as Xena. She journeys through the ancient world and interacts with seminal figures, stories, and ideas from various religious and mythological traditions. The television series constructs the stories in a way that makes provocative suggestions about the truth and usefulness of religion in general, about the truth-claims of specific religious traditions, and about the ontological relationships among the metaphysical claims of various religions. The various answers to the problem of religious plurality suggested in Xena: Warrior Princess are compared to standard philosophical and theological approaches.
As globalization has brought religious communities into greater contact with one another and religious diversity to the forefront of public awareness, the problem of religious plurality is addressed not just in philosophical and theological treatises, but also in popular culture texts.. The Xena character was created as an evil warlord and temptress in the series Hercules: The Legendary Journeys. The spin-off series involving Xena begins with Xena undergoing an unexplained conversion in which she renounces evil and resolves to spend the rest of her days doing good in order to atone for the misdeeds of her past. Over the course of six seasons of episodes, Xena interacts not only with the gods of classical Graeco-Roman mythology, but also with key figures from several of the world’s religious traditions, through storylines that construct complicated relationships among the religious and mythological systems involved.
Xena does not interact with Islam. This is quite understandable. Islam did not emerge until the sixth century C.E. Though Xena’s travels through the Xenaverse cover a span of roughly 1200 years of Earth history, they end long before the sixth century. So when Xena travels through what we now know as Islamic territories, she encounters either the pre-Islamic jinn or the kind of comic-book stereotypes of pre-Islamic Arabia that caused Arab activists to protest Disney’s Aladdin film.-Ron Price with thanks to David Fillingim, “By the Gods—or Not: Religious Plurality in Xena: Warrior Princess,” Journal of Religion and Popular Culture, Volume 21, No.3, Fall, 2009.
As I was finishing my career as a teacher
a Xenaverse appeared where all religions
and mythologies were true, but some were
truer than others in the lighted-chirping box.
Despite Xena’s preference to remain aloof
from spiritual concerns and promote a wide
pragmatic humanism, both Christianity and
Hinduism both turned out to be true in the
most ultimate of senses. It should not be a
surprise that Hinduism and Christianity both
received top billing in a TV series that capped
the 20th century. After all, in the 20th century,
it was through the influence of Tolstoy’s take on
Jesus’ teaching that the Hindu Gandhi awakened
to the way of satyagraha. And it was in the Hindu
practice of Gandhi that the Christian Martin Luther
King, Jr., saw the non-violent love of Jesus.....This
process was described as passing over and coming
back-the spiritual/ethical stance for a post-Auschwitz,
a post-Hiroshima, post-modern world, that is our own.
Xena’s pragmatic, humanistic commitment
to the good of others guides her interactions
with the spiritual traditions she encounters...
To blindly accept religious authority—or any
other authority for that matter—is dangerous—
so went the wisdom of this television oracle.
But a stance rooted in one tradition, open to the
collective wisdom of other spiritual and ethical
traditions & sources, and committed to the good
of all people promises the best possibility for us
to meet the ethical challenges in this very very
globalized techno-bureaucratic age: amen! Xena!
Ron Price
13 March 2010
PS This is the 2nd edition of this prose-poem. The author is a Canadian living in Australia and has been a Bahá'í for 50 years.
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married for 42 years, a teacher for 35
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03-13-10, 06:15 PM
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#2
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Alvar's Bitch
Hears the Whispers
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: brick city
Posts: 14,019
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Re: Xena: Some Reflections
This should be in discontinued shows thread but I love that you brought up one of my favorite old tv shows. I watched it even if it was re-run 5 times, history has proven that there were warrior women, Amazons did exist and in some cultures women fought side by side with men. It was also a chance to see someone I thought was going to be a big star, Kevin Smith, sadly he met a very untimely death on a movie set. Just one more reason I wish this show was still shown in syndication.
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build me a bridge soaked in gasoline
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03-13-10, 11:39 PM
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#3
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Blew Up the Hatch
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: When?
Posts: 1,896
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Re: Xena: Some Reflections
I'm with you snakey-- absolutely loved Xena! But I'm sure I remember seeing it in the late '80's in the States. It was great on many levels, and I think it was a watershed for female characters: Post-Xena it was OK for women to kick butt! And to fight men!
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Keeper of Jacob's Tapestry
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03-14-10, 12:05 AM
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#4
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 Muffin Queen
Squishes the Frog
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: sitting with mah snoogy-woogy.
Posts: 23,354
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Re: Xena: Some Reflections
Moving to Discontinued Series. Please continue.
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Going to Canada. BBL.
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03-15-10, 05:35 PM
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#5
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The American Idle
Carries Big Stick
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Getting some gum to pay MinaKitty
Posts: 16,051
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Re: Xena: Some Reflections
I loved this show as well. Half naked, Amazon woman.... kicking butt.
Not sure about all that stuff written above; I'm pretty sure none of that ever entered my mind, but Xena was hot and the lesbian overtones with her little blonde sidekick were awesome.
Then I think her sidekick cut all her hair off, and was decidedly less hot after that.
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Redwood Original
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03-17-10, 02:47 AM
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#6
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Alvar's Bitch
Hears the Whispers
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: brick city
Posts: 14,019
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Re: Xena: Some Reflections
Gabriel and Xena had the Lesbianas forming clubs and show watch groups, I remember reading about them. The history of the warrior women is true in the most basic sense of the show. RonPrice, who started the thread is noting how the show did have whole episodes focused on different cultures and religions which did make it more interesting and the costumes were always good. I didnt like when she was crucified by her ex, Julius Caesar tho, lol. The first season of the show was going in very different direction and there was a different actor playing Ares, then they brought on Kevin Smith and I never missed it after. Sam Raimi (Evil Dead) was involved in it too as a Producer so it brought the gore, in a good way.
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build me a bridge soaked in gasoline
Last edited by snakey; 03-22-10 at 07:54 PM.
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03-18-10, 07:49 PM
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#7
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Blew Up the Hatch
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: When?
Posts: 1,896
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Re: Xena: Some Reflections
One of my favorite things in the National Museum is what I call the Xena shields and swords--
http://www.museum.ie/en/exhibition/p...c-ireland.aspx
unfortunately not a great pic, look for the big glass case with the swords fanned out, behind them in the same case are two for-real round Xena shields.
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Keeper of Jacob's Tapestry
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03-22-10, 07:56 PM
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#8
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Alvar's Bitch
Hears the Whispers
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: brick city
Posts: 14,019
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Re: Xena: Some Reflections
Quote:
Originally Posted by Miss Milligan
One of my favorite things in the National Museum is what I call the Xena shields and swords--
http://www.museum.ie/en/exhibition/p...c-ireland.aspx
unfortunately not a great pic, look for the big glass case with the swords fanned out, behind them in the same case are two for-real round Xena shields. 
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very Boudica, cool.
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build me a bridge soaked in gasoline
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