[page 37]
Michael Stauffer, M.F.A.
Wheaton College
Building Character while Developing
a Character:
An Investigation of the Integration of Faith and Theater
I. A Case for Character a Definition
of the Objective
At
a time when the entire purpose and direction of a liberal arts education
is coming under scrutiny, new focus is being place on the importance of
values education. The discussion raises the question of just what we are
trying to accomplish during the relatively brief time we have with our
students. Whereas as an assimilation and integration of a significant
body of academic material is essential to an understanding of the world
in which they must function, the development of a value system and ultimately
a moral identity as a filter for this information is viewed as equally
essential. It is this personal development that will assist in setting
qualitative life goals and in serving as a basis for future decision making.
If
we can accept the premise that one of the major purposes of a liberal
arts education needs to be the transmission of values, not merely the
specifics of the various discipline minutiae, then professors at faith
based institutions have an even greater responsibility as they set about
sifting through the details of theological systems to distill a model
that will serve the student throughout her adult life. This model should
lead the student to develop a set of moral values that will enable her
to become a responsible agent, rather than a passive individual being
acted upon and molded by the forces at work around her.
As
educators at faith based institutions of higher learning we find the model
clear, albeit challenging; Jesus Christ and living example of love and
justice certainly set a criterion against which any specific action or
lifestyle can be measured. The problem arises when one begins to consider
the pedagogy to be used in assisting the student to develop and embrace
a sense of being that will grow with him and not be discarded later as
superficial, shallow, or hopelessly out of date: a value system that will
sustain him on his journey of character development.
[page
38] The moral education of our students must move beyond the
"whats" of required and unexplained in loco parentis
rules setting behavior limitations. The student must be urged to explore
the "whys" of her belief system, if she is to develop a lifestyle
that will not simply be discarded as irrelevant when she leaves the parochial
walls of college life.
It
is our responsibility, as educators of faith, to help students become
aware adults, thinking creatively, and making informed decisions emanating
from a value system that reflects the nature and model of Christ himself.
This requires facing life with the fiber of truth and honesty, embracing
Christ's model of love and justice, and appreciating fully the working
of God's grace. Accomplishing this is certainly the true mission of a
most misunderstood integration of faith and learning. This integration
must be an active penetration of all the disciplines and all life's callings
with the beliefs and values that make up a Christian world-view.(1)
It
is my suggestion in this paper that theater affords a natural integration
of these truths into the behavior patterns of the student as he begins
to investigate the intentions, motivations and subsequent actions of the
various characters in a play as part of the necessary preparation antecedent
to the development of a believable character on stage. Hence theater can
enhance a student's ability to develop virtuous character traits for life
while building a believable character for production. Theater is in fact
a natural laboratory for the examination of moral issues because the issues
are concrete and real and moral choices are made.(2)
This
laboratory experience affords the student the opportunity to ask the "whys
" of her own moral principles and choices as she looks into the mirror
held in front of her by the character she is investigating. The reliability
of the method is directly proportional to the reality and honesty experienced
in the exploration. It is this process of introspection, decision making,
and ultimate action taking, that will be discussed in this paper, as it
pertains to the student's development of deliberate habits of responsible
action. It is deliberate choices and the developing habits of responsible
action that as Aristotle has said, develop those inner [page
39] dispositions of the heart called virtues.(3) Aristotle
believed that character is what shows a man's disposition the kinds
of things he chooses or rejects when his choice is not obvious.(4) This
Aristotelian tradition of character has been embraced by Booth, Holmes
and Hauerwas, the major sources cited in this paper. This reference to
character will be used throughout the paper as a term of comparison to
the dramatic character awaiting actualization through the diligent rehearsal
of the honest introspective student.
II. The Journey towards a Moral Identity
the Process
When
Stanley Hauerwas suggests that the virtuous life is a journey, he is implying
a process through which people are gradually and graciously transformed
by the pilgrimage to which they have been called.(5) Character is correlative
to the image of journey. Not only is one on a journey, his very life is
conceived as journey. Paul's recurring image in his epistles of "pressing
on to the mark" is a constant source of encouragement to those persevering
the journey. This metaphor of the journey surely should be the primary
one for articulating the shape of moral existence and living.(6) The path
of this journey and the events experienced along the way are influenced,
and at the same time do greatly influence, the moral development of the
individual. These events the joy, the pain, the hopes, and the
failures - are the stuff upon which character is built. The moral self
results from constant readjustments to the nuances and ambiguities of
our ethical choices and experiences on the journey.
In
an attempt to define what can be a very nebulous reference to character
by many, Hauerwas suggests that the idea of character indicates what a
man can decide to be as opposed to what a man is naturally.(7) Hauweras
assumes a self which has continuity within time, is a responsible agent,
and for whom character, a set a virtues and qualities is formed over time.
To say someone has character seems to imply that in some sense he has
control over [page 40] himself, is
a self-master, that through self-effort he can regulate his disposition
and actions by rules, principles and ideals.
A
person's inclination and desires, which are part of her nature, may suggest
goals, but such inclination and desires only enter into what we call a
person's character insofar as she chooses to satisfy them in a certain
manner. This manner may be in accordance with the rules of efficiency:
persistent, careful, dogged, or painstaking or it may be in accordance
with the rules of social appropriateness: honest, fair, considerate, and
ruthless.(8)
Inherent
in most references to character is the capacity of a person to speak for
herself, to determine beforehand her future conduct, and there by somehow
perhaps guarantee a predictability of action beyond the present moment.
This predisposition to behave in certain "moral" ways is most
certainly based upon those things that a person considers most important
in her life; that she truly cares about. Character cannot be thought of
as a kind of outer manifestation that leaves a more fundamental self,
hidden. It is the very reality of who we are as self-determining agents.(9)
This sense of intense motivation and purposeful intention, this disposition
toward the greater good, is what Holmes refers to as virtue. It is not
arrived at haphazardly or intuitively, but consciously and carefully over
time. Virtue in character, as a motivation for cognitive value assessment
and assimilation, as well as subsequent affective choices of behavior,
remains a constant guiding force, a still small voice behind the action.
What
one cares about is directly influenced by the experiences that have molded
his sense of value. These experiences can be societal and determinable,
or grounded in personal emotional nuances. Response to these experiences
is colored by one's beliefs and values; they also play a formidable role
in developing these values. Artificial experiences designed as consciousness
raising and sensitizing have been shown to be very effective in creating
an atmosphere for moral growth. Developing these virtues in our students
as a constant is certainly the goal of any discipline's attempt at an
integration of faith and learning. These are among the primary objectives
of Arthur's Homes' discussion of the essentials for establishing a moral
identity.
[page
41] In discussing the importance of the investigation of value
development with the teaching of the various disciplines, Holmes emphasizes
that all of life comes value laden (laden with God given possibilities
for good.) These values are objective, not relative to the individual
or situation, but rooted in universal aspects of our lives in God's creation.(10)
It is with the exposure to and assumption of these truths, these objective
values, that the journey can become a richer and fuller experience.
It
is within this milieu that Holmes and Hauerwas place emphasis on a sensitive
awareness of the context in which we live, and, in developing this sensitivity,
assuming a responsibility for our actions in that context. This responsibility
puts stress on the individual as a decision maker. A moral agent is not
one who wanders a predetermined course, or simply falls into life letting
things happen to him. Hauerwas adds that to emphasize responsibility is
to give recognition to the fact that often in our moral experience we
are simply forced to fall back on ourselves in order to make a decision
that takes account of the contingencies of the human situation.(11) In
responding humanly to a particular situation, a person does more than
shape that situation; he shapes himself. He reinforces or weakens an habitual
orientation that accords (or is at odds) with the requirements of human
life, and so sets up the conditions of his future moral career.(12) Our
actions thereby become acts of self-determination whereby we not only
reaffirm what we have been, but what we will be in the future.
Hauweras
poses an interesting question at this point. "Are we first a kind
of person from which subsequent acts follow, or is the kind of person
we are dependent on the kind of actions we engage in?"(13) These
introspective questions of motivation and exploration of intentions are
basic to any in-depth character study in theater. Without a thorough understanding
of the whys of character action, no believable depiction can be attained.
Hauerwas
suggests that we need to explore what forms the conscience: what centers
bring life to wholeness and integrity and style, and what brings lasting
dispositions into being [page 42] that
give order and direction to gesture, word, and deed.(14) We need to explore
the significance of conscious intention, to shape a life in accord with
God's good will, and to practice becoming a fitting living person conforming
to God's goodness.(15)
The
objective is clear. We know what we must attempt to accomplish with our
integration of faith and learning in molding the very spirit of our students.
Research literature eloquently supports the premise that narrative, the
creation of stories of believable characters caught in the act of coping
with life as they find it, and of making decisions both selfishly and
for the greater good, is one of the most effective means to attain this
goal.
Narrative
thought presents concrete human and interpersonal situations in order
to demonstrate their particular validity. It is a description of reality,
and it is a way of seeing that aims at a verisimilitude. The story mode
requires imagination, and understanding of human intention, and an appreciation
of the particular of time and place.(16) In so doing one can see how readily
narratives can focus on characters and on the causes of their actions:
their intentions, goals and subjective experience. Christ certainly sensed
the power of the narrative, of story telling, with his use of parables
to stimulate interest and to teach valuable moral lessons. These stories
allowed the listeners to access the truths being taught and to personalize
them.
In
his book, The Company We Keep, Wayne Booth builds a most convincing
case for the proposition. Anyone who conducts honest introspection knows
that "real life" is lived in images derived in part from stories.
Our imitations of narrative imitations of life are so spontaneous and
plentiful that we cannot draw a clear line between what we are, in some
conception a natural un-storied self, and what we have become, as we have
first enjoyed, the imitated, and then criticized both the stories and
the responses to them.(17) One does in fact read [page
43] to become a better person a more fully faceted individual.
One cannot help but be influenced both directly and indirectly.
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