I had
planned to start my post investigating how and why exactly reading
interpretations might be of use to deal with real people and real life issues
but, again, something amazing has happened. Apparently, thinking about in what
way exactly these activities might be connected brought me back to these basic
questions about reading that I probably thought I had answered a few times
already. At least I had thought more often than once that my blog would come to
an end because there would be nothing to write about anymore. And each time I
have been wrong. Like this time when I unexpectedly answered my two “biggest”
questions about reading. When I couldn’t take my bike to work because of the
rain and walked all the way I puzzled them out all at one go. (Should do this
more often …) So, this has to come first.
One
thing that puzzled me for a long time is about WHICH KIND of fictional texts I
love and get excited about, and which kind I find invariably boring and
irrelevant. And what I found out applies likewise to other “text-producing”
activities, especially acting. There are certainly a lot of great actors – more
than there have ever been before at the same time, I dare say - and I usually can
see and appreciate when somebody has done especially well. But it is not before
they have done THAT THING that I kind of fall in love with them. And then,
potentially, I want to see everything they have done – though I never manage to
do that, of course. I am just about to do it with Christopher Eccleston, even
though I can see that it will be impossible. But that doesn’t matter, he already
proved to be a gold mine as to the load of relevant “text” I have collected
checking him out. It was his “Doctor” who got me hooked, and I began to look
for more, and found out that I already had him on dvd. As Norfolk in
“Elizabeth”, which I hadn’t liked in spite of Cate Blanchett. But I remembered
instantly that I had been thrilled by Geoffrey Rush as Walsingham and by that
guy who played Norfolk and whose name meant nothing to me about … ten(?) years
ago. (Well, he is a wee bit different in period knickerbockers and with a beard
– and (almost) without his beautiful Northern accent!) This was even exactly
the same thing that happened with Richard Armitage after I had seen him in “The
Hobbit” – as my favourite dwarf of all times – and then noticed that I had seen
him in “North and South” about five years before that but hadn’t bought the dvd
because I didn’t really like the story. (And it took even more time for me to
notice that because he was A GREAT DEAL different with a beard, “weird” hair,
and THAT VOICE …) And I had just a funny and endearing sort of proof of having
fallen in love permanently when I saw Simon Russell Beale in “My cousin Rachel”
playing a lawyer of some sort, and I was so disproportionally pleased that I
decided to like the film on the spot - even though I had to admit that he has
NOTHING AT ALL to do with its success. This may appear ridiculous but I liked
it nonetheless. In his case it wasn’t that kind of “lightning” thing as with
Richard Armitage, when he came through that door and said: “So, this is the
Hobbit!” in THAT VOICE! It only happened when I began to write about “The
Tempest” and began to NOTICE my ongoing relationship with him. Though, in fact,
there was this moment as Lear - when he stopped in the middle of the stage,
raised his eyes to the sky and whispered: “Not mad! (Pleeease!!!)” So, in his
case, I even know when AND why – which is, of course, great! In the case of
Richard Armitage I began to make up reasons afterwards, I think, though they
were by no means hard to find. As to Christopher Eccleston I remembered, seeing
“Elizabeth” again, that I had fallen in love with him. But then I had forgotten
about it because I never saw him again until I finally watched “Doctor Who”. And
it happened at least one other time recently, with Lucian Msamati, when I saw
him as Iago in the RSC’s “Othello”. I finally got it on dvd this year, and then
I wasn’t as pleased as I had been seeing it on the big screen. But I am glad
that I had another go at “Othello”, even memorized long scenes with Iago
because I know that this is the best way to analyze them and “get into” their beautiful
logic. And, watching it after I had done this, I could see again why I had
loved his Iago so much. And there are a lot more old and recent examples, as
for Kate Winslet in “Revolutionary Road”, or Rosamund Pike in “Women in Love”
where she did this thing I thought would be impossible: to “nail” Gudrun
Brangwen. Or Patrick Stewart, who already swept me off my feet as Claudius when
I was a teenager, and keeps doing it, I think, by the sheer force of his
“acting personality”. Or Cate Blanchett, of course, for the same reason. I
know, I get carried away, and could go on for a while, but I know that it isn’t
just riding my hobby-horse. It is that I know this kind of thing happens for lots
of totally different reasons. I think I even love these British actors mainly
for being so different – because of the multitude of possibilities to make,
respectively see, something special. But what all these actors have in common –
and what makes the difference between them and the many other great actors I am
pleased to see every time I see them – is that I have SEEN them do THAT THING I
want to see. And know that I can expect them to do it again, and that I want to
see it. I probably still don’t really know what it is and maybe never will
because I know that acting is something I will never come to understand. (Like
reading, it is, of course, DOING IT that makes us understand it!) But, I think,
making this detour about what I understand, I have, at last, come a big step
closer.
The
question which films and series (or actors) to watch and which books to read
has become especially relevant during the last few years – on the one hand
because I began to understand that there isn’t an unlimited store of time. (“I
wasted time, and now does time waste me”, “Richard II” and a big favourite!) On
the other hand I never go to the cinema anymore because I haven’t gone for some
time, or watch or read something because I think I SHOULD have seen or read it,
or because I haven’t anything to read. When I am reading something, or pay
money to see something, I know exactly why I am doing it. And this is what has
changed during the last few years – basically since I came back to “Shakespeare”
– and why it makes sense for me to write this blog. I know that EVERYTHING got
changed KNOWING WHAT IT IS that I want and need. I suddenly knew the
difference, but I couldn’t say exactly what it was. I think I can now.
What always
puzzled me most about my relationships with texts is that, from childhood, I have
preferred text that would most aptly be called “naturalistic”. Which means
being based on the “real” world and appearing “believable” or, in the case of
acting, what I consider to be psychologically convincing. But recently I have
preferred stuff like “Hannibal”, or “Doctor Who”, or, of course, fantasy stuff
like “The Hobbit”. And I am even watching “Harry Potter”, mainly, as I like to
think, for catching up with great actors, but I genuinely enjoy it. And this is
the kind of stuff I frequently labeled “bullshit” in my blog. I even have
noticed over and over again that I have become bored with the “naturalistic”
stuff I always thought I liked to watch. On the other hand, I just rediscovered
“The Lakes” and “Sparkhouse”, and kind of found out why I like them – and am
deep into “Our Friends in the North” right now. (****!) There is a blatant contradiction
somewhere in there. At the same time I know that I basically prefer all these
texts FOR THE SAME REASON. And that it has to do with another big issue that
already puzzled me at uni where I didn’t come a step closer to answer the
questions about how to define “naturalism”, or what exactly fictional texts
have to do with the real world. I think I came so far as to concede that to be
“believable” (and to be taken seriously) has nothing to do with the text being
linked to the real world IN THE FIRST PLACE. There are lots of people who might
find “Middle-earth” more believable than Zola or Dostojewski, that is, closer
to their own experience and to how they see the world. Of course it has SOMETHING
to do with it, but it is infinitely more complicated than that. And, as I was
looking for answers in the wrong place - that is, somewhere “in” the text
instead of looking into what happens between me and the text - I had no chance
to answer this kind of questions anyway. And I kind of knew this …
For some
time now I cannot get rid of the creepy feeling that, unnoticed by myself, I
have finally begun to write the doctoral thesis I was never going to write. And
that means this will probably get even more “reader-unfriendly” than it already
is … But I must say that I am extremely pleased that I would have begun it with
the statement that, in my experience, reading is an equivalent to having sex!
And the reason that there is no big smiley face here is not that I still don’t
know how to make a smiley face so that it shows in my blog. It is that this is
NOT a joke. Not really. I KNEW that I had to wait with the doctoral thesis
until I would have found a way of dealing with these matters in a SERIOUS way. More
truth, less bullshit. I knew what finally beat me at uni was that it is almost
impossible to tell them apart when it comes to literary criticism.
I think
I came closest to an answer about the question what a RELEVANT fictional text
is for me when I wrote one post after another analyzing “Hannibal” - which I
labeled “bullshit”, mostly, I think to keep the text at arm’s length
scrutinizing it. And I noticed that the outworn terms “art” and “beauty” kept popping up. In this case,
“bullshit” didn’t mean that the text “was” bullshit, rather that “believable”
wasn’t an issue. At least I worked under the assumption that nothing in
“Hannibal” IS MEANT to be believable - which might be a weird way of looking at
it. But it was possible to watch it like that, and enjoy it. And I still hate
horror that is supposed to be believable. The believable – and truly horrible –
content, in my opinion, in “Hannibal” isn’t to be found “on the surface”. (It
isn’t a series for hard-core horror fans but rather for weird intellectuals,
like myself?, who revel in beautiful and strange things, and all kinds of “bad”
irony. Well, I might be wrong and just kept misunderstanding, which, I think,
happens.) The real horror unfolds on a deeper level THROUGH OUR INTERACTION
with the text. When we come to confront questions about our own sanity, or
ethics, and have to decide how far we’ll go “following” Hannibal, answer the
question if we are in fact going to “participate” … I don’t think I answered
any of these questions, but I came to USE these outworn concepts again.
“Outworn” because I probably thought I was through with them, taking it that
the kind of text that IS SUPPOSED to be art is also the kind of text that I am
bored with. And actually using them made me see them in a new light.
Instead
of “art” I might rather have said “poetry”, but I obviously stopped saying that
even more definitely than art. To avoid confusion, even in my own head, I
should say that, strictly speaking, neither “art” nor “poetry” are terms that
can be applied to texts like “recreational” novels, theatre productions, or,
least of all, “bullshit” science fiction or horror series. In fact I started to
use them as some kind of comprehensive metaphor, like, for example, I may speak
of the “poetry of life”. This kind of use of a term may be highly questionable,
especially because a potential reader has to “get into” the experience as well
to understand what I mean. But this is the only thing I know to do when my
experience doesn’t FIT the frame of ready-made concepts available to describe
it. An example might help – or make it even more confusing. I just retrieved
one from my last post where I described “The Crucible” in terms of an art form
which I called “Greek tragedy”. Of course this is a metaphor as well – one that
helped me to analyze what I “read”. This made me remember that Richard Armitage
spoke of the play as “opera” – which is also a metaphor, of course, that I put
down as interesting and telling without really analyzing what it meant. I just
took it to mean the same thing that I meant, but of course it doesn’t. Though,
as far as I know, opera might even be what “survived” of Greek tragedy because,
I think, on the Greek stage at least the chorus actually SANG their part(? To
be checked out …) Anyway, the two metaphors are linked because opera is an ART
FORM that usually processes TRAGIC content by transforming it into sublime
beauty. So it might rather be some kind of emphatic concept about HOW to do
these things the best way. I might even call it a WORKING METAPHOR, containing
instructions how to act, something like: “If I am able to do this LIKE an opera
singer, holding this tone, or phrase, or inner movement, until the very end of
beauty and perfection, I am doing this right.”
So,
dealing with a text AS IF it was art - or, in fact, ANYTHING ELSE than it “says”
it is! - is what, in my experience, makes texts “poetic” – which is almost the
same thing as to say that it makes them genuinely work. And it is, by the way,
exactly what Schiller meant by “playing” – if we cut out the idealist bullshit.
What he described is A CERTAIN FORM of poetry, and exactly what applies here:
subjecting the content “we” are passionate about to the RULES of an art form,
transforming it into “beauty”, or anything that goes “deeper”, shifting things
inside us. WITHOUT this poetic activity the shifting will not happen. We will
stay unmoved and unchanged. And when I notice that THIS happens is the exact
moment the text begins to work for me, and I begin to enjoy the reading. It
doesn’t depend on the content. I can get interested in all kinds of bullshit –
and real-life stuff! – when I can see and appreciate the PLAYING with it. It
might just become especially interesting when it is something like horror,
blood, and fear, or some “real-life” stuff I can relate to. And there don’t
have to be SPECIFIC rules, as there are for opera, but the rules can be made up
as we go. What makes the text poetic in this case is that WE, as the audience,
are beginning to figure out the rules and play with them. This is even the kind
of poetic activity that I prefer (see “Hannibal”!). And, even though it is usually
less obvious, it can happen in so-called “naturalistic” films or series – or
not, same as it does or doesn’t in science fiction or fantasy. I even said once
that I don’t care for “naturalistic” stuff, and I was right in this respect
that I don’t care in the least for texts that are just trying to reproduce something
in the real world, without any attempt at telling a story of their own or
establishing their own aesthetic rules. In this case, the acting might be brilliant,
and I won’t notice. (Though I use to think that, in these cases, there isn’t
any “genuine” acting involved.) And I judge that Tolkien’s books - or even the
one’s by Karl May, which I label “fantasy” as well - are “poetic” because they
are genuinely playful. Whereas, for me, “Narnia” or “Game of Thrones” (the
series!) are boring because they are just put together from ready-made bits
that fail to get “fused” through playing and to come to life. (But this might
be quite the reverse for other people, of course, because they might like to
play different games with different things.)
And of
course I don’t think that this is in any way news – not even for me! But,
probably because I had “buried” poetry, I couldn’t make this connection and use
the idea of playing as a TOOL to say which texts – or feats of acting – are
relevant and worth reading or watching. In fact, it was the question I was
trying to answer writing my master thesis and knew I didn’t. Nobody could, just
looking at the text, because, as I wrote, the text is just the text, and we can
argue about its relevance and worth using all kinds of reasons and concepts
without ever getting anywhere. In fact, “we” don’t have to argue, we KNOW. I
suppose Richard Armitage knew exactly what he was saying. He KNOWS what happens
when he is standing on a stage singing beautifully because he has done it. And Simon
Russell Beale does “that thing” on the stage OBVIOUSLY IN ORDER to get this
human response out of us. Of course, seeing poetry as playing – which is a
metaphor as well, by the way! - the stage must be the most poetic place in the
world, but of course it happens anywhere when we are reading. On the stage it
is often laid open, for one thing because it is the only place where the fourth
wall is real. I just thought of Lucian Msamati standing there WATCHING the
audience, in fact playing cat and mouse with us, taunting us to grant that he
is just doing the same thing with us that he is doing with all these other
people he is manipulating. Kind of TRYING OUT if we, as well, can be
manipulated. (Of course we can! As a faithful follower of Frank Underwood I knew that anyway …) There is a world of meaning that can be
created on a stage just by doing a little thing like this.
And this
makes a beautiful connection to the other big question I think I answered.
Basically, it is a short and simple question – the question that stood right at
the beginning of my blog: Why “Shakespeare”? (To be continued, of course …)
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