Even
though I tried, this time I cannot keep up with my reading. As I am reading on
– having now worked my way through “Three Sisters” and “The Cherry Orchard” and
starting again on “Uncle Vanya” - what I have written before just gets
cancelled and I start anew. Of course I like this – but “Chekhov” proves almost
too complex and dynamic for my taste. Though, right now, it feels again as if I
was going deeper …
And it
appears that, by making these “moves”, I learned a lot about a fictional world
that I hadn’t been aware of – and about the “vortex”. (I am actually looking
forward to elaborating on the concepts I have used “instinctively” when I was
reading, but there is always so much reading to do that there will probably be
a long period of looking forward still …)
“Why is
it we have hardly started living before we all become dull, drab, boring, lazy,
complacent, useless and miserable?”
definitely
was one of these moments where I OBSERVED the vortex grinding to a halt. They
are always great moments. It felt as if I had an answer to one of the nagging
questions I was dealing with when I was reading, even though it is itself a
question. When I am not looking for causality but am getting into the mode of
answering “Chekhov” provides, it even appeared like a surprisingly precise
answer. I just didn’t really know what the QUESTION was.
However,
I remember WHEN the question came up. It came up the moment I began to read
Chekhov – when, in the first act of “Uncle Vanya”, Dr. Astrov is talking about
the mindless destruction of woods, and the opportunity of doing something about
the CLIMATE!!!? - Even though I was thrilled – and shocked! – I think I “put
this away” the moment I read it because I couldn’t deal with the timelessness
right away but had to figure out the characters first. And, even though I
talked with Claudia about this when we met, I never got round to dealing with
it. The closest I came to asking the “timeless” question in “Chekov” was –
after having identified the parallel state of our worlds as some kind of
“atmosphere” of neglect and carelessness: Why does nobody CARE? And to this
question the RHETORICAL question from “Three Sisters” provided a shockingly
precise answer.
“Why is
it we have hardly started living before we all become dull, drab, boring, lazy,
complacent, useless and miserable?”
Indeed it
is BECAUSE “we” become dull, drab, boring, lazy, complacent, useless and
miserable before we even have a chance to know it that we are unable to genuinely
care about things like trees and climate change. Besides, the quote appeared to
provide an answer to my overall observation (and question) about “Chekhov”:
that (or why) - even though rather disruptive things happen on that stage (like
people shooting themselves, shooting at others, leaving for good …) - there is
never any genuine CHANGE in people’s lives. So, that made me feel as if the
carelessness and indifference about the state of the world and the inability to
move forward towards happiness were somehow connected. Having struck this
connection, it appears instantly trivial, but I found THE WAY Chekhov made me
discover it totally exciting.
Reading
on, I came upon some kind of explanation about how they might be connected –
which is not satisfying AS AN EXPLANATION. However, I felt that it struck the
core of the issue more than any explanation could. I found it at the end of the
third act of “The Cherry Orchard”, and it comes from Lopakhin who has just been
celebrating the greatest triumph of his life. He, the son of a poor peasant,
who has been nothing but beaten and mistreated as a child, buying the finest
piece of property in the neighbourhood to “develop” it! Immediately after
almost dancing with joy, he blurts out in distress:
“Oh, if
all this could be over quickly, if our
miserable, mixed-up lives could somehow hurry up and CHANGE.”
This was
the most “timeless” moment for me reading Chekhov. Taking up the first act of
“Uncle Vanya” again, reading closely, I gathered that there isn’t THAT much of
a parallel situation ON THE SURFACE as the catchword “climate” suggests. It is
just that we tend to separate such issues from their context to create
timelessness – something I am trying to avoid, but this time it happened to me
as well. What Chekhov was writing about has nothing to do with global warming,
of course, but with the protection the woods offer to create a milder, more
wholesome climate. In a northern continental climate woods offer protection
from rough weather and chill - whereas, in my own world, they alleviate the
overheated urban atmosphere in summer. (Which, however, is kind of two ends of
the same stick.) “But I love trees!” proved more “sustainable” – as I realized
that trees have a lot more impact on my life - and state of mind - than I have
been aware of. To my own surprise, I actually stuck with it and KEPT thinking
about trees. It helped a lot that a documentary called “Das geheime Leben der
Bäume” (= “The Hidden Life of Trees”) had just come to the cinema, and I
watched it. And there is a book as well which I am going to read, and I know
already that it is something I could have recommended to Richard Armitage for
him to understand how his character is FEELING about trees. By the way, it is
not the kind of esoteric crap it sounds like. It was written by a forester who has
been working with trees all his life, but who also LOVES them. Who has his ear
on nature, and has been trying to learn everything about them. (And it
immediately answered all the questions I had about raising a forest – by
cutting down and planting anew or by letting it grow.)
Somehow,
all this came into “Oh, if all this could be over quickly …” not by chance. The
hour of Lopakhin’s greatest triumph is also the hour of death for the cherry
orchard which gets chopped down as a consequence in the last act. I even
understand why this HAS to happen. There is money to be made, which is also the
most important kind of energy for making things move FORWARD. And I think that this
ANTAGONISM – that cannot be resolved! – is fundamental in Chekhov.
My
observation about the historical and economical background having such an
impact on people’s lives might have been created because I noticed PARALLEL
STRUCTURES from the beginning where the representation of the world “outside”
and the domaine of people’s feelings are concerned. The reason why I was drawn
into Chekhov’s world in this way is that the “Chekhov vortex” plays almost
entirely on an instrument I know so well – but very seldom give up so
unrestrictedly to “somebody else” to play on: MY OWN FEELINGS. I noticed this
already when I read the first lines of “Uncle Vanya” – so much that it spooked
me and I actually closed the book. But of course I wanted to read on – and
noticed that I would be fine. I suppose it was the irony that I discovered subconsciously
which made me feel safe. Reassured me that I was in no danger of being stuck
with this gob of “mixed-up” feelings I didn’t want … And this feature I
described as “flightiness”: the experience that feelings can be cancelled. Even
though I MUST feel them strongly at the moment, they will go away. This
reassurance made it possible that I could open up towards these characters in a
way I usually don’t. To leave the ground of analyzing them more than I usually
do, and instead treat them like genuine human beings. Even more - that I WANTED
to be kind and understanding and perceive them the way I think Chekhov did. To
allow that there is this GRAIN of – I wouldn’t say “goodness” because this is
already too much of a moral term – but of human quality and genuine feeling in
EVERBODY. And, doing this, I learned to use Chekhov’s TECHNIQUES of creating
emotional complexity. One of them I noticed explicitly, among others in the bit
I quoted from “The Cherry Orchard”, as a parallel to the antagonism in the
outside world. Chekhov always makes these extensive stage directions, not just
about what has to happen on the stage but also about how people are supposed to
be feeling at that precise moment – and
which emotions actors are supposed to express. I tend to read over these, but
very soon noticed that I shouldn’t. Reading them, I discovered that people often
express CONTRADICTORY feelings. For example, saying rather funny or trivial
things while they are crying. And – like people in real live! – they are saying
one thing and are doing the opposite. And this opens some kind of gap where I
begin to reach out for an explanation.
At the moment he is saying this, Lopakhin is exultant and distressed AT THE SAME TIME. He is himself an
example for the “mixed-up” state he is talking about. And this makes me
QUESTION what he is saying. So - even though he should be! - he isn’t EXACTLY
an example for the way “we” would want these lives to “hurry up and change”.
Not even in his own mind.
And this
is where I felt this striking parallel with my own historical situation – which
is, of course, not one made of given facts but of interpretation. The way
Chekhov put this, he expresses MY OWN experience of the antagonism. AT THAT
MOMENT, I couldn’t help feeling that we were standing at this parallel
“junction” in history - where everything that appeared relatively stable is
about to change with lightning speed, whereas we – “mixed-up”, dull, lazy and miserable
as we are – are unable to keep up, neither emotionally nor in our actions. If
Lopakhin’s wish and vision were ever to come true, we would have to become
DIFFERENT people. And how is this ever supposed to happen???
Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen