[page 68]
The Villain's Will to Sacrifice
King
Pentheus arrives, enforcing phallocentric order, right after the phallic
slapstick scene. Soon, he accuses Tiresias of fomenting rebellion (as
Oedipus does to the same character in Sophocles' play). In his Cambridge
lectures, Soyinka mentions this moment in his own version of The
Bacchae and describes Pentheus as "properly opposed to the
presence and activities of the god Dionysus in his kingdom".(105)
Why properly? Because Soyinka has added the initial ritual procession
with Tiresias as false scapegoat. This lends a greater validity to the
subsequent critique of the priest by Pentheus (though he has similar
lines in Euripides' version):(106) "Another god revealed is a new
way opened / Into men's pockets, profits from offerings. / Power over
private lives--and state affairs".(107) Despite such accusations,
Tiresias eventually expresses a tragic sympathy and fear for the young
king, as in Aristotle's formula for audience catharsis. "I pity
Pentheus / His terrible madness. There is no cure . . ."(108) No
cure from his madness, that is. But there is a Lacanian cure
for Pentheus through his madness, through embracing his sinthome
(fundamental symptom)--shown in Soyinka's play by the Ogunian conversion
of Pentheus in later scenes. His self-sacrifice, as personal cure, might
then create a vicarious, communal cure for the watching audience, in
Aristotle's sense of catharsis, to the degree that spectators have pitied
and feared his fate, following the lead of the prophetic analyst, Tiresias.
Pentheus
already demonstrates a symptomatic projection--and avoidance--of the
self- [page 69] sacrificial drive
within him, through his fears of slave revolution, of bacchic madness,
and of the blind Tiresias gaining power "over state affairs."
These threats give him the ostensible right, as with similar dictators
throughout history (in Europe, Africa, and elsewhere) to extend the
violent repression, as social superego, against "the rot and creeping
/ Poison in the body of the state".(109) When Kadmos reminds him
of the terrifying sparagmos of his cousin Actaeon,(110) the king
again displaces any fearful awareness of his own drive and similar fate,
by desiring the same for Dionysus: "I thank you for suggesting
a most / Befitting fate for that sorcerer when we find him".(111)
This reaction by Pentheus is not given in Euripides' play (although
his Kadmos also mentions Actaeon). Soyinka twists the irony even further
to foreshadow Pentheus' own path toward a tragic fate, in his violent
judgment for Dionysus, whom he misrecognizes as a mere "sorcerer."
Pentheus is not just a melodramatic villain, or a simple antagonist
to Dionysus. He becomes a tragic hero--falling into sacrifice due to
the hamartia of his hubris (the error in his judgment through
pride). Yet along with this Brechtian side of the Aristotelian model,
showing the ruler's tragic flaw and fate as mistaken social choice,
Soyinka also shows the rightness in the misstep. As the Artaudian "plague"
of Dionysus spreads throughout Pentheus' kingdom,(112) he will be transformed
by his own errors in repressing it, becoming infected with its Ogunian
drive, through the bacchic elders (Kadmos and Tiresias) and through
the maternal chora of Agave, converted virgins, foreign maenads,
and slaves.
[page
70] This is not easy to see in Euripides' version. But Soyinka's
tragicomic, Afro-European twists position the voyeuristic desires of
the theatre audience, watching the Dionysian rites throughout the play,
as pointing to the offstage climax of Pentheus' violent fate, when he
watches the bacchae from the pine tree, and then becomes their sacrificial
victim. The abyss between divine and human worlds, crossed by Ogun in
the Yoruba myth and by the Ogunian actor in Soyinka's theory, thus finds
its parallel in the choral abyss at the edge of the stage, at various
points in the play. As already mentioned, Soyinka's slave chorus and
leader offer the audience a voyeuristic preview of Pentheus' Ogunian
fate. Although the slave leader moves his community in the opposite
direction from Pentheus' choice for his city, toward embracing rather
than repressing the Dionysian cult, they both become sacrificial scapegoats,
through the bacchic goat-song (tragodoi). But Soyinka shows the
sparagmos of the slave leader onstage, putting the theatre spectators,
a priori, into Pentheus' ultimate offstage position as phallic (tree
seat) voyeur of the violent, ritual chora. At some level the
audience shares Pentheus' contradictory character--his repressive superego
(not wanting to allow too much ecstasy of those others onstage) and
his voyeuristic id (wanting to see more of the others' passionate rites)--even
before his heroic ego appears onstage in Soyinka's drama. The wisdom
of Tiresias' joking prophesy and the comic relief of Kadmos' phallic
thyrsus also set up the entry of Pentheus, as superego voyeur, mirroring
the audience in his trip through Dionysian hallucinations to the Real
fate of his drive--with a final, tragicomic vision added by Soyinka,
which may show each spectator's fatal drive as well.
Pentheus
is still a villain in Soyinka's drama, willing the sacrifice of others,
until his Ogunian conversion to sacrificing himself for the sake of
the community. In another added scene, after the slave leader's sparagmos
and the elders' slapstick routine, Pentheus not only [page
71] rejects the warnings of Kadmos and Tiresias (as in Euripides),
he also slaps an old slave so hard that he "knocks him flat".(113)
This sudden response of explicit, onstage violence to the old man's
timid questioning of the king's order--about whether he really wants
to destroy "the hut of the holy man" (Dionysus)--evokes the
sympathy of the audience for the slave as victim, and fear of Pentheus
as villainous. Yet, it also previews Pentheus' own tragic fall, through
his self-destructive drive, and the audience's complicity in willing
that eventual sacrifice.
That
future fall of Pentheus to the choral power of the bacchae (offstage)
is also foreshadowed in the surprising, bacchic power of the slave chorus,
extending the old slave's questioning of Pentheus into outright defiance
(onstage). "We are strangers but we know the meaning of madness
/ To hit an old servant / With frost on his head . . ."(114) The
slave leader goes even further than his chorus, becoming possessed with
the god, as in his earlier scene of being like a "black hot gospeller".(115)
Here his chant moves from "Dionysos shall avenge this profanity"
to "I have drunk the stars. . . . And yielded to the power of life,
the god in me," and even further to speak in the god's voice: "I
am Dionysos".(116) The chorus of other slaves intones with him
(until his final movement of personal identification): "repeating
each line after him, as if this is a practised liturgy. Pentheus's face
registers horror and disbelief as he recognizes the implications of
this".(117) One implication is of a potential slave rebellion.
But another may be the dawning recognition by Pentheus of the god within
him as well, of the Ogunian life and death drive that Dionysus personifies
and the slave leader then describes. "I am the life that's trodden
[page 72] by the dance of joy /
My flesh, my death, my re-birth is the song / That rises from men's
lips, they know not how. / But also, / The wild blood of the predator.
. . ." In the mirror of the slave leader's choral communion with
the god, Pentheus might see his own subsequent transformation from being
the vengeful predator of Dionysus to becoming the prey itself, as vessel
of the god's death, dismemberment, and rebirth. In the larger ritual
of the play's performance, Soyinka's Ogunian actors might also lead
the audience in a transformation from vengeance and voyeurism to tragicomic
awareness of split-subjectivity, as predators and prey of the sacrificial
spirits in our mass media.(118)
Spectators' Desires
According
to Lacanian psychoanalyst Bruce Fink, "The pervert seems to be
cognizant, at some level, of the fact that there is always some jouissance
related to the enunciation of the moral law. The neurotic would prefer
not to see it, since it strikes him or her as indecent, obscene".(119)
Soyinka's Bacchae evokes a greater awareness of perverse desires
and jouissance in both the moral law and its theatrical enunciation,
even for neurotics who might prefer not to see. Through additional scenes
of choral violence onstage, his Bacchae summons the cruel, voyeuristic
desires of the theatre audience, creating an Artaudian vortex at the
stage edge. But then, in a Brechtian twist, the play also distances
the audience, through the sadistic morality and voyeuristic foolishness
of Pentheus (introduced by the comical prophesies of his elders). These
[page 73] gests reveal the spectators'
own contradictory desires while watching the play: to morally repress
and yet voyeuristically glimpse the obscene, bacchic rites offstage.
At
the slave leader's identification with the god's voice ("I am Dionysos")
and the chorus's desire to join him ("Lead us--!"), Pentheus
interrupts their revolutionary fervor with a quick, castrative threat:
"I'll cut out the tongue of the next man to utter that name Bromius
or Dionysos!".(120) Then the abject figure of repressed choral
power appears again onstage, this time as a captive, bound and surrounded
by soldiers. But he immediately defies Pentheus' command himself: "Who
calls on Dionysos!" Not only does Soyinka add to Euripides' drama
the slave chorus, their leader's identification with the god, Pentheus'
verbal threat, and Dionysus' own violation; the Nigerian dramatist also
puts a Brechtian twist to this rebellious scene. The stage direction
reads: "There is a dead freeze of several moments."(121) This
semiotic freeze--showing a tableau of Dionysus and his followers, bound
by, yet defiant against Pentheus--interrupts the momentum and introduces
a shift in the character of the orisa-like god. Rather than rage against
his repressive captor, as the slave chorus had begun to do, Dionysus
will put on a serene, Apollonian mask. He will lead Pentheus and the
theatre audience towards further tableaux and pantomime dreams (added
by Soyinka), setting up historical parallels from ancient Greece to
tribal Africa to New Testament Palestine, thus involving the postmodern
lures of cinematic and televisual voyeurism--through this initial still
shot, which suspends the action and increases the desire to see more.
After
the freeze Pentheus inspects his prisoner, as his officer reports the
"miracle" of how [page 74] the
offstage, imprisoned bacchae have "shed their chains".(122)
As in Euripides' version, Pentheus continues to misrecognize Dionysus
as merely a priest or sorcerer of the cult. Dionysus, now an Esu-like
trickster god (similar to Euripides' character), plays along with many
double entendres, such as: "The god himself / Initiated me."
This also begins his Obatala-effect on Pentheus, luring the ruler into
Apollonian dreams, through Dionysian drunkenness, which will ultimately
lead to his own malformation in deadly, choral rebirth. Even now, Dionysus
initiates Pentheus by invoking the king's curiosity about the cult,(123)
then reacting critically: "Will you reduce it all to a court /
Of inquiry? A fact-finding commission such as / One might set up to
decide the cause / Of a revolt in your salt-mines, or a slave uprising?".(124)
Soyinka thus connects the ancient Greek ruler, in his voyeuristic desire
for judicial control, to the postmodern spectator--through this implicit
reference to the governmental commissions and juridical news media of
today's Europe, Africa, and United States. But Soyinka will also show
his theatre audience more of the ancient ritual sacrifice, to answer
Pentheus' question: "You say you saw the god? What form / Did he
assume?".(125) Unlike most of today's theatre, film, and TV, this
play will take its audience into the Real, obscene drive of choral sacrifice,
beyond the formal tricks of voyeuristic desire and superego repression.
Before
Pentheus gives a castrative cut to the "girlish curls" of
the god,(126) as in Euripides' drama, Soyinka adds a verbal image of
the bacchic cult's mountain rituals. His Dionysus offers [page
75] this as a metaphor for the theatre of the mind, being
revealed to the king and the postmodern audience through onstage and
offstage rites. "Think of a dark mountain / Pierced by myriads
of tiny flames, then see / The human mind as that dark mountain whose
caves / Are filled with self-inflicted fears. Dionysos / Is the flame
that puts such fears to flight, a flame / That must be gently lit, or
else consume you." Thus, the onstage cutting of each lock of the
god's hair gains a new meaning, especially since the cutting is done
directly by the king in Soyinka's version.(127) It symbolizes the self-inflicted
wounds of fear and abject rage that Pentheus already suffers within
his own mind--and will suffer further at the hands of his bacchic mother
and chorus on the mountain offstage.
For
now, Pentheus has projected the fear of his own jouissance upon
the evil Other and he seems to be gaining power over the foreign god
in the castrative gestures of cutting Dionysus' hair and taking away
his phallic thyrsus. But the ruler's vengeful rage toward moral order
will become--through his own acts of voyeurism and transvestism--a self-immolating
drive. Eventually, his own ecstatic, choral flame will put to flight
the myriad fires of perverse fears within Pentheus' mind, as he becomes
more and more consumed by the intoxicating visions, wine, and role-playing
that Dionysus will offer to him--and through him to the theatre audience.
Hopefully, however, those spectators will experience a "gently
lit" and beneficial sweep of the Dionysian flame, in the ritual
catharsis of their "self-inflicting fears," through the Ogunian
sacrifice of Pentheus and of the actor playing him. If so, Pentheus
will not merely be sacrificed in some offstage fictional space, but
also in the Real of the audience, in the dark mountain of its human
minds, as communal chora.
Of
course, the way the cathartic flame plays through the audience depends
a great deal [page 76] on the performance
of the drama and its co-creation in different spectators' minds. Some
may watch in a more Brechtian, critically distanced way, and be only
singed into self and social reflection. Others may become more fully
inflamed with Artaudian cruelty, leaping Ogun-like into the fourth stage
abyss of their own lacking being, between living, dead, and unborn worlds.
But Soyinka increases the likelihood of that collective flame as a communion
rite, by reshaping the abject chora of the next choral ode. "As
Dionysos is chained, his Bacchantes begin a noise, a kind of ululating
which is found among some African and Oriental peoples and signifies
great distress, warning, or agitation".(128) This non-verbal echolalia(129)
increases and spreads from the foreign female chorus to Soyinka's additional
slave chorus, "swelling into deafening proportions."
Instead
of Euripides' single chorus of female maenads, calling for the mythic
Dionysus to descend from Olympus and take vengeance on Pentheus, Soyinka
creates a choral dialogue between bacchantes and slaves, beginning with
their infectious, pre-verbal, ululating cries. Although Euripides' chorus
describes the "male womb" of Zeus through which Dionysus was
born,(130) Soyinka's double chorus of males and females becomes the
dithyrambic (twofold) chora, as their abject ululations shift
into chthonic birth pains. First, their semiotic breathing resonates
with the thundrous earthquake that precedes the god's reappearance.(131)
Then they give birth, as collective womb, through the choral chant that
Soyinka adds between the lead [page 77] bacchante,
repeating the word "earth," and the group's one-word responses:
"Earth . . . Swell . . . Earth . . . Grow . . . Earth . . . Move
. . . Earth . . . Strain . . . Earth . . . Groan . . . Earth . . . Clutch
. . . Earth . . . Thrust . . . Earth . . . Burst . . . Earth . . . TAKE!"
Dionysus
returns through this choral thunder and earthquake--appearing, as at
the beginning of the play, in the chora of his dead mother's
tomb (but this time with flames around his feet). Euripides' Dionysus
returns with a violent, raging voice: "Let the earthquake come!
Shatter the floor of the world!"(133) However, Soyinka's Dionysus
resurrects calmly, in contrast to the terror of his chorus: "Why
do you tremble? / Look up. Look at me . . . All is well".(134)
Rather than a vengeful Dionysus, in fierce command of the lightning:
"Consume with flame the palace of Pentheus!";(135) this Dionysus
presents an Apollonian, Obatala-like serenity, explaining to his chorus
how he escaped imprisonment and fooled Pentheus: "With ease. No
effort was required".(136) And yet, Dionysus also reveals his Esu
aspect to the chorus, telling how he tricked Pentheus, by evoking the
king's rage and destructiveness. "I made the sick desires / Of
his mind his goal, and he pursued them. / He fed on the vapors of his
own malignant hate, pursued and roped mirages in the stable . . ."(137)
Then Dionysus describes his own actions as a separate persona (like
the orisas Ogun and Sango), destroying Pentheus' palace through earthquake
and lightning. "That moment came Dionysos. / He shook the roof
of the palace of [page 78] Pentheus.
. . . Razed the palace to the ground, reduced it / To utter ruins."
This exposition by Dionysus is very similar to Euripides' version. But
Soyinka's Bacchae will show more onstage of the Esu-like trickery of
his Dionysus, bringing out further Obatalan delusions through a drunken
Pentheus, which will focus the Ogun-like death drive of the king toward
his ultimate offstage sacrifice. In this way the play also warns the
audience about its sacrificial drives in the mirages of today's Dionysian
screens.
Signifying Chains and Imaginary Mirrors
After
Pentheus returns to the stage, a herdsman gives another foreshadowing
of the king's fate (as in Euripides), describing the sparagmos
of cows offstage by the Dionysian bacchae, including Agave.(138) This
spurs Pentheus' desire to see the women in their wild state--first as
a warrior, then as a transvestite and peeping Tom, under the spell of
Dionysus. But Soyinka adds several mime scenes, delaying the cross-dressing
of Pentheus, and further teasing out the voyeurism of the theatre audience.
Soyinka also changes how Dionysus casts his spell on the king, showing
a mirror-stage magic and symbolic logic to the god's semiotic, choral
power. Rather than simply convincing Pentheus to wear a women's dress
and the bacchic ornaments as a disguise, Dionysus first warns his Lacanian
subject of the signifying chains that structure his unconscious desires,
and then shows him the hypnotic, therapeutic imagery that "loosens"
such chains.(139)
"You
Pentheus . . . are a man of chains. . . . You breathe chains, talk chains,
eat chains, dream chains, think chains . . . molten iron issuing from
the furnace of your so-called kingly [page
79] will".(140) This iron chain metaphor relates not
only to the Ogunian aspect of Soyinka's Dionysus, and its sacrificial
force in Pentheus, but also to the signifying chains issuing from the
unconscious furnace of every human mind, producing particular, characteristic
symptoms, according to Lacanian theory. The chain issues, too, from
the chora of maternal loss (in Kristeva's theory), as indicated
by Dionysus' subsequent words and gestures: "It has replaced your
umbilical cord and issues from this point".(141) Dionysus touches
Pentheus on the navel and turns him gently around and around. "[It]
winds about you all the way back into the throat where it issues forth
again in one unending cycle." This imaginary chain may symbolize
the moral restrictiveness and violent rage of Pentheus' ruling character.
Yet it also illustrates the chain of specific signifiers structuring
each human character onstage, and each person in the audience, giving
meaning and symptomatic repetition to the choral lack of being in their
breathing, talking, eating, dreaming, and thinking.
Dionysus
then uses his hand in a different gesture, which offers Pentheus (and
similar Lacanian subjects in the theatre audience) a mirror stage revelation,
pointing to the Real behind the ego image and its perverse reflections,
toward the navel of the dream or signifying chain. According to Soyinka's
stage direction, Dionysus "holds his hand before Pentheus' eyes,
like a mirror".(142) Here the Other's gesture not only captures
the king's ego in a mirror stage trance; it also shows Pentheus his
own perverse image and the Real lack of being behind it. "Look
well in the mirror, Pentheus. What beast is this? Do you recognise it?
Have you ever seen the like? In all your wanderings have your eyes ever
been affronted by a creature so gross, so unnatural, so obscene?"
Then Pentheus "shakes off his hypnotic state, [and] tries to snatch
the 'mirror' but [page 80] clutches
at nothing." The god has shown him that the grotesque immorality
of others, which he has struggled so violently to repress, is actually
his own beastliness as he fears it--the desire of the Other in the king.
Yet this obscene desire of gross, Dionysian creatures, whether expressed
by the bacchae or repressed within Pentheus, is merely a mirage of phallic
jouissance, repeating the moral chains of signification in a
perverse way. Dionysus thus gives Pentheus a glimpse of the nothingness
that drives him toward sacrifice--toward an Other jouissance
of the body and of other Yoruba worlds. But this glimpse of Real lack
behind the mirage may also be cathartic for postmodern Euro-American
spectators, even those raised in the mass media's virtual realities.