Norsefire
Norsefire | |
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Universe | |
In-universe information | |
Type | Political party |
Leader |
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Key people | List of members
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Slogan |
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Colours | Black and white (comic) Black and red (film) |
Political ideology |
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Political position | Far-right |
Norsefireis thefictionalwhite supremacist[2][3]andneo-fascist[4][5][6][7][8][9]political partyruling theUnited KingdominAlan MooreandDavid Lloyd'sV for Vendettacomic book/graphic novel series, its 2005film adaptation,and the 2019 television seriesPennyworth.[10][11][12][13]
The organization gained power promising stability and restoration of the United Kingdom after a worldwidenuclear warbetween theUnited Statesand theSoviet Uniondecimates theEarth.The United Kingdom and Ireland survive due to their geographic isolation and the decommissioning of Britain'snuclear arsenal,but suffer widespread damage leading to societal instability, which is a catalyst for the rise of Norsefire.[14][15]
Due to the chaotic state of the world outside of the United Kingdom, the party gained power by promising order and security among the population.[15]However, while the Norsefire regime did indeed bring order back to the country, this order came at a cost. Political opponents along with religious and ethnic minorities were rounded up and sent toconcentration camps.[9]With their potential enemies all removed within a short space of time, Norsefire began consolidating their power over the country.
In public, the party portrays itself as aChristian fascistparty supportive of theAnglican Communion.[16]In private, the party leaders are apathetic on the subject, and allow higher-ranking members to not followChristian moralityorChristianityin private as long as such activities do not threaten the party's power. For instance, propagandist Lewis Prothero takes illicit drugs, Bishop Lilliman sexually abuses children, and three Fingermen attempt to rapeEvey Hammondwhen they apprehend her.[16]The head of the party, Leader Adam Susan, actually worshipsFate,the super-computer surveillance system that surveys the nation, and considers himself and his creationGod.While this is not explored in the film, both the novel and film imply that Susan/Sutler is not a fervent Christian so much as a person who values security and order, which he maintains by eliminating political opponents and cultural minorities.[8]
The Norsefire party is loosely based on theNazi Partyand theprivate religious views of Adolf Hitler.[3][7][9][17]
Overview
[edit]This sectionpossibly containsoriginal research.(June 2021) |
In the story, the party is presented as rising during apost-apocalypticBritain that has narrowly avoided an internationalnuclear warfrom 1988 on.[9]As displayed during the story ofEvey Hammond,although the United Kingdom did not suffer any nuclear attacks, the effects of full-scale nuclear war on other countries had severe effects on the environment, and thus onagriculture.This in its turn severely damaged theBritish economyand mass riots broke out. As Evey relays toV,ananarchistdetermined to destroy Norsefire, the government quickly collapsed and chaos overran the country.[9]
The situation turned after several years. From the madness of the violence came the ultra-right-wing Norsefire regime:fascists[4][5][6][8](similar toOswald Mosley'sBritish Union of Fascists) that united with the surviving big companies and businesses, giving them the appearance of wealth and stability. After seizing control of the country, the party gained complete control over theChurch of Englandand other influential organizations to promote doctrines favourable to Norsefire.[16]They began promoting and demoting members of the clergy as they saw fit. They also took overthe television companies,creatingNTV(Norsefire Television), and implemented the technologies that would allow for a closely monitored society, includingclosed-circuit television.In the novel, the British monarchy continues underQueen Zara.No direct reference is made to the monarchy in the film, though "God Save the King"is played during a television comedy sketch to greet an actor playing Chancellor Sutler.
By the time the story of the graphic novel has begun, Norsefire has shut down the concentration camps and is essentially in complete control of society. Although competition exists between the varying branches of the state, they generally have complete control over the United Kingdom. Their control over the state soon faces a threat from V, theanarchistprotagonist of the story who seeks to overthrow the regime and allow the people to decide their own fate. By the end of the novel, every top government official and notable figure in Norsefire has died, except for Lewis Prothero who is driven insane by V and incapacitated by Norsefire early on in the novel, and Eric Finch who leaves Norsefire after he kills V and when Norsefire collapses.
Film
[edit]In the 2005 film adaptation, amidst worldwide turmoil, members of what would later become Norsefire launch a plan to seize power by releasing a virus on the British populace and blaming it on their enemies. After the virus devastates Britain, the party wins an overwhelming victory in that year's general election and subsequently markets a cure through a pharmaceutical company under the control of its top-ranking members, who become extremely wealthy as a result.
In the film, in addition to itsWhite SupremacistandChristian Nationalistviews, Norsefire also expressesAnti-Americanism,shown when Prothero mocks theUnited States(which is said to be devastated by the virus and a second civil war), calling it the "Ulcered Sphincter of Arse-erica". He gloats at the current state of the country and suggests that cargo coming from America in a bid for aid be dumped as revenge for theBoston Tea Party.Prothero then claims that the United States has fallen as "judgement" for "godlessness". It is later shown that the United States fought a disastrous war in theMiddle East,which may have contributed to Anti-American sentiment in the United Kingdom.
The party is also shown to be extremelyanti-Muslimand intolerant of any criticism of its top leadership. Popular talk show host Gordon Deitrich is arrested for airing a sketch that mocks Adam Sutler, the leader of Norsefire in the film, and is subsequently executed after a copy of theQuranis found at his home.
Anti-Irish sentimentis implied to be an element of party policy in the film, Prothero mocks a member of the technical staff on his show as "that Paddy" and Creedy views Finch with suspicion on the grounds that Finch's mother was Irish and then gloats about the death toll in Ireland from the "St. Mary's Virus".[14]
In the film, after killing Prothero and other high-ranking party officials, V persuades Creedy to betray Sutler, arguing that Sutler would turn on him eventually, in exchange for him surrendering. Creedy kidnaps and executes Sutler, only for V to subsequently kill him and his entire team, though he is fatally wounded in the process. Evey places his body inside a train loaded with explosives, which V intended to use to bombParliament.Finch arrives, only to let her activate the train, having grown disillusioned and disgusted with Norsefire. The bomb-filled train explodes, destroying Parliament (and presumably the party along with it) as hundreds of V's supporters watch.
Motto
[edit]A common recurring motto is "Strength through Purity, Purity through Faith" (or in the film, "Strength through Unity, Unity through Faith" ). Anothermaximoften used by Norsefire as a salute is "England Prevails".
Symbols
[edit]In the book, a blue "N" on a black flag is the symbol of the party. An "N" or "NF" are the only party symbols shown.
In the film, the Norsefire symbol is theCross of Saint Georgecombined with aNordic crossin red and black, with the black possibly taken from theflag of Saint Davidand the Nordic cross representingScotland.The symbol is shown on flags, police badges,coat of arms,government vehicles, and armyberetbadges. Two versions exist, one with a red cross on a black background and another with a black cross on a red background.
See also
[edit]Notes and references
[edit]- ^Moore, Alan, Introduction.V for Vendetta.New York:DC Comics,1990.
- ^Shantz, Jeff (2015).Specters of Anarchy: Literature and the Anarchist Imagination.Algora Publishing. p. 223.ISBN978-1628941418.
[Norsefire's] goal is to lead the country that I love out of the Twentieth century. I believe in survival. In the destiny of the Nordic race.
- ^abKeller, James (2008).V for Vendetta as Cultural Pastiche.McFarland & Company. p. 113.ISBN978-0786434671.
The Norsefire regime is obviously based upon the Nazi party (including the Nordic nationalistic implications of the name), Sutler upon Hitler, and the Larkhill International Facility on the Nazi death camps.
- ^abCall, Lewis (1 January 2008)."A IS FOR ANARCHY, V IS FOR VENDETTA".Anarchist Studies.16(2): 154–172.
V for Vendetta offers a clever, insightful look at the rise of fascism. The fascist "Norsefire" party takes advantage of the power vacuum which occurs as the liberal British state collapses in the aftermath of the nuclear war.
- ^abMuise, Chris (2011).Quicklet On V for Vendetta By Alan Moore.Hyperink, Inc. pp. 1–10.ISBN978-1614640844.
Britain, however, survives under the cold, watchful eye of the Norsefire government, a fascist regime that took control amidst the chaos and confusion after the war.
- ^abGerbaudo, Paolo (2017).The Mask and the Flag: Populism, Citizenism, and Global Protest.Oxford University Press.p. 98.ISBN978-0190491567.
It is not by chance that the most popular sequence is the final revolution scene, an almost hypnotic act, in which a mass of people wearing Guy Fawkes masks and costumes flood the streets of London, converging on the Houses of Parliament to overthrow the regime of the fascist Norsefire party.
- ^abBoudreaux, Madelyn."An Annotation of Literary, Historic, and Artistic References in Alan Moore's Graphic Novel, V For Vendetta".Archived fromthe originalon 2008-05-14.Retrieved2008-10-25.
...make Britain great again....This is typically "nationalistic" sentiment.... It was this sentiment, taken to its extremes, that drove Hitler's Nationalist Socialist (Nazi) Workers' Party to try to rid Germany of "non-Germans."
- ^abcMoore, Alan (1981).V for Vendetta, Book One: Europe After the Reign.Vertigo (DC Comics).pp.37–39.ISBN0-930289-52-8.
My name is Adam Susan. I am the leader. Leader of the lost, ruler of the ruins. I am a man, like any other man... I am not loved, I know that. Not in soul or body. I have never known the soft whisper of endearment. Never known the peace that lies between the thighs of woman. But I am respected. I am feared. And that will suffice. Because I love. I, who am not loved in return. I have a love that is far deeper than the empty gasps and convulsions of brutish coupling. Shall I speak of her? Shall I speak of my bride? She has no eyes to flirt or promise. But she sees all. Sees and understands with a wisdom that is Godlike in its scale. I stand at the gates of her intellect and I am blinded by the light within. How stupid I must seem to her. How childlike and uncomprehending. Her soul is clean, untainted by the snares and ambiguities of emotion. She does not hate. She does not yearn. She is untouched by joy or sorrow. I worship her though I am not worthy. I cherish the purity of her disdain. She does not respect me. She does not fear me. She does not love me. They think she is hard and cold, those who do not know her. They think she is lifeless and without passion. They do not know her. She has not touched them. She touches me, and I am touched by God, by Destiny. The whole of existence courses through her. I worship her. I am her slave.
- ^abcdeBell, Deborah (2014).Masquerade: Essays on Tradition and Innovation Worldwide.McFarland & Company.p. 168.ISBN978-0786476466.
Nuclear war has ravaged the world. From the ashes of English society the Norsefire regime creates a sense of order. This fascist order resonates with images of Nazi Germany. Anyone who deviates racially, ethnically, or sexually from the Norsefire norm is placed in prison or a concentration camp-style facility.
- ^Gomez, Manny (July 29, 2019)."EPIX'SPennyworth:Setting Up 60's DC London And The Road ToV For Vendetta– SDCC2019 ".LRMonline.RetrievedJuly 29,2019.
"The arcing story this season is about a civil war that is brewing, and that came from a conversation from myself andBruno[Heller]where we were considering doingV for Vendetta,we were like "that is much a very 80's 90's kind of show, what would it be in the 60's?' What kind of world would be have to create, like inGothamthere would eventually be Batman in this there would eventually beV for Vendetta[Norsefire andV].So we took that brewing civil war as a stepping stone. "–Danny Cannon
- ^Heller, Bruno(December 11, 2020).(Video)Pennyworth:Bruno Heller Talks Season 2,V For Vendetta,& The War That Breaks London.CBR Presents.RetrievedDecember 11,2020– viaYouTube.
"TheV For Vendettaworld conceptually — it's [like] where this world may or may not end up. What [V for VendettacreatorsAlan Moore,David Lloyd andTony Weare]did so well was to create a[Fascist]version of England that felt like England. It wasn'tNazi Germanyimposed on that world. [Norsefire] was very much the parochial, familiar world of England transformed into something dark. That's what we've tried to do, and what [Cannon] did so brilliantly with the visuals, particularly in this season. It's England with this shadow across its face. "–Bruno Heller
- ^Zachary, Brandon (December 13, 2020)."(Article)Pennyworth:Bruno Heller Talks Season 2,V For Vendetta,& The War That Breaks London ".Comic Book Resources.RetrievedDecember 13,2020.
"TheV For Vendettaworld conceptually — it's [like] where this world may or may not end up. What [V for VendettacreatorsAlan Moore,David Lloyd andTony Weare]did so well was to create a[Fascist]version of England that felt like England. It wasn'tNazi Germanyimposed on that world. [Norsefire] was very much the parochial, familiar world of England transformed into something dark. That's what we've tried to do, and what [Cannon] did so brilliantly with the visuals, particularly in this season. It's England with this shadow across its face. "–Bruno Heller
- ^Harper, Rachael (February 5, 2021)."PennyworthSeason Two Secrets: What's It All About, Alfie? ".SciFiNow.RetrievedFebruary 5,2021.
"One of the few stories that have been told in this kind of world isV For Vendetta[and] conceptually, this[civil waris a]prequeltoV For Vendetta.God, I wouldn't hold us up againstAlan Moore,but with comic books you have to find a throughline, and that's very political [forPennyworth]. "–Bruno Heller
- ^abCombe, Kirk (2013).Masculinity and Monstrosity in Contemporary Hollywood Films.Palgrave Macmillan.p. 160.ISBN978-1137360809.
Here, Creedy not only bullies but delights in reminding Finch of his marginalized status as a mongrel according to long-standing English prejudice against the Irish, as well as Norsefirean standards for racial purity. Chillingly, in this small exchange, we also discover that Norsefire chose to release its deadly virus on Ireland, no doubt yet one more effort by an English ruling class to pacify that uncooperative island.
- ^abKeller, James (2008).V for Vendetta as Cultural Pastiche: A Critical Study of the Graphic Novel.McFarland & Company.p. 91.ISBN978-0786434671.
- ^abcVaughn, Justin (2016).Political SciFi: An Introduction to Political Science Through Science Fiction.United Kingdom:Routledge.p. 179.ISBN978-1138639775.
However, it is important to note that high-ranking members of the party often engaged in immoral behavior but were exempt from punishment.
- ^*Alan Bullock;Hitler: a Study in Tyranny; Harper Perennial Edition 1991; p. 219: "Hitler had been brought up a Catholic and was impressed by the organisation and power of the Church... [but] to its teachings he showed only the sharpest hostility... he detested [Christianity]'s ethics in particular"
- Ian Kershaw;Hitler: a Biography; Norton; 2008 ed; pp. 295–297: "In early 1937 [Hitler] was declaring that" Christianity was ripe for destruction ", and that the Churches must yield to the" primacy of the state ", railing against any compromise with 'the most horrible institution imaginable'"
- Richard J. Evans;The Third Reich at War;Penguin Press; New York 2009, p. 547: Evans wrote that Hitler believed Germany could not tolerate the intervention of foreign influences such as the Pope and "Priests, he said, were 'black bugs', 'abortions in black cassocks'". Evans noted that Hitler saw Christianity as "indelibly Jewish in origin and character" and a "prototype of Bolshevism", which "violated the law of natural selection".
- Richard Overy:The Dictators Hitler's Germany Stalin's Russia;Allen Lane/Penguin; 2004.p 281: "[Hitler's] few private remarks on Christianity betray a profound contempt and indifference".
- A. N. Wilson;Hitler a Short Biography;Harper Press; 2012, p. 71.: "Much is sometimes made of the Catholic upbringing of Hitler... it was something to which Hitler himself often made allusion, and he was nearly always violently hostile. 'The biretta! The mere sight of these abortions in cassocks makes me wild!'"
- Laurence Rees;The Dark Charisma of Adolf Hitler;Ebury Press; 2012; p. 135.; "There is no evidence that Hitler himself, in his personal life, ever expressed any individual belief in the basic tenets of the Christian church"
- Derek Hastings(2010).Catholicism and the Roots of Nazism.Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 181: Hastings considers it plausible that Hitler was a Catholic as late as his trial in 1924, but writes that "there is little doubt that Hitler was a staunch opponent of Christianity throughout the duration of the Third Reich."
- Joseph Goebbels(Fred Taylor Translation); The Goebbels Diaries 1939–41; Hamish Hamilton Ltd; London; 1982;ISBN0-241-10893-4:In his entry for 29 April 1941, Goebbels noted long discussions about the Vatican and Christianity, and wrote: "The Fuhrer is a fierce opponent of all that humbug".
- Albert Speer;Inside the Third Reich: Memoirs;Translation byRichard and Clara Winston;Macmillan; New York; 1970; p.123: "Once I have settled my other problem," [Hitler] occasionally declared, "I'll have my reckoning with the church. I'll have it reeling on the ropes." But Bormann did not want this reckoning postponed [...] he would take out a document from his pocket and begin reading passages from a defiant sermon or pastoral letter. Frequently Hitler would become so worked up... and vowed to punish the offending clergyman eventually... That he could not immediately retaliate raised him to a white heat... "
- Hitler's Table Talk:"The dogma of Christianity gets worn away before the advances of science. Religion will have to make more and more concessions. Gradually the myths crumble. All that's left is to prove that in nature there is no frontier between the organic and the inorganic. When understanding of the universe has become widespread, when the majority of men know that the stars are not sources of light but worlds, perhaps inhabited worlds like ours, then the Christian doctrine will be convicted of absurdity."