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[page 131]
The re-creation of theatre by the Church
The
main thesis of this theory is that theatre was recreated in the context
of Christian ritual ex nihilo, in the tenth century AD, after
a prolonged cut-off from the Classical tradition and the disappearance
of any trace of early medieval theatre. It would appear that this approach
is based on the CSA theory of development of ancient Greek theatre from
Dionysiac ritual, while in fact it is of earlier origin.
Seemingly,
the almost absolute absence of documentation on any form of theatre
towards the tenth century AD, unquestionably supports the recreation
thesis, which is endorsed by the vast majority of scholars to this day.
Nonetheless, two outstanding scholars, Edmond Chambers and Benjamin
Hunningher, claim implicitly or explicitly that recreation within the
framework of the Christian Church could not have happened.
Theories
of recreation in the context of the Christian Mass are of romantic source.
In 1809 Wilhelm von Schlegel declared that drama could not be found
in all Europe throughout the Middle Ages.(47) In 1839 Charles Magnin,
in his book Les Origines du Théâtre Moderne, claimed
that the new theatre was created from the festivals of the Christian
Church during the tenth and eleventh centuries, exactly as it was created
from the religious festivals in ancient Greece during the fifth
century BC.(48) Magnin established thereby an analogy between Christian
Europe and ancient Greece on the grounds of a parallel creation of theatre
from religious ritual//sources. In 1849 Edélestand du Méril,
in his book Origines Latines du Théâtre Moderne,
adopted this analogy and suggested the Church as the cradle of European
theatre.(49) In 1886, [page 132] Leon
Gautier, in his book Histoire de la Poésie Liturgique au Moyen
Age, conjectured - most cautiously - that the origins of European
theatre reside in the tropes of Easter,(50) especially those of the
tenth century, and that these developed later into mystery plays and
other religious works, until they eventually became plays in the spoken
language. Tropes are non-official texts, inserted in the sacred macro-text
of the Mass; but only a few of them were adapted to dramatic form. Moreover,
even if they were sung in dialogic form, they usually did not feature
enacted characters. Thus Gautier set the foundations for conceiving
the description of the stage performance of the "Quem Quaeritis"
trope as the document that bears witness to the recreation of theatre
by the Church. Many years later Karl Young, in his book The Drama
of the Medieval Church,(51) expressed the view that in itself there
is nothing in the tropes that could potentially recreate theatre.(52)
Despite this, the cautious thesis of Gautier swiftly became an accepted
truth. Since then the "Quem Quaeritis" is conceived in most
books of theatre history as the source of modern European theatre. In
1929 Gustave Cohen, in his book, Le Théâtre en France
au Moyen Age, made a "dramatic" theoretical move in formulating
his "law" that "[a]ll religions generate drama by themselves
and all rituals willingly and spontaneously take dramatic and theatrical
shape."(53) He thereby set the foundations for conceiving the "Quem
Quaeritis" as a particular instance of a universal law. Since
all the above-mentioned theories presupposed that religious [page
133] theatre eventually developed into secular theatre, Cohen's
law bestowed upon it further validity. It is noteworthy that Cohen published
his book in France in 1928, a year after Pickard Cambridge had demonstrated
the groundless nature of the CSA theories. In addition, it transpires
from the early phases of the recreation theory that the idea of development
of theatre from Dionysiac religious festivals was suggested prior to
the CSA, and that the latter only attempted to lend it scientific/anthropological
foundation.
Against
the background of Chambers' illuminating research,(54) Hunningher set
out to refute the recreation thesis.(55) In his book The Origin of
the Theater, he claims that the Church could not have recreated
European theatre for two reasons: a) the supposed discontinuity from
the tradition of Classical theatre did not happen and, therefore, there
could not have been recreation; and b) there is an essential opposition
between the nature of the Christian faith and theatre; therefore, the
latter could not have developed from the former.
Indeed,
in order to claim in favor of re-creation, a total break in the continuity
of the theatre tradition that originated in Classical culture, even
if that underwent a process of decay during the Middle Ages, has to
be demonstrated. The main methodical problem is that the settling of
this historical and theoretical controversy depends on the nature of
the evidence we now possess. From the beginning of the third century
AD until the tenth century, the only sources on the existence of theatrical
activities are the condemnations of Church authorities and councils.
Those continuously and consistently denounced the art of the mimes (mimi),
their [page 134] followers and successors,
and blamed even the clergy for indulging in these "Satanic"
activities. From these objections alone it is possible to infer their
existence. While the frequency of condemnations reached its peak by
the ninth century AD, there is a pronounced decrease in them during
the tenth century. It is during this century that the description of
the performance of the "Quem Quaeritis", widely considered
to be the first evidence on the recreation of theatre by the Church,
was composed. The usual explanation is that the relative silence of
the Church indicates that theatrical activities had completely disappeared.
However, a diametrically opposite interpretation can also be suggested:
that this silence offers evidence of the mitigation of hostility within
the Church itself toward these activities, and a growing awareness of
their potential, if subordinated to the promotion of its own ends. Hunningher
assumes that "the Church has always, with wisdom and discretion,
adopted and sanctified worldly elements from which the people, the congregation,
would not willingly be parted."(56)
It
is not at all clear what were the actual professions of the mimes, against
whom the Church was so critical. "Mimes" is a collective name
for a set of stage artists who performed a program of short items, each
belonging in a different art,(57) similar to a variety show. Such a
performance included animal-tamers, rope-walkers, escape artists, ventriloquists,
magicians, puppeteers, musicians, singers, dancers, storytellers, and
possibly actors too. We may safely conjecture that the objection of
the Church focused not on the musical or circus-like performances, but
on those who reflected an explicit heretical attitude to matters sacred
to it. Probably, those included actors who specialized in comic or even
satirical sketches, whether the object of derision was an individual
or an institution. Such a performance, if it indeed made use of the
theatre medium, in the sense of actors enacting characters, even if
their quality was [page 135] extremely
low, could explain the hostility of the Church and ensure the minimal
continuity required for the revitalization of the art of theatre. In
general, it is plausible that the Church was not opposed to theatre
in itself, but to its pagan connotations.
With
regard to Hunningher's second objection, concerning the essential disagreement
between Christianity and theatre, the facts reveal the opposite: Christianity
and theatre were excellent partners for quite a long period. Hunningher
is aware of that and, therefore, his claim is restricted to the necessary
conditions for the recreation of theatre ex nihilo. He endorses
the widely accepted view that theatre developed from Dionysiac ritual,(58)
because of its ecstatic nature, but he does not accept the thesis of
recreation in the context of an essentially symbolical religion.(59)
In his view, following Kirby's approach,(60) while ecstasy is a necessary
condition for the creation of theatre, Christian symbolism precludes
it, because the symbolic element of the Mass substitutes for the sacrifice,
and the word substitutes for the deed; e.g., prayer replaces trance.(61)
For Hunningher, in the context of a non-ecstatic religion, only temporary
adoption of theatre, and its eventual rejection can be conceived.
Hunningher
also opposes the assumption that the Mass features theatrical elements.
On this issue he found support in Carl Young,(62) who suggested a crucial
criterion for the definition of a dramatic medium: "impersonation",
in the sense of an actor enacting a character who is not [page
136] himself.(63) In Hunningher's view, this does not characterize
the Mass, and acting is essentially contradicted by its nature: its
performance can not be conceived as an enactment of the crucifixion,
but as the actual thing. From the very beginning, the Christian faith
considered the Mass a real sacrifice. Its underlying intention was not
to represent or describe the crucifixion, but to reincarnate the experience.(64)
However, it is difficult to accept that there is an essential opposition
between a religion and a medium, which can serve any purpose and communicate
any message, including diametrically opposite ones. Whereas Hunningher's
claim that the church could only have adopted (or rejected) the medium
of theatre is acceptable, his line of argumentation is not.
For
Hunningher the performance of the "Quem Quaeritis" - whose
description appears in the Concordia Regularis,(65) - can only
be understood within the context of a continuous dramatic tradition
and as bearing witness to the adoption of theatre by the Church. In
contrast, Nagler, who published the text in English translation,(66)
claims that "[i]n the Concordia Regularis, the birth of
medieval drama from the spirit of liturgy lies clearly before us".(67)
In my opinion this document clearly supports Hunningher's thesis. Close
analysis of the description of this performance reveals a fairly good
acquaintance with all aspects of theatre art and a level of sophistication
that contradicts the claim of spontaneous recreation ex nihilo.
We should [page 137] distinguish
between being the first theatre performance, which recreated the medium
of theatre after a period of total ignorance of the past, and the earliest
document in our possession that bears witness to theatrical activity
in the Church.
The
main theoretical contribution made by Hunningher resides in that he
suggests, by implication, a pattern of relationship between ritual and
theatre, alternative to that of creation or recreation: adoption or
rejection in any possible order. This pattern presupposes an essential
difference between ritual and theatre medium and the option of making
use of this medium by any ritual. A thousand years of rejection, and
a few centuries of co-operation, even if their ways eventually parted,
supports the validity of this pattern. The question is, therefore, whether
or not this pattern is also valid for rituals that supposedly did generate
theatre, in particular ecstatic rituals, such as the Dionysiac one?(68)
I believe that the adoption-rejection (or vice versa) pattern better
accounts for the relationship between ritual and theatre in the Classical
period too, on the grounds of the essential difference between these
two domains. This alternative pattern conforms to the conception of
theatre as a medium that can serve any theological/philosophical/ideological
idea or purpose, even opposing ones. To claim that theatre was created
or recreated by a ritual that employed it - just as it employs other
media - is as absurd as claiming that natural language, poetry or music
originated in ritual.
Hunningher
demonstrated that it is extremely difficult to accept Gustave Cohen's
"law", that any religion naturally and spontaneously generates
theatre, when almost a millennium had passed between the first encounter
of the Church with pagan theatre and the establishment of the Church
theatre. A similar phenomenon, of lengthy rejection and eventual adoption,
is found in the Jewish culture, which managed to sustain its hostility
towards theatre for a few [page 138] more
centuries.
The charm of ritual theories of origin
Evidence
of the influence of the ritual theories of origin on the practice of
theatre is reflected in the works of a vast group of theatre directors
who advocated the revitalization of theatre by restoring the ritual
elements that it had allegedly lost. This trend was/is led by such prominent
directors as Peter Brook, Jerzy Grotowski, Ariane Mnouchkine, Richard
Schechner and Eugenio Barba. However, in fact, the elements introduced
by them were not genuine ritual elements, but stagecraft inventions
inspired by principles thought to underlie ritual behavior in any possible
culture. Schechner was aware of the artificial nature of what he himself
termed "home-made" rituals:
a contradiction undermines these efforts. [...]
When artists, or their audiences, recognize that these staged "rituals"
are mostly symbolic activities masquerading as effective acts, a feeling
of helplessness overcomes them. So-called "real events"
are revealed as metaphors.(69)
This is a wonderful insight. Unfortunately,
Schechner was not consistent with it and, in other contexts, he continued
to maintain that this tendency to reintroduce and reintegrate ritual
elements is characteristic of avant-garde theatre. In my opinion, these
"home-made" ritual elements are foreign to both ritual and
theatre, because they originate in erroneous conceptions of both ritual
and theatre medium. Despite all his staging innovations, Schechner could
not have succeeded in reintroducing ritual elements into theatre, because
to begin with these were not part of theatre. His innovations could
not have transformed a [page 139] theatre
performance into "an efficacious event upon which the participants
depend."(70) Ritual can employ the medium of theatre as
one of its components, but theatre cannot employ ritual because it
is a medium. Theatre can describe a given ritual, or parts
of it, but a ritual cannot describe a theatre production because it
is not a medium. All in all, "home-made" ritual elements
are no more than formal "ceremonial" stage behavior, which
undoubtedly has a specific impact on the audience, and whose nature
has yet to be investigated. I believe that these elements deserve specific
research.
I
have suggested elsewhere an alternative answer to the problem of the
theatre medium origin in terms of the necessary psychological, behavioral
and institutional conditions that made the creation of the theatre medium
possible.(71)
I
believe that all ritual theories of origin are clearly of an ideological
character; i.e., there is no scientific truth in them. They are fallacious
and do not stand rational criticism. I also believe that the ritual
elements allegedly reintroduced to theatre are obviously spurious. The
main question is, therefore, what is the secret of the appeal of claims
based on a profound relationship between ritual and theatre, whether
in the form of development or shared basic nature? In my view, the only
answer is that it is a matter of a metaphorical aura that, for romantic
reasons, people wish to attribute to theatre. This metaphorical aura
is supposed to lend theatre a numinous quality that not only does it
not always radiate, but that perhaps less than anything else defines
its nature. Between this aura and theatre historical reality there is
nothing. In this respect, Vince's words are illuminating:
However inaccurate as a record of the historical
origins of the theatre, the ritual theory appeals on a metaphorical
level to unconscious patterns and [page 140]
longings in our own psyches and we find drama considered
in its terms a richer and more satisfying experience than it might
otherwise be.(72)
It is indeed possible that this metaphorical
aura reflects a genuine nostalgia for primeval ritual or communal participation,
which is so lacking in modern and post-modern society. Whatever the
answer, I believe that the true object of research should be not the
supposed ritual origins of theatre, but the actual necessity for such
a theory and the misguided devotion to the idea of an umbilical link
between ritual and theatre, other than the possible use of this medium
of theatre for the sake of ritual purposes. Despite this appeal, the
medium of theatre could not have originated in ritual.
Endnotes
-
This article summarizes the
main issues dealt with in my book The Roots of Theatre, which
focuses on the creation of the medium of theatre, University of Iowa
Press, forthcoming.
-
"Dramatic media"
is used here in the sense of iconic media capable of formulating fictional
worlds. These include media such as theatre, cinema, Opera, puppet
theatre, comics and photo novel.
-
In particular, see: J. L.
Austin, How to Do Things with Words (Oxford University Press
1980 [1962]); John R. Searle, Speech Acts (Cambridge University
Press, 1985 [1969]); Stephen C. Levinson, Pragmatics (Cambridge
University Press, 1987 [1983]). Vimala Herman, Dramatic Discourse
- Dialogue as Interaction (London: Routledge, 1995).
-
In particular, see Jane
Harrison, Themis: A Study of the Social Origins of Greek Religion
(Cambridge University Press, 1927 [1912]); Jane Harrison, Ancient
Art and Ritual (Oxford University Press, 1951 [1913]); Gilbert
Murray, "Excursus on the Ritual Forms Preserved in Greek Tragedy"
in Jane Harrison, Themis; Francis M. Cornford, The Origin of Attic
Comedy (London: Edward Arnold, 1914). All quotations are from
these editions.
-
In particular, see Allardice
Nicoll, Masks, Mimes and Miracles (London, Bombay and Sidney:
Harrap, 1931) 20 ff.)
-
Murray 341.
-
Aristotle, The Poetics,
in S. H. Butcher (trans. and ed.), Aristotles Theory of Poetry
and Fine Art (New York: Dover, 1951) VI,12. All quotations are
from this edition.
-
Murray 343-344.
-
A. W. Pickard Cambridge,
Dithyramb, Tragedy and Comedy (Oxford: Clarendon, 1927). All
quotations are from this edition.
-
Harrison, Ancient Art
and Ritual (1913) 15-23.
-
Pickard Cambridge 198.
-
Most known dithyrambs are
fragments and there are no extant full poems before those of Bacchylides,
from the fifth century BC. - a century after the creation of tragedy.
See: Anne Pippin Burnett, The Art of Bacchylides (Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1985).
-
Cornford,
-
Aristotle V, 2
-
Aristotle IV, 12.
-
Cornford 178-179.
-
Cornford 2-3.
-
Cornford 2.
-
Cornford 99.
-
Cornford 18.
-
Cornford 8.
-
William Ridgeway, Dramas
and Dramatic Dances of Non-European Races (Cambridge: University
Press, 1915) 24.; 1.
-
Pickard Cambridge 334-335.
-
Murray 344.
-
Murray 345.
-
An additional difference
resides in the elements of dismemberment, cooking and eating the god
(omophagy), although it can be conjectured that these are implicit
in the element of pathos in Murrays model, as it transpires
from his analysis of Euripides The Bacchae.
-
Another problem that will
not be discussed in this context: a set of narrative components in
a given order does not constitute a structure of a dramatic action.
See my books Elements of Play-Analysis (Tel Aviv: Or Am, 1992
(Hebrew)); and The Roots of Theatre, see note No. 1.
-
Nicoll 20-25.
-
Aristotle V, 2; Cornford
178-9.
-
Harrison, Themis
(1927) 41.
-
Harrison, Themis
(1927) 35.
-
Cornford 4.
-
Ernest T. Kirby, Dionysus:
A Study of The Bacchae and the Origins of Drama (Ann Arbor: University
Microfilms Int., 1982 [1970]); Ernest T. Kirby, Ur-Drama - The
Origins of Theatre (New York: New York University Press, 1975).
All quotations are from these editions.
-
Kirby, Ur-Drama 2-3.
-
Kirby, Dionysus 74-75.
-
Schechner, 120.
-
Schechner 123.
-
Schechner 30.
-
Schechner 120.
-
Eli Rozik, "Theatre
at One of its Borderlines - Reflections on Suz/o/Suz by La Fura dels
Baus," Theatre Annual, 49, 1996.
-
Schechner 165-166.
-
Schechner 170.
-
Schechner 142.
-
Schechner 1-4.
-
Schechner 43.
-
Schechner 6.
-
August Wilhelm von Schlegel,
Vorlesungen über Dramatische Kunst und Literatur, Sämmtliche
Werke. (Leipzig, 1809) 1846-1847. Quoted by Benjamin Hunningher,
in The Origin of the Theater (New York: Hill and Wang, 1961
[1955]) 4.
-
Charles Magnin, Origines
du Théâtre Moderne. Quoted by Hunningher 5.
-
Edélestand du Méril, Origines Latines du Théâtre Moderne. Quoted by
Hunningher 5.
-
Léon Gautier, Histoire
de la Poésie Liturgique au Moyen Age (Paris: 1886) 1. His
definition of "trope": "Cest linterpolation
dun texte liturgique: interpolation que lon a principalement
loccasion de constater, depuis le IXe jusquau XIIe siècle,
dans certaines livres de chants à lusage des églises
de lAllemagne, de lItalie, de la France. Cest lintercalation
dun texte nouveau et sans autorité dans un texte authentique
et officiel; dans ce texte même dont saint Grégoire avait
si sagement tracé et fixé toutes les lignes."
-
Karl Young, The Drama
of the Medieval Church (Oxford: Clarendon, 1967 [1933]). Quoted
by Hunningher 45.
-
This claim also applies
to the Christian Mass. I have expanded on this in my book The Roots
of Theatre, see note No. 1.
-
Gustave Cohen, Le Théâtre
en France au Moyen Age. (Paris: Reider, 1928): "toute religion
est par elle-même génératrice de drame et que
tout culte prend volontiers et spontanément laspect dramatique
et théâtral" (p. 1). My translation.
-
E.K. Chambers, The Mediaeval
Stage (Oxford University Press, 1903) 1-41. Hunningher 63-84.
All quotations are from these editions.
-
Benjamin Hunningher, in
The Origin of the Theater (New York: Hill and Wang, 1961 [1955]).
All quotations are from this edition.
-
Hunningher 75.
-
Hunningher 66-67.
-
Hunningher 41.
-
Hunningher 45.
-
Kirby, Dionysus and
Ur Drama
-
Hunningher 60-61.
-
Young
-
Hunningher 81-85.
-
Hunningher 84.
-
In the tenth century, Ethelwold,
Bishop of Winchester, composed the Concordia Regularis, as
a supplement to the Rule of St. Benedict, the regulations of the Benedictine
Monasteries, and in it he set down accurate directions for the performance
of the "Quem Quaeritis" on the Sunday morning of Easter.
A.M. Nagler, A Source Book in Theatrical History (New York:
Dover, 1959 [1952]) 39-41.
-
The English translation
in Nagler. The Latin source in Hans-Jürgen Diller, The Middle
English Mystery Play (Cambridge University Press, 1992 [1973])
14.
-
Nagler 39.
-
I have tried to answer this
question in The Roots of Theatre; see note No. 1.
-
Schechner 118.
-
Schechner 126.
-
Rozik, The Roots of Theatre.
-
Ronald W. Vince, Ancient
and Medieval Theatre (Westport, Connecticut and London: Greenwood
Press, 1984) 16.
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