Deeper - Angie Faith - Allegory Of The Cave -20... ^new^ -
Diving into the Dark: Angie Faith’s “Deeper” and Plato’s Allegory of the Cave
Angie took a breath and, for the first time, told a truth that wasn't optimised for conflict minimization. "Yes. I thought… people should see how their choices add up."
In Angie Faith's the protagonist (assumed to be a representation of Faith herself) begins in a state of modern enlightenment. She has already seen the sun. She understands the mechanics of the puppeteers. Yet, she finds the "real world" above ground to be sterile, noisy, and disconnected. Deeper - Angie Faith - Allegory Of The Cave -20...
Neither path is easy. Both require you to turn away from what everyone else accepts as real. But where Plato’s allegory ends in loneliness (the returned prisoner is mocked), “Deeper” ends in connection. Because diving requires a partner. You can’t go to those depths alone.
The "Deeper" project is built on the foundation of , which describes prisoners chained in a dark cave seeing only shadows of reality on a wall. Diving into the Dark: Angie Faith’s “Deeper” and
To fully appreciate Faith's "Allegory of the Cave," it's essential to understand the philosophical framework that inspired it. The original "Allegory of the Cave" was penned by the ancient Greek philosopher Plato around 380 BCE. In this seminal work, Plato described a group of people who have been imprisoned in a cave, facing a wall where shadows are projected. Behind them, a fire burns, and between the fire and the prisoners, there is a walkway where people carrying puppets or objects pass by, casting shadows on the wall.
She turned and walked back into the mouth of the darkness. This time, she was not a prisoner. She was a diver. She carried the memory of the sun in her chest, and the rhythm of the song in her blood. She has already seen the sun
Through the tear in the world, she felt a rush of wind—not the recycled air of the dome, but real wind, smelling of ozone and dirt.
Angie Faith – “Deeper” (with the Allegory of the Cave in mind. You’ll never hear the drop the same way again.)
Given the lack of a single obvious mainstream work combining all these, the most plausible interpretation is that Angie Faith is an independent musician or spoken-word artist who released a piece titled inspired by or explicitly referencing Plato’s Allegory of the Cave, with “20...” indicating a year (e.g., 2021, 2022).