Something like “Seasons” except about growth through the death of the self and how Job fails in that.
- Framing devices
- Interpolations NB: switched below
- Friends and “Friends”
- Unknown things (theodicy)
- Should all things be known (what if the pals really did solve theodicy)
Rewrite for side-by-side:
- Framing devices
- Interpolations
- Friends and “Friends”
- Unknown things (theodicy)
- Should all things be known (what if the pals really did solve theodicy)
Timeboxed third attempt for academic in footnotes:
- Intro
- Background — Andrew and Jill and the fundamental unhappiness of identity
- Younes — Gender play and hidden selves
- Dysphoria — The internal side
- Clash with Jill — Stopped talking, told off for Younes, told to fuck off
- The choice of Job
Pals quotes:
- Job and his quote-unquote friends
- Narrative/moral/commercial failure (~13 mins)
- Inverse Pascal’s wager (impossible to distinguish between God’s wrath and God’s indifference) even if you believe, this could still happen (~14mins)
- (Hunt for Vanessa Zoltan’s dad saying “If God is not dead, he is not welcome in my home”) (~15mins)
Chesterton quote:
Job puts forward a note of interrogation; God answers with a note of exclamation. Instead of proving to Job that it is an explicable world, He insists that it is a much stranger world than Job ever thought it was.
G. K. Chesterton https://www.chesterton.org/introduction-to-job/
On forgiving one’s Elihu:
\footnote{}