|
As
we watch, we are probably frustrated by their inability to get together,
by their stubbornness and the rather sad incapacities that keep them
from a fruitful interchange, digging them ever deeper into a morass
of conflict. This is a good setting for a comic turn--a revelation that
helps each of them to see the other, to relax and laugh a bit, recognize
their limitations and foibles, and start learning from the other. The
comic transformation would be toward a student rewarded for her persistence
and determination, and a professor satisfied that he has found a way
to overcome obstacles to teach successfully. Each would find tolerance
for the other's eccentricities, and the happy couple would then achieve
their comic union, so to speak, not in sex in this case, but in the
good feeling and anticipation of future fruitfulness that crowns any
successful relationship.
As
we know, of course, things turn out very differently. Carol's disconnected,
factoidal memory of the transactions of the first act is apparently laid
out for her by her "group" into a picture of a different kind.
Each of John's utterances will be decontextualized and reassembled, then
hurled back at him as accusations. Harassment and assault appear as the
perfect postmodern deconstruction: unpredictable, dangerous, in arbitrary
context, and the result of conflicting social ideologies and forces. As
Carol, now empowered, now in the driver's seat, presses her charges, John
makes an effort to explain to her, to admit his condescensions and other
minor failings, to philosophically sympathize with her position about
what she is supposed to be learning. He only gradually sees that she is
instituting not one, but a whole series of prosecutions against him, first
to the full extent of university regulations, then to the full extent
of the law. As his situation, both in the university and beyond, grows
more desperate, he becomes more and more like the demon she believes she
is [page 106] prosecuting. Finally,
in the end, accused of rape, he knocks her down, stopping just short of
smashing her with a chair, screaming that he wouldn't touch her sexually
with a ten-foot pole. He has almost become the monster she already sees
him as being.
What
has happened in this play? The play is, like John Millington Synge's Riders
to the Sea, a vision of a tidal wave coming to destroy a person, a
family. We see it coming. It comes on relentlessly. It arrives and crashes
down. It destroys. It is over. It feels like a random event of nature,
like the storms in the sea off the Aran Isles, like the natural storm
that catches Lear on the heath and the human one that later kills Cordelia.
This latter is the "Great thing of us forgot!" by Albany, who,
if he had remembered earlier to rescind the warrant on Cordelia's life
might have saved her. But the winds will blow until they are exhausted,
and some of us will have to pick up the pieces when it is over and begin
again. Inside a comic mirror, an amusing vision of two absurdly limited
and flawed people, a tragic wind blew. Like Gloucester's blinding in wake
of his misapprehension of the characters of his own sons, injury comes
suddenly and with striking cruelty. What's left is really painful and
hard to bear.
It
seems to me, then, that this play is not about whether Carol or John is
right or wrong. It is about the horror of what viciousness, stupidity,
and blindness wreak when we mistake them for justice, wisdom, and vision.
Carol does destroy John's career, and possibly his family life. But his
deafness and arrogance, his pompous self-obsession and obtuseness as a
teacher are also damaging. The deepest irony in the vision the play presents
is that this is a comic set-up, tending toward farce. We have two narrow
creatures whose knee-jerk reactions and drastic limitations, given their
chosen roles in life, are quite ridiculous. John is almost a clown, a
pretentious pedant-expert, much like Oliver Hardy. Carol is the waif,
the nincompoop, the blunderer, all concentration and concern--not dissimilar
to Stan Laurel. Like all good comic characters, they take themselves seriously.
But what is at stake is not, for instance, pride in the face of a petty
insult, but something larger: learning, the truth, the obligation of the
teacher, the striving of the learner to understand a difficult and frightening
world. Try as we might, we are not quite permitted to laugh. The comic
world is there, but it has taken a sour turn. While Laurel and Hardy can
destroy a whole car or house without significant consequences, here the
consequences, in the second act, come thick and fast. As in Synge's Aran
Isles, the breath of fate is constantly soughing in the rafters of the
house. There is something about the setting in both plays that suggests
to us from the beginning, gives us a kind of foreboding, that [page
107] things will not work out well, that the jaws of destruction
will open soon and swallow everything that washes into them.
In
Synge's play fate seems to seal the inhabitants of the island in the grip
of custom and necessity. Everything is horrifyingly inevitable. In Mamet's
play, on the other hand, the context is still comic. These are manners,
styles, and social institutions that are being examined. They signal the
domestic comedy of manners to the audience in an instant. They carry with
them a sense of choice, of the changeability of fashion, of the need for
tolerance, learning, and accommodation. In short, they are indelibly comic.
Perhaps one reason why the play has provoked so much controversy and outrage
is not just that it seems to be a rigged case, but that Mamet won't let
us have our comedy, won't let us see these people as clowns whose actions
may teach us a little something, but after all, don't mean much. Carol
behaves like an automaton, a programmed robot, and so she might be another
Stan Laurel, an oh-so-predictable character in the farce. But she is not
a robot, and as the stages of destruction of John progress, she looks
more and more like a monster. Mamet has offered the sacrifice, but it
is not acceptable. The play is as humorless as the characters and laughter
does not come. He may have slain the comic god (who is, fortunately, easily
resurrected), and this is his sin. He has shown us a domestic world that,
as if we didn't know, is unsafe. Something profound, after all, has been
lost--not only some faith in what it might mean to be student and teacher,
to be learner and scholar, but faith in the comic rite, in the coming
together of the loose and ragged ends of imperfect individual transactions
into the working, acceptable weave of the social fabric. But I predict
that as the social fashions change, and the pressure of the issues raised
is eased, this play will seem dryer and funnier. Age will make its characters
more and more ridiculous, and the play will be more fun.
IV. Joining the Dance
As
we look down at comic characters and ridicule them from a distance, laughing
at them for what they have to learn (we are much wiser than they are!),
part of us cannot forget (and thanks to Mark Pizzato(11) for reminding
me) that they are our sacrifice. They are held up [page
108] to us as sacrifices to the household gods, to the gods
of survival and security. In the Dionysian mood, without the death of
tragic characters, we could not live. And without the humiliations comic
characters endure, we could not be assured and confident of our competence
and acceptability. The heroes of comedy don't laugh. They are serious.
This is the first corollary of the thesis advanced earlier that farce
is itself a sacrifice to tragedy, so that comedy can live.
When
they are successful, our comedians on the stand-up stage are said to "knock
'em dead." In the tradition of stand-up, the "them" is
us, in the audience, laughing at ourselves, at our humorlessness and over-seriousness,
at our pretensions, violent customs, and deadly ignorance. Thus the stage-edge,
as Pizzato has described it, has nearly disappeared, or works, by mutual
agreement, in both directions at once. On the stand-up stage, the threat
of comic disgrace disappears when its exemplar, the comedian, takes his
bow and exits. On the comic stage, however, the threat is on-going. We
need the protection of the comic god to be sure that matters domestic
stay that way. The sudden onslaught of disease, war, natural disaster,
the depredations of power-seekers, or the hypocritical, murky swamps of
political maneuverings, or the welling horror of fear, anger, and violence
felt by one individual or one group toward another--all these can rip
apart our domestic tranquility not only with a brutal suddenness, but
with an equally brutal arbitrariness. If Lear was right about the gods,
only comedy can save us, and only then for a while. The sacrifice must
be continual, and it must be effective. We must find a way to laugh, for
the comic laugh is the expiration of the breath that builds societies.
Without that, we spend our time in caves, shrinking in fear.
In
the hands of Samuel Beckett or Harold Pinter, or the early Tom Stoppard
of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, or Enter a Free Man,
or the David Mamet of Oleanna, we find the everyday domestic world
of comedy, but without its customary wall of protection, its castle-keep
separating it from the ultimate truths and ironies, chaos and destruction
of tragedy. Here the walls leak, and seeping into the very warp and woof
of that social fabric which is supposed to protect us, into the minor
details of everyday reality, which, if they go wrong, we should be able
to fix like the plumbing, are the seeds of disaster, of humiliation, destruction
and chaos. This is particularly clear in plays like Oleanna, The
Widow's Blind Date, by Israel Horowitz, The Visit by Friedrich
Dürrenmatt, Joe Egg by Peter Nichols, or Angels in America,
by Tony Kushner.
[page
109] It was Dürrenmatt, writing in 1955, in what was published
as Problems of the Theatre, who said:
Tragedy presupposes guilt....vision...a sense
of responsibility. In the Punch-and-Judy show of our century....there
are no more guilty and also, no responsible men. It is always, 'We couldn't
help it'...Everything is dragged along and everyone gets caught somewhere
in the sweep of events....Comedy alone is suitable for us. Our world
has led to the grotesque as well as to the atom bomb, and so it is a
world like that of Hieronymus Bosch...[T]he grotesque is only a way
of expressing...the form of the unformed, the face of a world without
face...
But
the tragic is still possible even if pure tragedy is not. We can achieve
the tragic out of comedy. We can bring it forth as a frightening moment,
as an abyss that opens suddenly; indeed, many of Shakespeare's tragedies
are already really comedies out of which the tragic arises.(12)
The
sacrifice thus leaps over the stage edge in both directions. As we laugh,
our world falls apart, and the victim is us. As comedy melts into chaos,
what Dürrenmatt calls the "conceit" of comedy, the imaginative
idea which built the confident protected edifice of the domestic world
of comedy, dissolves into the horrors of tragedy, with no exaltation,
no hint of heroism to compensate us for the loss. As the butts of the
comedy we take the boot-heel of tragedy in the neck, as Brecht might have
stated it. As Pogo said, with an apologetic little grin, "We have
met the enemy and he is us." If Pogo, the embodiment of gentle social
optimism, Walt Kelly's animal sacrifice to the gods of civility in politics
(a possum in a world of raccoons), sees the irony, maybe we can see it.
As Li'l Abner put it, "Any fool can see thet...Ah see it!"
If
we are doomed as a species, it may be because we have built self-collapsing
gods of this kind, and we will continue to chase them round and round,
up the tails of our own pretensions. If we are not doomed, it may be that
in the laughter we will find the courage to rebuild that stage edge. By
taking advantage of the inherently metaphorical structure of drama, by
carrying a new set of meanings from the individual to the society, from
the gods to humankind, and back again, we can re-stoke the metaphor of
the drama, re-invigorate our [page 110] largest
sense of the meaning of human action in our expectations of dramatic action.
In recognizing the tragedy, we can re-inform a comedy for our time.
Endnotes
- The essentials of this
view of realism can be found in Northrop Frye's account of the dramatic
forms in his Anatomy of Criticism (Princeton, 1957).
- Two Tars, 1928.
- Tit for Tat, 1935.
- Big Business, 1929.
- Produced by Hal Roach,
directed by Charles Rogers, 1935.
- Michael Wood. "Perseverance
to the Point of Madness." New York Review of Books XLIV:12 (July
17, 1997), 8.
- Wood, 10.
- Laurel and Hardy, Big
Business, 1929.
- Wood, 10.
- It is important to note
at this point that contemporary literary theory makes it difficult to
discuss this dance. Brian Richardson ("Beyond Postructuralism:
Theory of Character, the Personae of Modern Drama, and the Antinomies
of Critical Theory," Modern Drama XL:1 [Spring 97] 86-99) argues
that contemporary poststructural literary theory, since it denies representation,
cannot give a full account of character in modern drama. "...the
presentation of character in modern drama remains not only undertheorized
but in principle incomprehensible as long as reigning theoretical constraints
are observed (87)." The same might be said for action, plot, and
theme (what Artistotle called "thought"), since each, in the
poststructuralist mode, is deconstructed to the fragments of hegemonic,
or subversive ideologies, or to other fragments of ideas seen to be
more crucial than action or character or comedy or tragedy--like gender,
race, body, performativity and power. Sandra Tomc points out ("David
Mamet's Oleanna and the Way of the Flesh." Essays in Theatre 15:2
[May, 1997], 163-175) that numerous critics have asked whether Mamet
has ruined the play by using the first act to tell us what he thinks
is "the truth" about who John and Carol are and what happened
between them, loading the case for John and against Carol. This assumes,
of course, that what is at stake in the play is summed up in the question
of what sexual harassment is, whether it really happened in this case,
and by extension, whether it happens at all. Could the play be as much
about the failure of certain ideas about teaching and knowledge, about
study and learning, as it is about sexual harassment and the anti-intellectual
depredations of political correctness? Could it be about a connection
between the two sets of ideas, each illuminating the other? Could it
be about what happens when two people trap themselves in conflicting,
stereotypical roles that flow from the institutions and social structures
in which they live? One could argue that such a description is useful
for understanding hundreds of plays across centuries and cultures. Richardson
argues that we need the capacities of poststructuralist analysis, but
that it should be combined with elements of humanist and formalist criticism
to derive a cogent analysis of the shifting and sometime contradictory
representations of character in contemporary drama. In pursuing this
analysis, I have used largely the humanist and formalist modes, preferring
those traditions that see works of art of art as real entities, and
forms as wholes with power to make meaning out of their parts.
- See Mark Pizzato, "Theaters
of Sacrifice: Greek, Aztec, and Postmodern." Ethnologie und Inszenierung:
Ansätze zur Theaterethnologie, ed. Bettina E. Schmidt and Mark
Münzel (Marburg: Förderverein Völkerkunde, 1998), 137-67.
- Friedrich Dürrenmatt.
Problems of the Theatre and The Marriage of Mr. Mississippi. New York:
Grove Press, 1966, 31-32.
|