Also, obviously Amazigirl needs to keep being a superhero. You can’t just go to all the trouble of training your vocal cords to always talk in blue and not follow through on the crime fighting.
JasonAW3
I don’t know, I think they’re pretty solid, but not carved in stone, so we shouldn’t take them for granite, as they are kind of basaltic…
Carla's #2 Fan
The grotesque is holding a carved slab or bas relief
Felis Dee
Also, her foot is on the edge of a relief as well!
I’m making a redundant comment about AG and NG being redundant.
JasonAW3
“I’m from the Office of Redundant Redundancy, and it has come to our attention that your redundant comment about the redundacy of the previously redundancy comments about redundancy, has not yet reached the critical level of redundancy to be considered a redundant comment, with all redundant factors figured in, your current comment cannot be considered sufficiently redundant. So, carry on… Or, would that be redundant as well..?”
Okay barely related but now I’m wishing walky dressed up as Might Guy for Halloween since it’s a neighboring letter off from night guy. Im not even a Naruto fan i actively dislike it, it just would’ve been really funny
“I’m from the Office of Redundant Redundancy, and it has come to our attention that your redundant comment about the redundacy of the previously redundancy comments about redundancy, has not yet reached the critical level of redundancy to be considered a redundant comment, with all redundant factors figured in, your current comment cannot be considered sufficiently redundant. So, carry on… Or, would that be redundant as well..?”
JasonAW3
“Just so the message is clear, I’m from the Office of Redundant Redundancy, and it has come to our attention that your redundant comment about the redundacy of the previously redundancy comments about redundancy, has not yet reached the critical level of redundancy to be considered a redundant comment, with all redundant factors figured in, your current comment cannot be considered sufficiently redundant. So, carry on… Or, would that be redundant as well..?”
No, ewe are just feeling Baaahhhdd.
And I really wouldn’t want to pull the wool over your eyes on this one.
Whoops! I’ve been noticed!
I’d better take it on the lamb, and get the flock out of here!!!
Yep. And even if you leave the Church, the Church never completely leaves you. (I was raised Catholic, 35 years out of the Church, I’m still Culturally Catholic.)
Pongles
I wasn’t even raised religious and am still culturally christian (Easter, Christmas, etc. are all codified as federal holidays)
I read something from an American writer in italy who was asked if he was Protestant or Catholic. He answered he was an atheist. “Yes, but are a Protestant atheist or a Catholic atheist?” (Personally, I’m a Catholic atheist.)
Some1
It all depends on if you’re more of a CS Lewis person or a JRR Tolkien person.
Yakumo
I mean, Lewis had his period of atheism, that Tolkein played a major part of pulling him out of/bringing him back to Christianity, though I believe Tolkein hoped Lewis would join the Roman Catholic Church rather than go back to Church of England. But Tolkein, to my understanding, always was Roman Catholic and never went atheist. And I mean (understandably) really old guard Catholic. I read that after Vatican II (where the church went from forcing Latin on everything but the Bible readings and sermons), he’d embarrassed his grandson by loudly responding in Latin to the the English/”vulgate” prompting in the ceremony.
BarerMender
Nuts to C.S. Lewis. Except _The Screwtape Letters_. I like that.
CrazyJ
The version of that story I heard is that he was in Ireland, which makes more sense to me because of the conflict between Catholics and Protestants there.
eh, whatever
Northern Ireland specifically, and it also exists with a Jew instead of an atheist.
Arianod
Ain’t no atheist like a catholic atheist. I should know, I’m one ^^
You are correct! While Catholicism is indeed a belief system, Judaism is an ethnoreligion. This means that you can be culturally/ethnically Jewish, religiously Jewish, or both! There are plenty of people who identify as Jewish without practicing Judaism, which usually means that they have Jewish heritage. Dorothy seems to be one of those people! Hope that helps. 🙂
-Your friendly neighborhood Jew
Indeed.
I, for example, had a ethnically and religiously Jewish grandmother who married a Catholic and religiously converted. And while my father was raised Catholic and went Atheist (as often happens), it is my Jewish heritage that my father identifies with even though his mother was actively pretending not to be Jewish.
I, meanwhile, eschewed it all and declared myself pagan.
Rose by Any other Name
Arg – typo. That should be “It is his Jewish heritage that my father identifies with…”
To be honest, there’s always fuzzy line between religion and ethnicity. More so in Judaism, but in others as well. Especially for groups that were underprivileged minorities. Which long included Catholics in the US.
Jamie
One of my personal, pet anthropological theories is that religion is really just codified culture; it’s just a bit more confident about itself than a culture is. Like, a culture will say that eating eggs commemorates the moon god, or whatever, but a religion will say that commemorating the moon god is important, so you should eat eggs. And while a culture might look down on you and shame you for not eating those eggs, a religion might imply that you’re going to The Bad Place for the lack of egg-eating.
A lot of the differences end up feeling like hair-splitting, is what I’m saying. Christianity (and Islam) being cross-cultural religions is something of an innovation (and interestingly probably rhymes well with the Roman imperial religion, in that it syncretizes with but also colonialised indigenous religion; there’s a lot of theory-of-empire stuff mixed in there, too, like core-and-fringe demarcations or what not).
No and yes. Heritage, family obligation, traditions, plus if you were raised Catholic and especially baptized, the church considers you always Catholic. It’s more or less the same with most denominations, excluding some Calvinism. But the Catholics are pretty adamant about it, they call former Catholics “lapsed Catholics”, a presumption they’re still Catholic.
That’s not Dorothy’s case, she’s just ethnically Irish Catholic, iirc.
The simplest way to put it is that the Jews are an ethnic group, a nation. They have a really old religion called Judaism, whether or any individual puts faith in it, they usually consider it to be an integral part of their cultural heritage.
My understanding is that Catholicism can make a major imprint on someone’s sense of a cultural background, but it’s not actually ethnic. The word Catholic actually means something like “universal” or “global”, its adherents consider it to be a faith for the whole world.
Also, “putting faith in it” is a uniquely Christian framing — your religious identity being based on your personal beliefs is Christianity’s biggest contribution to religious thought.
One’s Judaism isn’t based on belief, it’s based on heritage, identity, and actions. There are tons of Jewish atheists, who are religious because we are members of the tribe (identity) and are practicing the religion in community (actions). Jewish atheists aren’t a problem for us.
We haven’t seen Dorothy doing anything Jewish, but she retains the identity.
thejeff
In the short term that’s true, but over the long run (generations) it’s the religious part that tends to keep people in the community.
Derry Girls where Catholic and Protestant students are supposed to be listing things they have in common and they end up listing stereotypes of each other instead. And one is that Catholics like statues, then Sister Michael’s all “that one’s true, I love a good statue”
I worked at a Catholic publisher in my younger days, and I remember it being a pretty big thing that people considered themselves culturally Catholic while being nonpracticing. There were whole books about it.
(Fun but unrelated fact about my days at a Catholic publisher. It was named “Crossroads” and we got a surprising number of Crossword submissions, I assume from people who saw the word cross and stopped there)
I’m not Catholic, but my dad was raised, his side mostly is, and my sister married a non-practicing Catholic guy.
What was explained to me – which might be completely off-base – was that if you’re baptized Catholic, to the Catholic church, you’re Catholic. You’ve already got your foot in the door to heaven. Then, just don’t commit any mortal sins, and if you can, get those last rites before you die, and you’re good; otherwise, you might be waiting in Purgatory for a little while.
Ex-Catholic sounds to me like “I was raised in this but I don’t believe in it anymore.” Non-practicing Catholic sounds like “I’m basically agnostic but I’ve got this insurance policy just in case I’m wrong.”
Religions are belief systems, but from a sociological perspective, are also cultures interwoven into larger society. America as a whole contains people of all belief systems, but it is quite obviously far more culturally influenced by Christianity than, say, Hellenism. The phrase “America is a Christian nation” is *sociologically* true (to an extent; America is a complex place), though not in the way American conservatives *say* it is, since they mean it *prescriptively*.
So while Dorothy may not be a believer in Catholicism, if she grew up in a family that was, it’s accurate enough to describe herself as one in this context.
And the US is much less culturally any one particular religion, since it’s a country of immigrants who brought different religions with them. In Europe, up until pretty recently in historical terms, even Protestant denominations were largely national state religions.
I think cultural Catholicism without belief is way more of a thing than with other Christian denominations. Based on observation through the Internet and media at least, Catholicism is barely a thing where I live lol.
I follow a YouTuber who’s Catholic upbringing factors into his analysis of stuff. He calls himself a professional lapsed Catholic. A prolapsed Catholic, if you will. (Flaw peacock if anyone knows him)
Super heroes are arguably just appropriations of older folk tales and heroes anyway. Robinhood, King Arthur, Beowulf. Hell it’s pretty much common knowledge Batman was inspired by Zoro. How deep we wanna go with the appropriation guilt?
274 thoughts on “Starting up”
NGPZ
… I’m a Mizrahi Jew and all for seeing Amazi-Girl in action?!?!
to quote Enda Mode,
WHAT THE — IS THIS A QUESTION?!?!? XD
clif
It may be a relief, but it’s not a gargoyle.
V
this pun was also my first thought lol. wonder if it was intentional.
DJTsurugi
the pun fucking sends me. ~<3
Colineo
I thought a relief was a carved slab.
ValdVin
By “Glory”, I think you’re right
nothri
This is a truly grotesque series of puns….
Also, obviously Amazigirl needs to keep being a superhero. You can’t just go to all the trouble of training your vocal cords to always talk in blue and not follow through on the crime fighting.
JasonAW3
I don’t know, I think they’re pretty solid, but not carved in stone, so we shouldn’t take them for granite, as they are kind of basaltic…
Carla's #2 Fan
The grotesque is holding a carved slab or bas relief
Felis Dee
Also, her foot is on the edge of a relief as well!
Arianod
LOL
Michael Steamweed
Drop that bas!
Sirksome
Night Guy has the super heroics covered anyway. AG would be redundant.
Reltzik
And since Night Guy is already redundant, AG would be redundantly redundant.
Michael Steamweed
I’m making a redundant comment about AG and NG being redundant.
JasonAW3
“I’m from the Office of Redundant Redundancy, and it has come to our attention that your redundant comment about the redundacy of the previously redundancy comments about redundancy, has not yet reached the critical level of redundancy to be considered a redundant comment, with all redundant factors figured in, your current comment cannot be considered sufficiently redundant. So, carry on… Or, would that be redundant as well..?”
zee
Okay barely related but now I’m wishing walky dressed up as Might Guy for Halloween since it’s a neighboring letter off from night guy. Im not even a Naruto fan i actively dislike it, it just would’ve been really funny
saltchocolate
a relief!!
clif
To quote the alt-text…
Qube
there’s a joke to be made here, but I’m feeling too sheepish
rowanmikaio
Any joke you made would probably be grotesque, anyway.
JasonAW3
“I’m from the Office of Redundant Redundancy, and it has come to our attention that your redundant comment about the redundacy of the previously redundancy comments about redundancy, has not yet reached the critical level of redundancy to be considered a redundant comment, with all redundant factors figured in, your current comment cannot be considered sufficiently redundant. So, carry on… Or, would that be redundant as well..?”
JasonAW3
“Just so the message is clear, I’m from the Office of Redundant Redundancy, and it has come to our attention that your redundant comment about the redundacy of the previously redundancy comments about redundancy, has not yet reached the critical level of redundancy to be considered a redundant comment, with all redundant factors figured in, your current comment cannot be considered sufficiently redundant. So, carry on… Or, would that be redundant as well..?”
JasonAW3
No, ewe are just feeling Baaahhhdd.
And I really wouldn’t want to pull the wool over your eyes on this one.
Whoops! I’ve been noticed!
I’d better take it on the lamb, and get the flock out of here!!!
Ray
Ah, material for another rarepair AU.
Kyrik Michalowski
How is Dorothy both a Jew and Catholic? I know you can have Jewish heritage, but I thought being Catholic was a belief system. Am I wrong?
MisterJinKC
No you’ve got it right. She’s Jewish by blood, was raised Catholic, and is currently atheist.
Dave Van Domelen
Yep. And even if you leave the Church, the Church never completely leaves you. (I was raised Catholic, 35 years out of the Church, I’m still Culturally Catholic.)
Pongles
I wasn’t even raised religious and am still culturally christian (Easter, Christmas, etc. are all codified as federal holidays)
Jeremiah
If i remember correctly she was actually raised a religiously and let to choose her own beliefs but one of her parents is catholic.
Jeremiah
I think she means in sense of her heritage is from both even though she chooses to be atheist.
Rabid Rabbit
You can have culturally Jewish people, who identify with the cultural/genetic heritage but aren’t religious.
Weirdly, the same is true of Catholics.
And, well, of lots of groups, really. I mean, you can pretty much always tell an ex-Catholic atheist from an ex-Pentecostal atheist.
BarerMender
I read something from an American writer in italy who was asked if he was Protestant or Catholic. He answered he was an atheist. “Yes, but are a Protestant atheist or a Catholic atheist?” (Personally, I’m a Catholic atheist.)
Some1
It all depends on if you’re more of a CS Lewis person or a JRR Tolkien person.
Yakumo
I mean, Lewis had his period of atheism, that Tolkein played a major part of pulling him out of/bringing him back to Christianity, though I believe Tolkein hoped Lewis would join the Roman Catholic Church rather than go back to Church of England. But Tolkein, to my understanding, always was Roman Catholic and never went atheist. And I mean (understandably) really old guard Catholic. I read that after Vatican II (where the church went from forcing Latin on everything but the Bible readings and sermons), he’d embarrassed his grandson by loudly responding in Latin to the the English/”vulgate” prompting in the ceremony.
BarerMender
Nuts to C.S. Lewis. Except _The Screwtape Letters_. I like that.
CrazyJ
The version of that story I heard is that he was in Ireland, which makes more sense to me because of the conflict between Catholics and Protestants there.
eh, whatever
Northern Ireland specifically, and it also exists with a Jew instead of an atheist.
Arianod
Ain’t no atheist like a catholic atheist. I should know, I’m one ^^
Michael Steamweed
Works with Protestants and Mormons, too.
Roborat
How can you tell, is it tattooed on the back of their neck?
Proxiehunter
Jewish is an ethnicity as much as a religion. For some Jewish people maybe more of an ethnicity than a religion.
NGPZ
Yee, that me.
(mixed-race Mizrahi-black and an agnostic atheist)
MushroomLad
You are correct! While Catholicism is indeed a belief system, Judaism is an ethnoreligion. This means that you can be culturally/ethnically Jewish, religiously Jewish, or both! There are plenty of people who identify as Jewish without practicing Judaism, which usually means that they have Jewish heritage. Dorothy seems to be one of those people! Hope that helps. 🙂
-Your friendly neighborhood Jew
Rose by Any other Name
Indeed.
I, for example, had a ethnically and religiously Jewish grandmother who married a Catholic and religiously converted. And while my father was raised Catholic and went Atheist (as often happens), it is my Jewish heritage that my father identifies with even though his mother was actively pretending not to be Jewish.
I, meanwhile, eschewed it all and declared myself pagan.
Rose by Any other Name
Arg – typo. That should be “It is his Jewish heritage that my father identifies with…”
thejeff
To be honest, there’s always fuzzy line between religion and ethnicity. More so in Judaism, but in others as well. Especially for groups that were underprivileged minorities. Which long included Catholics in the US.
Jamie
One of my personal, pet anthropological theories is that religion is really just codified culture; it’s just a bit more confident about itself than a culture is. Like, a culture will say that eating eggs commemorates the moon god, or whatever, but a religion will say that commemorating the moon god is important, so you should eat eggs. And while a culture might look down on you and shame you for not eating those eggs, a religion might imply that you’re going to The Bad Place for the lack of egg-eating.
A lot of the differences end up feeling like hair-splitting, is what I’m saying. Christianity (and Islam) being cross-cultural religions is something of an innovation (and interestingly probably rhymes well with the Roman imperial religion, in that it syncretizes with but also colonialised indigenous religion; there’s a lot of theory-of-empire stuff mixed in there, too, like core-and-fringe demarcations or what not).
HueSatLight
No and yes. Heritage, family obligation, traditions, plus if you were raised Catholic and especially baptized, the church considers you always Catholic. It’s more or less the same with most denominations, excluding some Calvinism. But the Catholics are pretty adamant about it, they call former Catholics “lapsed Catholics”, a presumption they’re still Catholic.
That’s not Dorothy’s case, she’s just ethnically Irish Catholic, iirc.
Thag Simmons
Catholic culture has a way of leaving a trace even if your family aren’t practicing.
Dday
The simplest way to put it is that the Jews are an ethnic group, a nation. They have a really old religion called Judaism, whether or any individual puts faith in it, they usually consider it to be an integral part of their cultural heritage.
My understanding is that Catholicism can make a major imprint on someone’s sense of a cultural background, but it’s not actually ethnic. The word Catholic actually means something like “universal” or “global”, its adherents consider it to be a faith for the whole world.
Leorale
Also, “putting faith in it” is a uniquely Christian framing — your religious identity being based on your personal beliefs is Christianity’s biggest contribution to religious thought.
One’s Judaism isn’t based on belief, it’s based on heritage, identity, and actions. There are tons of Jewish atheists, who are religious because we are members of the tribe (identity) and are practicing the religion in community (actions). Jewish atheists aren’t a problem for us.
We haven’t seen Dorothy doing anything Jewish, but she retains the identity.
thejeff
In the short term that’s true, but over the long run (generations) it’s the religious part that tends to keep people in the community.
Jamie
Fun fact: there are actually a ton of catholic churches out there that are unaffiliated with the Roman Catholic Church that everyone knows about.
drs
Her grandparents were a mix of Jewish and Catholic, her parents were non-religious. Somehow Joyce has mostly remembered the ‘Jewish’ part (after the ‘atheist’). https://x.com/damnyouwillis/status/1719520562278502723/photo/4
I’m not sure if her grandparents were 3 Catholics and 1 Jew, or of two grandparents were each of Jewish-Catholic heritage.
drs
*or if two
Laura
…And how is AG’s interpretation Catholic?
…because it’s guilt-motivated? Expiatory?
Michael Steamweed
Because she’s posing next to a grotestque. 🙂
a/snow/mous/e
That was my interpretation, at least.
HueSatLight
Derry Girls where Catholic and Protestant students are supposed to be listing things they have in common and they end up listing stereotypes of each other instead. And one is that Catholics like statues, then Sister Michael’s all “that one’s true, I love a good statue”
Laura
Huh. OK, thank you for the explanation! 🙂
Lena
I worked at a Catholic publisher in my younger days, and I remember it being a pretty big thing that people considered themselves culturally Catholic while being nonpracticing. There were whole books about it.
(Fun but unrelated fact about my days at a Catholic publisher. It was named “Crossroads” and we got a surprising number of Crossword submissions, I assume from people who saw the word cross and stopped there)
BorkBorkBork
I’m not Catholic, but my dad was raised, his side mostly is, and my sister married a non-practicing Catholic guy.
What was explained to me – which might be completely off-base – was that if you’re baptized Catholic, to the Catholic church, you’re Catholic. You’ve already got your foot in the door to heaven. Then, just don’t commit any mortal sins, and if you can, get those last rites before you die, and you’re good; otherwise, you might be waiting in Purgatory for a little while.
Ex-Catholic sounds to me like “I was raised in this but I don’t believe in it anymore.” Non-practicing Catholic sounds like “I’m basically agnostic but I’ve got this insurance policy just in case I’m wrong.”
Aus
Religions are belief systems, but from a sociological perspective, are also cultures interwoven into larger society. America as a whole contains people of all belief systems, but it is quite obviously far more culturally influenced by Christianity than, say, Hellenism. The phrase “America is a Christian nation” is *sociologically* true (to an extent; America is a complex place), though not in the way American conservatives *say* it is, since they mean it *prescriptively*.
So while Dorothy may not be a believer in Catholicism, if she grew up in a family that was, it’s accurate enough to describe herself as one in this context.
thejeff
And the US is much less culturally any one particular religion, since it’s a country of immigrants who brought different religions with them. In Europe, up until pretty recently in historical terms, even Protestant denominations were largely national state religions.
zee
I think cultural Catholicism without belief is way more of a thing than with other Christian denominations. Based on observation through the Internet and media at least, Catholicism is barely a thing where I live lol.
I follow a YouTuber who’s Catholic upbringing factors into his analysis of stuff. He calls himself a professional lapsed Catholic. A prolapsed Catholic, if you will. (Flaw peacock if anyone knows him)
thejeff
Though I’d say “cultural Christian” in general is a thing, we’re just so steeped in it in the US/Europe that we don’t really recognize it.
And exvangelicals are a thing, much like recovering Catholics.
Adj
Um, that’s not a gargoyle. It’s a grotesque.
Proxiehunter
Well I think it’s cute.
Thag Simmons
alt-text!
Sirksome
Super heroes are arguably just appropriations of older folk tales and heroes anyway. Robinhood, King Arthur, Beowulf. Hell it’s pretty much common knowledge Batman was inspired by Zoro. How deep we wanna go with the appropriation guilt?