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[page
182] Moliere stated that
the purpose of comedy is to correct men's vices,
. . . and nothing reforms the majority of men better than the portrayal
of their faults. To expose vices to everyone's laughter is to deal them
a mighty blow. People easily endure reproofs, but they cannot at all
endure being made fun of. People have no objection to being considered
wicked, but they are not willing to be considered ridiculous.(46)
Moliere believed, or at least claimed to believe, that
he was trying to correct the vices of people in his comic depictions of
their vices. He presented these vices before a theatrical backdrop of
classical young lovers. In so doing he could readily point out the vice
that needed correction before his society could experience that sense
of regain, of reestablished equilibrium, of resurrection into a fully
mature society based on mutuality. Moliere then, whether he realized it
or not, was presenting his vision of the ideal society. This society was
premised on a family that operates in a mutual exchange of love and is
freed from the control of either barefaced vice or vice masquerading as
virtue. This loving society may only just barely escape the darkness of
evil and collapse of loving relationships by a miraculous event beyond
human control, but it presupposes a hopeful future that includes everyone
who wants to be in that future loving family/society/community. Whether
on purpose or not Moliere's resurrected society potentially is a significant
adumbration of the future beloved community of God.
The
plays of Jean Baptiste Poquelin (Moliere) raised the art of comedy in
17th century France to that of tragedy and provided some of the greatest
plays in the classic (or perhaps the Neo-Classic) historical theatrical
repertory.
Based
on the oeuvre of his work I have alleged that for Moliere anything that
destroys mutuality of relationship may rightly be called sin and that
which returns the world to right relationship may be termed grace. Sin
therefore is anything that leads to distorted or broken family or societal
relationships.
[page 183]
A Concluding Summary:
In
this paper the theological issues of sin, grace, finitude, mutuality and
future community were identified as central issues of the dramatic comedy
tradition of Moliere as reflected in representative scripts from his oeuvre,
and representative theories of dramatic comedy which suggest themselves
as applicable to his work. This was accomplished through an analysis of
several significant historic theories of comedy, analysis and criticism
of the dramatic comedies of Moliere, and developing and applying a relational
theology of mutuality as suggested by philosophers and theologians John
Macmurray, Martin Buber and John Macquarrie.
From
that process I have asserted that dramatic comedy views sin as any human
action or attitude that throws society out of balance, and which if allowed
to go unchecked, would destroy that society. Sin in Moliere's dramatic
comedy is most often seen in relational terms as that which destroys mutuality
between characters and does not allow the characters, and therefore society
at large, to become more fully human. His version of Dramatic comedy is
constantly revealing humans in their finite condition as what we are rather
than what we claim to be.(47) Eugene Peterson, in his book of reflections
on the life of David, suggests an important understanding regarding characters
and storytelling that is applicable to our relationship to the characters
of Moliere's comedy.
Throughout
my childhood, in my mother's telling of the story, I became David. I
was always David. I'm still David. It's the intent and skill
of this scriptural storyteller to turn everyone who reads or hears the
story into realizing something essentially Davidic about him- or herself.(48)
Roger Scruton, in "Laughter," suggests that
what causes the laughter of the audience at character's pretensions and
actions is a recognition of their own implication in those attitudes [page
184] and actions. We are in effect laughing at ourselves as
we laugh at them.(49) This allows us as audience members to experience
the grace that can come with laughter that the particular character in
the play may or may not accept or experience. Even Moliere's form of comedy
has its graceful qualities and possibilities. After all, beyond its criticism
lies the positive desire to cause positive change by correcting the characters'
and the audience members' vices. Moliere's comedy thus reveals us in our
distorted incompleteness, our "brokenness," our sinful and limited
finiteness. Laughter is often the mirror, whip and gift that reveals,
castigates and allows for transformation of the characters, and us as
we see ourselves revealed in the characters of his dramatic comedy.
Comedic Laughter And Grace:
Laughter
thus is one of the means of grace dramatic comedy offers to the characters
in the play and to the audience who watches, identifies with, and responds
to the characters. By our laughter we join others in a corporate response
in which we can acknowledge those sins that alienate us from others. By
choosing to accept laughter as a means of grace, we can become more critical
of our own sins at the same time we become more tolerant and forgiving
of the sins of others. Comedy is thus both criticism and understandingly
graceful.
Comedy
is always jarring us with the evidence that we are no better than other
people, and always comforting us with the knowledge that most other
people are no better than we are. It makes us more critical but it leaves
us more tolerant.(50)
Comedic Structure And Grace:
Moliere's
dramatic comedy also provides for and offers grace in its structure. The
chiasmic U-shaped structure(51) most often used in dramatic comedy provides
for the offending [page 185] party's
transformation and welcome re-entry into the society that has been threatened
or offended by that character's attitudes and actions. There is a strong
tendancy to offer grace and acceptance to everyone who is willing to accept
it through the structural statement of dramatic comedy. The only characters
who are excluded at the final curtain are those characters who actively
reject the final rebalanced or resurrected society, and they are often
entreated to a peace in the "virtual future"(52) of the comedy.
Comedic Vision And Grace: An Eschatology
Of Hope:
Moliere's
version of dramatic comedy is not just a light humorous play that happens
to have a happy ending. It is, in the very vision and fabric of the comedy,
"a way of surveying life so that happy endings must prevail."(53)
This fortunate happy ending, most often brought about by "factors
. . . beyond human knowledge and control"(54) may be understood theologically
as the miraculous intervention of God on humanity's behalf. The spirit
and structure of Moliere's dramatic comedy seem to demand a hope-filled
inclusive eschatology in which everyone is invited to the final happy
ending. Only those who actively refuse that rebalanced or resurrected
community are not present, and hope is often held out for even them.
This
final community is seen as a rebalanced society, and even though we know
that its "virtual future"(55) will lead to further repetitions
of the cycle, for a moment frozen in time we can experience community
in microcosm as it ought to be. This final community is often seen as
an ideal community in that, however fleetingly, it is based on love and
mutuality of persons. In that respect such a community may represent (and
in any given production even may be) an adumbration of that community
of God that is among us, and not yet among us in its fullness.
Endnotes
- Alan Reynolds Thompson,
The Anatomy of Drama (Berkeley, University of California Press,
1942) 203, rpt. by Philip G. Hill in The Living Art: and Introduction
to Theatre and Drama, (San Francisco, Rinehart Press) 348.
- L. J. Potts, "The
Subject Matter of Comedy," (1950) rpt. in Comedy: Meaning and
Form, ed. with intro. Robert W. Corrigan (San Francisco: Chandler
Publishing Co., 1965) 199.
- Potts 202.
- Benjamin Lehmann, "Comedy
and Laughter," University of California Publications: English
Studies (1954) 10, rpt. in Comedy: Meaning and Form, ed.
with intro. Robert Corrigan (San Francisco: Chandler Publishing Company,
1965) 164.
- Francis M. Cornford, The
Origin of Attic Comedy (Garden City, New York: Doubleday and Company,
Inc., 1961) 3-23.
- Cornford 13.
- Cornford 13.
- R. W. Herzel, The Original
Casting of Moliere's Plays (Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI Research Press,
1981) 42-68.
- Martin Grotjahn, Beyond
Laughter: Humor and the Subconscious (New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc.,
1957) 260-61.
- Ludwig Jekels, "On
The Psychology of Comedy," Selected Papers, trans. I. Jarosy
(New York: International Universities Press, 1952) 97.
- Grotjahn 260.
- Grotjahn 261.
- Jekels 100.
- Grotjahn 261.
- Henri Bergson, "Laughter,"
in Comedy, ed., intro. and append. Wylie Sypher (Garden City,
New York: Doubleday and Co., Inc., 1956) 118-127.
- Bergson 121-122.
- Bergson 121.
- Jekels, 104.
- Jekels, 104.
- Lehmann 167.
- Christopher Fry, "Comedy,"
Vogue (January, 1951) rpt. in Comedy: Meaning and Form,
ed. with intro. Robert W. Corrigan (San Francisco: Chandler Publishing
Co., 1965) 15.
- Northrop Frye, "The
Mythos of Spring: Comedy," Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays
(Princeton University Press, 1957) 169.
- Frye 166.
- Frye 164.
- Frye 164.
- Frye 180-183.
- Susanne K. Langer, "The
Comic Rhythm," Feeling and Form (New York: Charles Scribner's
Sons, 1953) 328.
- Cornford 12-13.
- Jekels 97.
- Langer 328.
- Potts 202.
- Grotjahn 261.
- Fry 15.
- Cornford 3-23.
- Lehmann 165.
- Wylie Sypher, "The
Meanings of Comedy" rpt. in Comedy: Meaning and Form, ed.
with intro. Robert W. Corrigan (San Francisco: Chandler Publishing Co.,
1965) 37.
- Sypher 37.
- Frederick Buechner, Telling
the Truth: The Gospel as Tragedy, Comedy and Fairy Tale (San Francisco:
Harper and Row, Publishers, 1977) 58.
- Buechner 72.
- Sypher 48.
- Frye 148.
- Louis Kronenberger, "Some
Prefatory Words on Comedy," rpt. in Comedy: Plays Theory, and
Criticism, ed. with intro. Marvin Felheim (New York: Harcourt, Brace
and World, Inc., 1962) 194.
- Langer 307.
- Langer 331.
- Langer 331.
- Moliere (Jean Baptiste
Poqulin), "Preface to Tartuffe," trans. Richard Kerr in Dramatic
Theory and Criticism: Greeks to Grotowski, ed. Bernard F. Dukore
(New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., 1974) 252.
- Kronenberger 194.
- Eugene H. Peterson, Leap
Over a Wall: Earthly Spirituality for Everyday Christians, (San
Francisco: Harper San Francisco, 1997) 17.
- Roger Scruton, "Laughter,"
in The Philosophy of Laughter and Humor, ed. with intro. John
Morreall (Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1987) 168.
- Kronenberger 196.
- Northrop Frye, The
Great Code: The Bible and Literature, (San Diego: Harcourt, Brace,
Jovanovich, Publishers, 1983) 168-198.
- Langer 307.
- Kronenberger 194.
- Langer 331.
- Langer 307.
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