In this episode, we are diving deep into Norman Plant's groundbreaking work, The Neo Transcendentalist. But we aren't just looking at this compendium in isolation. We are embarking on a comprehensive comparative analysis, placing Plant's universe squarely between two of the most potent literary movements of the last century: Christian Speculative Fiction and Afrofuturism.
If you are a fan of C.S. Lewis, Frank Peretti, Octavia Butler, or N.K. Jemisin, this episode is going to radically challenge how you view genre boundaries.
For decades, the publishing world has largely treated Christian Sci-Fi and Afrofuturism as distinct, non-overlapping magisteria. Christian fiction has historically leaned into allegory, individual morality, and spiritual warfare (think Ted Dekker and Frank Peretti), while Afrofuturism has rooted itself in the lived experiences of the African diaspora, utilizing technology and ancestral memory to dismantle systemic oppression. But what happens when an author builds a world that demands both? What happens when transorganic, computational lifeforms are commissioned by the God of the Bible to wage war against ancient, racist entities embedded in the cosmos?
You get The Neo Transcendentalist.
Norman Plant has created something entirely unique. By anchoring the historical, systemic grievances of the African diaspora into a framework of ultimate, unyielding Biblical authority, he has given readers a new way to imagine the future. He reminds us that true science fiction has always been about confronting the "Other," surviving the apocalypse, and finding a way to thrive in the stars. For the Neo Transcendentalist, that thriving is only possible when every realm of existence is brought into the loving, liberating order of El Elyon.
"Take dominion over the deep, take dominion over the height, take dominion over the expanse and over every realm of existence and beyond. Be ye separate. Prevail! This is the will of OMNI." — Steffa Shontonius, The First Apostle of OMNI.
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Resources Mentioned in This Episode:
- The Neo Transcendentalist by Norman Plant
- The Neo Transcendentalists: The Way of Domineering by Norman Plant
- The Space Trilogy by C.S. Lewis
- This Present Darkness by Frank Peretti
- Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler
- The Broken Earth Trilogy by N.K. Jemisin
- The works and cultural critique of Kodwo Eshun