Jump to: navigation, search

Dudeismo

Il Dudeismo è una nuova religione il cui obiettivo primario è diffondere la filosofia e lo stile di vita rappresentati dal personaggio di "The Dude" ("Drugo") Lebowski, nel film del 1998 Il grande Lebowski dei Fratelli Coen.

Dude.gif

Fondato nel 2005 da Oliver Benjamin, un giornalista che vive tra Los Angeles, California, e Chiang Mai in Thailandia, il nome ufficiale del Dudeismo è The Church of the Latter-Day Dude.[1] Egli dopo una vita a girovagare per il mondo in cerca di sè stesso, rivide il film Il grande Lebowski. mentre era in un bar della città tailandese di Pai nel 2005. Quella sera egli decise di fondare la nuova religione.[2] A settembre 2009 più di 100.000 "Preti Dudeisti" sono stati ordinati dalla chiesa.

Anche se il Dudeismo utilizza principalmente l'iconografia e la narrativa del film Il grande Lebowski, i suoi aderenti credono che la visione del mondo dudeista sia esistita dall'inizio della civiltà, principalmente per correggere le tendenze della società verso l'aggressione e l'eccesso. Individui come Lao Tzu, Epicuro, Eraclito, Buddha, e il Gesù Cristo pre-ecclesiastico sono visti come esempi di antichi profeti dudeisti. Più recenti antenati comprendono pilastri del trascendentalismo americano come Ralph Waldo Emerson e Walt Whitman e umanisti come Kurt Vonnegut e Mark Twain.

Il sistema delle credenze dudeista è essenzialmente una forma moderna di Taoismo epurato da ogni dottrina medica e metafisica. Il dudeismo promuove e incoraggia la pratica di "seguire la corrente" e "prenderla con filosofia" o "non prendersela" di fronte alle difficoltà della vita, credendo che questo sia l'unico modo per vivere in armonia con la nostra natura interiore e con le sfide dell'interagire con altre persone. Cerca inoltre di attenuare i sentimenti di inadeguatezza che nascono in società che pongono grande enfasi su risultati e fortune personali. Conseguentemente, semplici piaceri giornalieri come fare un bagno, giocare a bowling, incontrarsi con gli amici sono visti come molto preferibili rispetto ad accumulare ricchezza e spendere liberamente denaro come metodo per raggiungere felicità e soddisfazione spirituale.

The Church of the Latter-Day Dude ha lanciato la sua pubblicazione ufficiale, The Dudespaper, nell'autunno del 2008. Il libro sacro Dudeista, The Tao Dude Ching, è stato messo online nel luglio 2009. È una reinterpretazione del Tao Te Ching che usa dialoghi ed elementi della storia de Il grande Lebowski.


Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/aug/12/volkswagen-dudeism-the-big-lebowski


While Dudeism in its official form has been organized as a religion only recently, it has existed down through the ages in one form or another. Probably the earliest form of Dudeism was the original form of Chinese Taoism, before it went all weird with magic tricks and body fluids. The originator of Taoism, Lao Tzu, basically said "smoke ‘em if you got ‘em" and "mellow out, man" although he said this in ancient Chinese so something may have been lost in the translation.

Down through the ages, this "rebel shrug" has fortified many successful creeds – Buddhism, Christianity, Sufism, John Lennonism and Fo’-Shizzle-my-Nizzlism. The idea is this: Life is short and complicated and nobody knows what to do about it. So don’t do anything about it. Just take it easy, man. Stop worrying so much whether you’ll make it into the finals. Kick back with some friends and some oat soda and whether you roll strikes or gutters, do your best to be true to yourself and others – that is to say, abide.

Incidentally, the term "dude" is commonly agreed to refer to both genders. Most linguists contend that "Dudette" is not in keeping with the parlance of our times.

Great Dudes

Lao Tzu Creator of Taoism

When things got screwed up in Ancient China Lao Tzu didn’t go all Mr. Miyagi and try to fix it. He got on his buffalo and took off for more-copasetic pastures. But not before scribbling down a few what-have-yous that helped define Eastern philosophy ever since.


Heraclitus Greek Philosopher

The man who wrote "you can never step into the same river twice" propagated the idea that everything was in flux, or "burning." Consequently one should make the most of it and spark one up whenever possible. And step into the river from time to time, preferably with a cocktail and an inner tube.


Snoopy Charlie Brown’s Dog

Always living up to the dictum, "It’s a dog’s life," he also famously said "My life has no purpose, no direction, no aim, no meaning, and yet I’m happy. I can’t figure it out. What am I doing right?"


Jeffrey Lebowski The Dude

The uber-dude. Helped to bring Dudeism to the forefront of modern consciousness. If not for him, we’d still be stuck in the dude dark-ages. He’s Dude Vinci, Isaac Dudeton, and Charles Dudewin all rolled into one. Or just, His Dudeness, if you’re into that whole brevity thing.


Quincy Jones Urban Dude

Producer/Musician/Songwriter Quincy Jones’ nickname was "The Dude," and though his 70s urban cult of Dudeism is slightly different than present-day orthodox Dudeism, it still exalts the groovy over the square, the heartfelt over the phony, and the afro over the buzz-cut. At least it did until he started going bald.


Sarah Silverman Comedian, Actress, Agent Provacateur.

One of the funniest humans on earth, Silverman has managed to downplay her classic good-looks in exchange for current status as the most controversial and offensive comedian in the world (except maybe for that Danish guy that drew the Mohammed cartoon). Universally beloved by male dudes everywhere, who wish more women were like her, but with significantly lower standards.

The Buddha Indian Sage

In keeping with the idea that the ideal Dude abandons the trappings of society and goes it his own way, there is no better candidate for Dudeism than the Buddha. Born a rich prince, he bailed on his birthright and taught that you should go with the flow. Chicks also dug him like crazy but none ever tied him down, cause Nirvana was what he was all about, man. Righteous.


Jesus Christ Bearded prophet of the meek and early archetype of the 1960s hippie.

Jesus was born Jewish, but then converted to Dudeism after he realized that the Romans and the Pharisees were fucking fascists. Today lots of people think he’s the son of the guy who created the universe and that our life is in his hands. But probably he was just a dude who thought people should mellow out and stop getting so worked up about stuff. Sadly, few of his followers seem to actually realize that. Remember: There’s not a literal connection.


David Grayson Alter-ego of Pulitzer-prize winning author Ray Stannard Baker.

David Grayson wasn’t a real person, but no one knew that for a long time. Intellectual writer Ray Stannard Baker longed for a life out in the pastures and so wrote a series of seemingly-autobiographical books under this nom-de-dude. The series speaks of the comfort of a simple life without too much work, surrounded by nature and good friends. Baker was forced to admit the truth after the character grew in such popularity that others were claiming to be him. The dude will out. To thine own self be dude.


Jerry Garcia Guitar canoodler extraordinaire

Roll away, the dude. Got a little carried away with the drugs, but it wasn’t because of psychic torment or weakness of character. He just liked them and maybe they made him play better. He was universally reknowned as an all-around nice guy with libertarian attitudes and appropriately-dudeish facial hair.


Joni Mitchell Angel-voiced troubador of the unpaved

While most of the sixties rock revolution was fomented by guys, the ladies seemed to end up as notches in their frayed leather belts of free love, or dead from intemperance like Mama Cass and Janis Joplin. Not so for the quintessentially cool dudeist saint Mitchell who sang smartly about individualism while smoking and cursing like a sailor and living life on her own terms. She paints pretty good too.


Mohandas "Mahatma" Gandhi Peace-loving subcontinental pacifist

Calmer than you are. Calmer than anyone ever anywhere. Gandhi was never, ever un-dude. He practically invented modern pacifism, not to mention shabby chic – he showed up to stuffy English parliament in nothing more than a ratty sheet. He also invented the sit-in, the hunger strike and the cool 1960s specs. He was the man in the white pajamas.


Walt Whitman Turned the hobo zero into a boho hero

Never had anything approaching a permanent job. Wandered all over the place. Became a famous poet unexpectedly and accidentally, while poseur contemporaries like Emerson and Thoreau struggled to make sure everyone thought they were hip and bohemian. Was a literate friend to the common man, never really acknowledged his fame, and even though he was probably gay, adamantly refused to iron his clothes.


Julia Child Brought fine cuisine to the common man

If not for Madame Julia, most Americans afflicted with a bad case of the munchies would only have overboiled 1950s cooking to turn to. But this huge, burly woman proved that you can be working-class and sloppy-looking and still eat good grub. She took the snobbery out of eating well – on one episode of her TV show she accidentally dropped food on the floor and then unceremoniously threw it back in the pan. Right on, Grey Poupon.


Jeff Spicoli Quintessential Surfer Dude

Surfers are responsible for the resurgence of the term "dude" in the 1970s so it would be downright unholy to omit their pop culture patron saint, Jeff Spicoli, Sean Penn’s character in the 1980s movie "Fast Times at Ridgemont High." Spicoli summed up the dude ethos in this perfectly pithy riposte to another character’s suggestion that he get a job: "What for? All I need are some tasty waves, a cool buzz, and I’m fine." He also had the brilliant idea of ordering delivery pizza during history class. Though he almost failed history, he totally aced Dudeist Ethics 101. Radical!


Kurt Vonnegut Modern day Dudeist philosopher

"I tell you, we are here on Earth to fart around, and don’t let anybody tell you different." So wroteth one of the greatest writers of Dudeist novels ever. While few of his books really even had plots, they were so packed with witty, quotable sayings and iconoclastic, easygoing ideas to live by that it hardly mattered. In fact, the very idea that plots were a part of life was anathema to him. Consistently imploring the world to shrug rather than assert, his essential philosophy was that life on earth is totally and utterly nonsensical so just try to have as good a time as possible without blowing anything up. So it goes.