Sep. 4th, 2009

vovat: (Default)
  • 12:14 I'm off to Woodbury, to bury my...oh, never mind. No, actually, I'm going to a temp agency. #
  • 15:40 @Clamanity Little Miss Muffet came to life! Except with Doritos instead of cottage cheese. #
  • 15:42 @JaredofMo Maybe it's alive! I wonder if it's friends with Victor Columbia Edison. #
  • 15:52 RT @thepipettes Waking up is like getting a kick in the teeth. Unpleasant, unnecessary, unfair. #
  • 16:25 The First Lady of Japan visited Venus in a UFO, apparently. She has something in common with Obama, who was apparently born there. #
  • 16:57 Link: The Revenge of Levi - Levi Johnston attacks his ex-girlfriend’s family. tumblr.com/xpy2ylhlt #
  • 22:36 A supermarket tabloid says that the Octomom criticized Kate Gosselin. In situations like that, I'm not sure which to root for. #
  • 22:48 @MikeConway Yeah, I remember that. I'm not sorry it fell through. #
  • 22:52 @JaredofMo Which is probably even worse, because at least you know not to expect much from the twisted takes. #
  • 22:56 @oz_diggs Yeah, w
    hoever made that HBO show "Oz" obviously hadn't ever read Baum. :P #
  • 23:54 The Pope blames atheists for environmental problems bit.ly/doqhY #
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vovat: (Polychrome)
There are many magical powers that have appeared in works of fiction throughout history, from early mythology right through fairy tales to modern fantasy and superhero stories. Instant transportation, growing and shrinking, invulnerability, flight, mind-reading...the list goes on and on. But in this particular post, I'm addressing invisibility. While not being seen is second nature (or even FIRST nature) to some beings, others have to use spells or items to achieve the effect. Hermes has a helm that can render him invisible, and the Norse Tarnhelm has much the same power. Tolkien's One Ring was originally conceived as an invisibility-granting talisman in The Hobbit, although that later turned out to be only a secondary power. It seems that cloaks are pretty much the go-to invisibility item nowadays, as in Harry Potter. Hats are apparently more common in traditional folklore, but the cloak does date at least as far back as the Welsh Mabinogi. And scientists are apparently working to make such cloaks a reality, although of course they wouldn't REALLY make someone invisible, but rather use optical camouflage technology to produce a similar effect.



Since I have a bad habit (or perhaps a good habit, if you share my fandom) of bringing things back to Oz, I'll mention that items rendering someone invisible are fairly common in the series. The dama-fruit of the Valley of Voe makes anyone who eats it invisible, and Rosalie the witch has a ring of invisibility (hopefully without the One Ring's powers of corruption) in the Oz-related Sky Island. In Tin Woodman, the main characters come across a section of the Munchkin Country that makes everyone in it invisible. I believe the first appearance of a cloak of invisibility in the series, however, was not in Baum, but in Thompson's The Gnome King of Oz. The Flying Cloak of Invisibility, made by a sorcerer named Soob, not only renders its wearer invisible, but can also fly them anywhere they want to go. When Ruggedo and Peter Brown first find the cloak on board Polacky the Plunderer's old pirate ship, it's torn, and hence doesn't work. On the advice of his royal wizard Potaroo, Ruggedo takes the cloak to the Kingdom of Patch, where a Quilty...well, patches it. The Nome uses it to cause a lot of trouble after this, but he's done in by the fact that the blue patch remains visible. I tend to like stories that explain exactly how an imperfect magical item might malfunction, and this is no exception.



The idea of such a cloak is also incorporated into Jack Snow's Shaggy Man, but with a twist. In order to get past Glinda's invisible barrier around Oz (which Baum introduced in Emerald City as a way to end the series, and then largely forgot about when he returned to writing Oz), the King of the Fairy Beavers makes Cloaks of VISIBILITY.

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