Theatre & Arts
Kristen Poole with Philip Pullman and David Fickling

Thursday, June 19th, 2025

Kristen Poole with Philip Pullman and David Fickling

Blackwell's Bookshop 48-51 Broad Street Oxford OX1 3BQ United Kingdom

Details

Readers of Philip Pullman’s trilogies
His Dark Materials
and
The Book of Dust
know that these novels speculate on parallel worlds and multiple spatial dimensions. But how do they also consider questions of time and history? Kristen Poole explores Pullman’s engagement with history in her book
Philip Pullman and the Historical Imagination: Seventeenth-Century Literature
,
Science, and Religion in
His Dark Materials
and
The Book of Dust. In particular, she shows how Pullman draws theoretical ideas and narrative modes from the fascinating period of early modern England. As a storyteller, Pullman takes up concerns about meaning, language, and interpretation in ways that echo various philosophies of the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Pullman’s curiosity about science and contemporary theoretical physics leads him to weave elements into his stories that bear striking parallels to various developments of the early scientific revolution. And as a writer keenly attuned to the poetics of John Milton and the narrative structures of Edmund Spenser, Pullman shares these authors’ investment in the sounds of language and the shape of plot and character.
In this conversation, Kristen Poole and Philip Pullman will discuss the influence of seventeenth-century ideas on
His Dark Materials
and
The Book of Dust
. How do early modern emblem books prompt ideas about what it means to read and interpret? What is Pullman’s particular attraction to this period of history? How do ideas about alchemy enter his stories, introducing philosophies about matter and our place in the universe (or multiverse)? What prompted the shift from Milton to Spenser as inspiration for the first and second trilogies? In addition to considering how Pullman drew from the early modern in crafting his novels, we will also think about how the ideas in the novels help us to see the past in a new light, recognizing the two-way traffic of history and story.
The conversation will be moderated by
David Fickling
, Philip Pullman’s publisher.
Kristen Poole
Kristen Poole is a scholar of early modern English literature whose research focuses on the nexus of literature, religion, and the history of science. She has published extensively on Shakespeare and Milton. She received a Ph.D. from Harvard and a Master of Sacred Theology from United Lutheran Seminary, Philadelphia. She holds the Ned B. Allen Professor of English at the University of Delaware (USA) and is currently a Visiting Fellow at Exeter College, Oxford.
Philip Pullman
Sir Philip Pullman is the author of the award-winning trilogy of novels
His Dark Materials
, which have been adapted for stage, screen, and graphic novels. The third volume of the companion series,
The Book of Dust
, will be coming out later this year. His other writings include the Sally Lockhart mysteries and his collection of essays
Dæmon Voices: On Stories and Storytelling
.
He was the 2023 recipient of the Bodley Medal.

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