I actually knew the answer to this one without the Google. I feel smartish now.
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Current time: December 2, 2024, 8:40 am
Poll: Where does the idea of Shangri-La come from? This poll is closed. |
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It's an ancient myth from Tibet or some other Eastern culture. | 4 | 20.00% | |
It's a fictional construct that came from a more western culture. | 9 | 45.00% | |
I have never heard of Shangri-La. | 7 | 35.00% | |
Total | 20 vote(s) | 100% |
* You voted for this item. | [Show Results] |
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Shangri-La
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Haha, alright, I'll tell. Sorry it took me so long. Unexpectedly busy day.
Anyway, Shangri-La is a purely fictional monastery or "lamasery" in the Himalayas. It's inhabitants enjoyed supernaturally long lives, so long as they stayed in the area where the monastery sat. It was from a book written by James Hilton in the 1930s called Lost Horizon. I read it when I was about middle-school age. Interestingly, I later realized that tons of people have no idea that it isn't a "real" myth or legend. People have even searched for Shangri-La, obviously to no avail. I may have decided to conduct this little poll in the wrong place. I should have known many of you would have guessed the answer. We had seven answer correctly. Seven had never heard of it and only one believed it to be a legend of eastern culture. Here are a few interesting links on the subject: This first link is just a blog, but it shows that people are indeed silly enough to search for places in fiction novels. http://cosmicvisions.blogspot.com/2009/1...ri-la.html This one ends on a more realistic note. http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc...480493.htm If you were to ask around a bit, you are bound to find a number of people who have heard the term Shangri-La and think it is Tibet's equivalent of the Fountain of Youth or an earthly utopia. I always found this astounding. The book is not even one hundred years old. Anyway, I thought some of you mind find that a bit intriguing as well. It says a lot, if you ask me.
I only know the meaning from the book Lost Horizon, which i loved because of the parallels to LOST.
I don't know if it came from elsewhere, suffice to say it's not improbably based off another concept, though a fiction writer could easily conceive of such a concept independently.
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Of course. It's an amalgam of fountain of youth, holy lamasery and other true myths, but the place itself and its concept as a whole are purely fictional. To actually search for such a place, according to directions in Lost Horizon is crazy. I think it shows that people put too much stock in books sometimes.
There are a number of myths about monasteries on mountaintops in China and Tibet. Many of them are very old and their locations are known.
Lol tell me about it, quite similar to Christians looking for a giant boat up a mountain somewhere.
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RE: Shangri-La
September 19, 2010 at 7:54 pm
(This post was last modified: September 19, 2010 at 7:57 pm by Entropist.)
(September 19, 2010 at 7:37 pm)Shell B Wrote: This first link is just a blog, but it shows that people are indeed silly enough to search for places in fiction novels. I seem to recall that some people have actually gone looking for the money in the film Fargo. Oh, no-- it appears that is an urban legend... Still, its funny that at the beginning of the film it says it is "Based on a True Story" when it really wasn't.
“Society is not a disease, it is a disaster. What a stupid miracle that one can live in it.” ~ E.M. Cioran
Quote:People have even searched for Shangri-La, obviously to no avail. Noah's Fucking Ark has the same problem. Likewise the so-called "Holy Grail." (September 19, 2010 at 8:00 pm)Minimalist Wrote: Noah's Fucking Ark has the same problem. Likewise the so-called "Holy Grail." Actually, it was an article I wrote on Noah's Ark that got me thinking about it again. I wrote an article in the past about the stupidity of believing in Shangri-La. I very much believe that is exactly what happened with the bible. Except for the fact that the bible was written in a manipulative manner, imo.
Any moment now some fundie asshole will show up insisting that the "ark" is real.
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