Does context matter?


Well, I think the answer to that is “Yes.” The better question may be if it should matter.

When I first heard the song by Muse below, I didn’t know its title. I just thought it was a very eerie, beautiful song (like much of Muse’s stuff) dealing with fearing death. In order to not turn this blog into a Xanga, here’s just the most relevant excerpt:

And I know the moment’s near
And there’s nothing you can do
Look through a faithless eye
Are you afraid to die?

It scares the hell out of me
And the end is all I can see
And it scares the hell out of me
And the end is all I can see

After deciding that I really liked it, I did some Googling to figure out the title.

“Thoughts of a Dying Atheist”

My first reaction was annoyance. A song I liked was saying the same BS about atheists that you hear all the time: we’re depressed, we fear death, we’re going to hope we’re wrong on our deathbed… I felt guilty liking a song that seemed to be perpetuating the same stereotypes I try so hard to fight.

That was, until I did a bit more Googling and found out Matthew Bellamy, the lead singer of Muse, is an atheist. I hate to say it, but everything seemed okay now. He was expressing his own fears, not necessarily badmouthing atheists. And hell, the whole reason I liked the song in the first place is because I can relate to it: death DOES scare the hell out of me. I find it morbid thinking there’s nothing after death, and I can see how comforting the afterlife is to religious people. I just can’t force myself to believe in it because I’d like it to be true.

Does this make me a bad person for doing such a mental flip flop? Or is it just more “acceptable” to criticize your own group?

Comments

  1. says

    I think it’s normal to be annoyed by something you can identify with when it’s cast in a negative light, but to do a complete role reversal and find comfort in it when viewed from a shared perspective.

  2. says

    I think it’s normal to be annoyed by something you can identify with when it’s cast in a negative light, but to do a complete role reversal and find comfort in it when viewed from a shared perspective.

  3. says

    Hah! I had the same issue over this song… only I never googled it. I just resigned myself to liking a song that had a viewpoint I didn’t care for.

  4. says

    Hah! I had the same issue over this song… only I never googled it. I just resigned myself to liking a song that had a viewpoint I didn’t care for.

  5. says

    I find that context matters, and I think it should. The context can completely change the meaning of something. I don’t know exactly how to express it, but, like black people using the “n word” themselves but being offended when others use it, it makes a difference that it’s an atheist singing about what atheists feel and think, rather than a theist saying the same thing.

  6. says

    I find that context matters, and I think it should. The context can completely change the meaning of something. I don’t know exactly how to express it, but, like black people using the “n word” themselves but being offended when others use it, it makes a difference that it’s an atheist singing about what atheists feel and think, rather than a theist saying the same thing.

  7. says

    Funny, before I got to your reaction, my first one was assuming he WAS atheist. Maybe I'm just an optimist. Then again, I TOO fear death. Ugh.I must download this song now! Thanks!

    But anyway, nothing wrong with your reaction, theists DO spout that stuff about atheists all the time.

  8. says

    Funny, before I got to your reaction, my first one was assuming he WAS atheist. Maybe I’m just an optimist. Then again, I TOO fear death. Ugh.I must download this song now! Thanks!But anyway, nothing wrong with your reaction, theists DO spout that stuff about atheists all the time.

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