Blood Thirst
Early
in his cross-dressing, Pentheus confesses to Dionysus that he has a
"great thirst" for the wine and its illusions.(180) After
he drinks more wine and becomes fully dressed in bacchic costume and
wig, at the conclusion of the slave chorus's discussion of forces knotted
in the blood, Pentheus has another vision. "I feel superhuman.
I could hoist the whole of Kithairon / [page
93] On one shoulder--with valleys full of women / Despite
their dancing and madness . . . yes?"(181) Similar lines appear
in Euripides' text, but there Pentheus sees his current feminine costume.
He even asks Dionysus if he looks like his mother, Agave.(182) In Soyinka's
version, Pentheus hallucinates that he wears armor on his body and that
his Dionysian thyrsus is a "sword." Pentheus' sinthome
thus becomes manifest to the audience, if not yet to himself: through
his vision of the god as a bull (that he had tried to sacrifice offstage),
in his hallucination of himself wearing armor (though he wears a bacchic
dress), and with his fantasy that he will lift a mountain valley, full
of mad, dancing women. The king's symptomatic violence against the alien
cult, even as he wears its costume and thirsts for Dionysian wine, shows
the death-drive thirst within Pentheus' own blood that the god turns
toward self-sacrifice, rather than the slaughter of others.
Dionysus
then repeats the Ogunian casting of Pentheus: "Yes, you alone /
Make sacrifices for your people, you alone. / The role belongs to a
king. Like those gods, who yearly / Must be rent to spring anew, that
also / Is the fate of heroes".(183) This is much more explicit
than what Dionysus says to Pentheus in Euripides.(184) Soyinka's Pentheus
is given more deceptive visions, yet also a more direct oracle of his
sacrificial fate. He thus becomes more Oedipus-like in his complex hubris.
It drives him into the very Dionysian dress, madness, and dancing that
he tried to repress in his city. In fact, the scene ends (in another
addition to Euripides' original) with Pentheus teaching Dionysus the
bacchic dance--taught to him, he says, as a "new march" for
his [page 94] troops, by a "famed
drill-master" that he has already "imported." Soyinka's
stage directions specify that the dance repeats the earlier moves in
the comical Tiresias scene.(185) But it also may recall the ancient
Greek chorus of young soldiers (ephebes) trained in military
marching. Likewise, Pentheus leaves the stage as a dancing soldier in
bacchic costume. He yells: "Death to the Bacchae!"--showing
the audience the death-drive dance in the blood of the king, costumed
for the sacrifice. Yet this reflects, too, the choral dance in the blood
of the audience, the jouissance of the Other beneath their clothes
and skins. Like Pentheus, theatre spectators enjoy superhuman illusions,
as invisible voyeurs at the stage edge. And they share with him a rage
for sacrifice, turned against others or into the Ogunian will for one's
own death to have meaning.
As
Pentheus' voice "dies off in the distance," Dionysus remains
briefly onstage to show that his "is not entirely a noble victory".(186)
This Dionysus, as in Euripides, exults in his turning of Pentheus' vengeful
spirit toward sacrificial sparagmos. Yet Soyinka's translation
of the god's final lines, invoking his spirit in the offstage Agave,
gives a further Lacanian twist: "Agave, open your mothering arms--
/ Take him. Mother him. Smother him with joy."(187) Pentheus will
experience the smothering jouissance of the pre-Oedipal mother,
as he travels from neurotic despotism (against the cult), through perverse
voyeurism (in the pine tree), to the psychotic terror of overwhelming,
disintegrating symbiosis within the chora (when his mother and
the other bacchae tear him apart). But like Ogun crossing the transitional
abyss between worlds, and like Soyinka's ritual actor sacrificed for
the communal audience, Agave will give birth to a [page
95] new Pentheus, through this dismemberment--turning the
tragedy into a divine comedy for those who, at least partly, believe.
At
the exit of Pentheus and Dionysus, "part of the Chorus of Slaves
set up a dog-howl, a wail of death," added by Soyinka to accompany
the choral ode of the combined choruses.(188) During the howling and
the ode, some of the female bacchae show the audience a "mime of
the hunt".(189) Through this additional African dance drama, prior
to the report of the sacrifice in the Greek text,(190) Soyinka allows
the audience to participate more visually, through onstage mime, with
the offstage ritual and maternal chora.(191) The rite is then
repeated, from the choral mime to the officer's report, as from the
offstage fiction to the Real within the audience's imaginings. In the
report of the offstage violence (as in Euripides' version), the fir
tree where Pentheus had been hiding is symbolically castrated from the
earth, uplifted and torn down, with "the wrench of roots / From
their long bed of earth and rocks".(192) Pentheus met a similar
fate, according to the messenger, at the hands of his mother, Agave.
"She seized the waving arms by the wrist, then / Planted her foot
upon his chest and pulled, / Tore the arm clean off the shoulder".(193)
Other limbs and body parts were then divided by the other bacchae, who
playfully tossed "lumps of flesh," strewing "fragments"
of Pentheus' body across the mountain valley that he had [page
96] envisioned as uprooting himself.(194) Soyinka thus gives
a vivid account, like Euripides, of the ego illusions of Pentheus, his
superhuman strength and voyeurism, being turned upside-down and inside-out,
by the (s)mothering passion of the bacchae. But Soyinka takes that chora
further than Euripides, connecting it with the joyful ego illusions
and terrifying lack of being in his postmodern audience, through another
communion rite.(195)
When
Agave enters, she carries the head of her son on a thyrsus, as in Euripides'
version, but the head is covered, according to Soyinka's stage directions,
with gold ribbons.(196) In response to her joyful delusion, that she
has hunted and dismembered a lion, and her praise to Dionysus for the
inspiration, an old slave adds: "Yes, he is a great hunter. He
knows / The way to a death-hunt of the self".(197) These lines,
added by Soyinka,(198) express the death-drive knowledge and Other jouissance
that Pentheus has now fully experienced, and that his mother is about
to see, along with the theatre audience. But the way that the audience
sees is also changed by Soyinka. He creates a dance around the disembodied
head, as obscene Thing (in Lacan's sense of das Ding),(199) by
first hiding it under golden ribbons and then turning it into a [page
97] fetish prop at the center of a May-pole dance.(200) As
Agave turns the thyrsus, the bacchae dance around the unveiled head,
chasing and catching "the ribbons as they unfurl and float outwards."
(This dance of unfurling ribbons might also relate to the twirling costumes
of Yoruba Egungun performers, as they incarnate the spirits of the dead.)
Agave continues to be deceived, yet reveals more, at the center of this
dance, to the audience. For her body is also a Thing, bearing an obscene
jouissance, not yet fully revealed.
Kadmos,
in extreme grief, then offers another Lacanian/Kristevan insight (added
by Soyinka): "She should have known him!"(201) Here the audience
may share, in a more and more Artaudian sense, the cruelty within both
Agave's delusion and Kadmos' clear sight--the horror of a maternal chora
that creates and destroys, through misrecognition.(202) But here there
might also be a Brechtian twist, distancing the audience into social
reflection: Kadmos "should have known him" better, too, before
giving the rule of Thebes to his tyrannical, anti-Dionysian grandson.
The violent repression of the Dionysian chora in Thebes--from
the alienation of Semele (by Agave and her sisters), to Pentheus' fear
of the alien cult, to his imprisonment of the god--became symptomatic
of the tragic flaw in the city's patriarchy, despite Kadmos' and Agave's
conversion to the cult. And the return of that repressed chora
led to the final tragic sacrifice. The play in performance may challenge
its audience with both an intimate Artaudian cruelty and a distancing
Brechtian gest. For Kadmos then says of Pentheus' head, on the [page
98] thyrsus held by his mother, "I don't want to see!"--and
the blind Tiresias asks, "What is it Kadmos?" Theatre spectators
could be positioned to see more of the tragic horror, like Tiresias,
through sympathy with the pain of Kadmos and Agave, yet also to look
more critically at their hypocrisy, delusion, and willful blindness.
What
is on that thyrsus changes a great deal from Euripides' to Soyinka's
Bacchae. Kadmos takes it as the glaring sign of a cruel paradox
(in lines added by Soyinka): "Dionysos is just. But he is not fair!
/ Though he had right on his side, he lacks / Compassion, the deeper
justice".(203) Here Soyinka offers a more critical, Brechtian view--even
of Dionysus, who does not reappear at the end of this play as he does
in the original. Euripides' Dionysus returns to give a vengeful moral
against Pentheus and Kadmos. But Soyinka's god remains absent from the
stage. Kadmos thus expresses a more postmodern, existentialist despair
at the lack in the Other--lacking fairness, compassion, a deeper sense
of justice, and a responsible presence. In Euripides' play, Dionysus
returns to explain the violence represented by Pentheus' decapitated
head and the remaining body parts brought onstage by Kadmos. "This
man has found the death which he deserved . . ."(204) Dionysus
also puts the blame on Kadmos, and predicts further suffering for him
and his wife, Harmonia, as they both will be turned into snakes, yet
will eventually "live among the blest".(205) They are also
put into exile from Thebes at the play's end. In Soyinka's version,
however, a more Brechtian and Lacanian view is offered to the postmodern
audience. According to cultural theorist Slavoj Zizek, the final stage
of Lacanian psychoanalysis involves "subjective destitution."
The subject experiences "the nonexistence of the [page
99] big Other; he accepts the Real in its utter, meaningless
idoicy; he keeps open the gap between the Real and its symbolization".(206)
Kadmos' bitter statement about the lack of compassion in Dionysus, plus
the god's absence at the end, opens this gap between the Real event
offstage in its meaningless violence and the symbolization onstage of
a meaningful rite of spring, through the bacchic dance around Pentheus'
head on the May-pole. Through the subjective destitution of Kadmos,
and the lack of Dionysus, the audience may also see this gap and experience
a Brechtian alienation effect, a distancing awareness of symbolic and
Real.
Soyinka's
Dionysus is lacking as a god, like the Yoruba orisas, especially Ogun.
That orisa sacrificed himself for others by crossing the abyss between
worlds; but he also slaughtered his human subjects in a drunken rage
after they made him king. Dionysus, like Ogun, loses his compassion
and lacks any balance in his sacrificial rage, according to the alienated
Kadmos, a former follower of the god. But when Kadmos takes his daughter
out of her Dionysian trance, to be alienated by the horror of her own
brutality, a further, Artaudian twist is added to this Brechtian questioning
of the god's cruelty. Agave's acceptance of the chora's destructiveness
leads to a final creative moment, as the Ogunian presence of Dionysus
returns to the stage, through the shards of her son's body.
Like
a Brechtian director, Kadmos separates Agave from her trance and character
hallucinations. He tells her to look at the sky and asks if her view
has changed. She replies that it seems clearer and brighter, with a
"red glow of sunset, a colour of blood".(207) He then asks
what she feels inside. She says, "a sense of changing. The world
/ No longer heaves as if within [page 100]
my womb." Kadmos has helped his daughter to detach herself
from spirit possession and communion with the Dionysian chora:
from her former, superhuman strength (like Pentheus' delusion), her
destructive creativity, and her feeling that the entire world outside
her was inside her womb. Then Kadmos requests that she look closely
at the head on the thyrsus. At first, she insists it is still a lion;
next, she sees a slave.(208) At last, she finds her son--in the head
on the thyrsus and in the other pieces on the bier, as Kadmos tells
her how Pentheus died. Tiresias tries to provide her with consolation
in the belief that "our life-sustaining earth" demanded such
sacrificial bloodshed "for her own needful renewal".(209)
While this relates to the logic of patriarchal sacrifice in many cultures,(210)
as with the Aztecs who fed both the sun and the earth with human hearts
and blood, it also makes sense regarding the maternal chora,
as Agave experienced it: the blood-thirsty world (and blood-red sky)
heaving within her own womb. Tiresias then describes the Artaudian space
of choral cruelty that he and Kadmos found offstage, on the sacrificial
mountain, relating also to the Real within the audience's imagination:
"blood that streamed out endlessly to soak / Our land. Remember
when I said, Kadmos, we seem to be upon / Sheer rockface, yet moisture
oozes up at every step? Blood, you replied, blood. His blood / Is everywhere".(211)
But Kadmos repeats his Brechtian questioning of such sacrificial logic
and fate: "Why us?" Then Agave gives an Artaudian response,
placing her hands on the grotesque death mask of her son: "Why
not?"
At
this moment the theatre itself is transformed into a bacchic choral
space. "The theme [page 101] music
of Dionysos begins, welling up and filling the stage with the god's
presence".(212) Here Soyinka brings onstage the experience of the
chora that remains offstage in Euripides' version, offering the
audience a vision from within the heaving womb that Agave had described.
First, a "powerful red glow" illuminates Pentheus' head and
bathes the stage; then "from every orifice of the impaled head
spring red jets." Agave, who had been holding the head, screams
and clutches the ladder beneath it. In this bloody show of light and
scenery, the world Agave had earlier perceived as heaving within her
womb is now displayed, through the pieta of her body and her son's decapitated
head. The blind Tiresias asks again, as when he first had a sense of
the head onstage: "What is it Kadmos?" Kadmos replies, still
in Brechtian detachment: "Again blood Tiresias. Nothing but blood."
Yet Tiresias finds more, as with the bloody rocks on the sacrificial
mountain, where he found a "life-sustaining earth." Tiresias
touches the red fluid, sniffs and tastes it, and says, "No. It's
wine." All the characters then drink from the jets of blood as
wine, participating in the Artaudian dream, as Agave "tilts her
head backwards to let a jet flush full in her face and flush her mouth."
The
audience or reader might choose, of course, not to take the tragicomic
drink, even vicariously. The spectator could experience Brechtian detachment
at this scene, seeing it as obviously rigged through the ladder and
head props--so not a true Dionysian miracle. (However, those spectators
expecting Euripides' tragic finale could also experience the uncanny
A-effect of the familiar made strange.) A gestic feminist might critique
the bloody scene as reveling in the patriarchal fear and oppression
of women, through the addition of onstage cannibalism (as omophagia)
to the offstage sparagmos. A Christian critic may be repulsed,
seeing a sacrilegious parallel to the Last Supper, where Jesus gave
wine to his followers to drink as his holy blood. A Lacanian might sense
the Real in its utter, meaningless idiocy. Other spectators [page
102] could reject the scene itself as idiotic. Soyinka takes
the risk of offering his audience a "communion rite" that
is postmodern and premodern, Brechtian and Artaudian, Lacanian and Kristevan--Greek,
Christian, and Yoruba. In doing so, he may touch upon the political
power of the dead and unborn worlds even in mass-mediated psyches. For
today's mass audience involves not only millions of minds put into a
ritual trance before film and TV screens, but also split and multiple
subjectivities in each of those minds, with the desires of Other gods
and ancestors flashing in the synapses--and the Other's death-drive
jouissance pulsing in the blood. Ultimately, the Other, as God
or gods, may not exist for many in the Lacanian postmodern. But the
desires, drives, choral cruelty, and violence--within and between lacking
human beings--certainly do. That Dionysus still demands a theatre of
sacrifice, in the Real as well as on the stage or screen.
The
antistructural communitas(213) at the end of Soyinka's Bacchae leaves
many questions open for a postmodern, postcolonial audience. If the
sacrifices of Pentheus, Agave, and Kadmos are cathartic in a Yoruba
sense, through Ogunian actors "strengthening the communal psyche",(214)
then how will that new community and its psyche(s) be restructured?
How will the theatre audience not only participate in the communion
rite, but also extend it beyond the theatre's walls? Communal psyches
are capable of great violence toward individuals and toward other communities,
as Europeans, Africans, and Americans have demonstrated throughout history
and in recent decades. Yet physical acts of violence also begin in the
cruelty and alienation suffered by individual minds--in the self-pity
and fear that can lead to a more destructive catharsis beyond stage
and screen rituals (as in "ethnic cleansing," for example).
[page 103] Aristotle, Artaud, and
Brecht all offer the hope that drama, written and performed with the
right homeopathic dose of violence, in the proper form of sacrifice,
would cure the communal psyche from its tragic repetitions. But they
developed their theories in a European tradition, from ancient to modern,
that stressed the individual freedom of certain souls to act. Current
postmodern and postcolonial theories question that classical, Cartesian,
Enlightenment, imperialist legacy. On the other hand, traditional African
cultures view each person as having multiple souls or psyches(215) --a
view with some affinities to postmodern, anti-Cartesian theories of
subjectivity, especially those influenced by Lacan's revision of Freud.(216)
Thus, Soyinka's revision of ancient violence in The Bacchae offers
valuable sacrificial connections, not only between vastly different
cultures, or to the past worlds of the dead within them, but also to
the Other of the living in the present theatre of the communal psyche--and
to the unborn in the global village of the future. But that present
and future communal theatre is being shaped more and more by the global
mass media, with screen edges, creases, and monsters touching upon the
Real as sacrificial chora. How do certain violent fantasies onscreen
perpetuate or alleviate the aggressivity of real life: demanding fetishistic
submission to the sacrificial apparatus of the media marketplace and
provoking mimetic acts of aggression--or providing a sacrifice of such
melodramatic habits of thought (reconstructing the fantasies that we
live by) through a more tragic kind of catharsis? This will be the crucial
issue in the chapters ahead, with direct examples of screen mirages,
choral edges, and Dionysian/Ogunian drives in film and television--
[page 104] involving the mass audience
as Pentheus-like predators and prey in melodramatic or tragic ways.