'
, ' and derivative words and concepts have appeared in a variety of forms in popular culture. In
Terry Pratchett's
Discworld book series, there is a running homophonic gag centered on various characters having a broad misunderstanding of the words
geis and
geese. In ''
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, Governor Weatherby Swann was going to stab the heart of Davy Jones, only for Jones to reveal that he cast a terrible geis upon his heart when he carved it from his body, that if someone stabs the heart then theirs will take its place. The line was cut from the film, but the geis remains in place as the curse of the Flying Dutchman. With the help of Jack Sparrow, Will Turner stabs the heart and becomes the new captain of the Dutchman''. Geasa are widely used in
Charles Stross's
Laundry Files series, especially employed by The Laundry (Britain's secret government agency tasked with protecting the realm from supernatural threats) to enforce the loyalty and duty of its agents. Geas (spelled Geass in the series) is an ability that plays a prominent role in the Anime
Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion, conceptually inspired by traditional Gaelic Geas. In the Series, Geass manifests as a unique ability granted to characters by otherworldly beings, often described as witch-like. Each Geass functions as a sort of binding vow that grants a character the ability to compel or enforce specific behaviors onto others, in parallel to the folkloric Geas, which traditionally imposes obligations or prohibitions on an individual.
Parallels in English literature Prohibitions and taboos similar to '
are also found in more recent English literature, though they are not described as ' in those texts. For example, in
William Shakespeare's play
Macbeth, the title character believes he is safe because "no man of woman born shall harm Macbeth". However, his nemesis
Macduff was "from his mother's womb untimely ripp'd" (i.e., born by
Caesarean section), and was therefore not "of woman born". Another example is the Witch-King of Angmar from
Tolkien's legendarium, who has a ''''-like prophecy described by the
Elven hero,
Glorfindel: "Far off yet is his doom, and not by the hand of man shall he fall." The meaning is then quite literal, for the Witch-king eventually falls at the hands of
Éowyn and
Meriadoc, one a shieldmaiden of
Rohan, and thus not a man but a woman, and the other a
hobbit, and thus not a Man as in species. ==References==