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[page 11] The
Defense Against Prejudice
The
most influential critical system to answer medieval objections against
the theatre developed during the Italian Renaissance. Critical response
during the sixteenth century was not so much a direct revolt against
the Medieval Age, but a discourse against the more severe partisans
of Catholicism who disliked men of letters as Reformers, and literature
as the instrument of Reformation.
Men
of letters, Humanists, and students tried to change their society. To
do so, they had to combat the church, or those people who followed a
more traditional approach to life. Protestantism developed during this
time, and the Reformers allied with these people. Yet men like John
Calvin established Puritanism based on well-established principles that
behavior evidenced motives and thought, and that ordained ministers
were supreme arbiters of behavior. Calvins followers continued
the prejudice against art, literature, and drama. As a result, critical
response was also a discourse against the Puritan variety of Protestantism.
Therefore, men of letters not only had to attack what they considered
to be unworthy, obsolete, medieval foes of dramas, but they also had
to defend drama against their own political and ecclesiastical allies.
Circumstances
and events of the day channeled criticism in the extreme. Men of letters
contested nearly eleven hundred years of established objections with
a faint allegorical light near the end. They necessarily had to meet
objections on the same level to satisfy those objections. They set themselves
to prove that drama and literature were not corrupting influences, but
strongholds of religious and philosophical truths. The function of the
Renaissance criticism was to reestablish the aesthetic foundations of
literature, to reaffirm the significance of classic culture, and to
restore once and for all the element of beauty to its rightful placed
in life and art.(15)
Although
the Humanist scholars grounded their defense on the writings of Horace,
they found rational justification of drama and an answer to every medieval
objection against literary works in Aristotles Poetics.
Under the criterion of reality, critics such as Cinthio (1504-1573)
and [page 12] Scaliger (1484-1558)
saw in Aristotles writings the contention that drama revealed
a higher reality than mere commonplace fact. Scholars argued that drama
did not deal with particulars, but universals. That is, drama had little
regard for the actuality of the specific event, but aimed at the reality
of an eternal probability.(16) The reality was not mere actuality, but
the appearance of reality through dramas imitation of human action.
The Renaissance critics were forced to lay stress on the elements of
probability and verisimilitude, i.e., a close simulation of the seeming
realities of life. But the imitation of life was for them an imitation
of life as it ought to be. Because drama dealt with universals, it aimed
to portray not what has been, but what might have been or ought to be.
The imitation was ideal.
Under
the criterion of morality, Renaissance critics saw drama as essentially
moral while not having a distinctly moral aim. Drama portrayed an ideal
representation of life. And drama must necessarily present an idealized
version of human life in its moral aspects. Furthermore, drama did not
starve emotions, but excited them in order to regulate them. In other
words, by admitting that theatre affected audience members, scholars
were able to turn the issue in favor of theatre by giving affectation
a moral function. Theatre functioned to purify and ennoble emotions.(17)
While
the criterion of reality related to the criterion of morality through
ideal imitation, the criterion of morality related to the criterion
of utility through function. Under the criterion of utility, drama was
more serious and philosophic than history because it universalized fact
and imitated life in its noblest aspects.(18) The function of drama
was to teach the moral ideal delightfully by using example as its instrument.
To arrive at this end, the playwright had to incite in the spectator
an admiration of the example or the ethical aim of drama would not be
accomplished. More than a mere delightful expression of truth, drama
attempted to stimulate a desire in the spectators mind to be like
the heroes portrayed.
The
problem with the criteria or reality, morality, and utility was that
they were at least unfair and at most inappropriate criteria for dramatic
art. To judge drama in terms of its moral [page
13] content, its closeness with a reality, and its usefulness
was to judge drama in non-aesthetic terms. From the Greek philosophers
through the Renaissance, drama was seen as a form of scholastic philosophy.(19)
Drama was seen neither as an art nor a science, but as an instrument
or faculty. Drama was an art only in that it had been reduced to rules
and precepts. It was seen as a form of logic.(20)
Prejudice and Defense Revisited
During
the Italian Renaissance, the prejudice against the theatre found its
way into Puritan Protestantism through John Calvin, who perpetuated
the medieval belief that the supreme question in a persons relationship
with life was the question of conduct. The English Renaissance theatre
was caught between Queen Elizabeths use of theatre at times to
make a religious and political statement and the Puritans who were backed
by a theological philosophy grounded on behavior. However, the Puritans
prejudice against theatre seems to be more fanatical and less based
on objectivity than the objections of medieval scholars. The Puritans
seemed to be engaged in a more precise definition of prejudice: to form
an adverse opinion of judgment without knowledge of the facts and to
hold an irrational suspicion or hatred of a particular group.
People
following Puritan beliefs blamed theatre practices and practitioners
for the misfortunes of life and for the more undesirable aspects of
society. In order to promote blame, Puritans infused theatre practices
with prejudices that did not necessarily follow the realities of those
practices. In other words, what the Puritans said the theatre did, and
what the theatre actually did were probably two different things. To
the Puritans, crimes of the theatre included emptying the churches,
perpetuating pagan custom, distorting truth, showing forth profane,
seditious, and bawdy stories, teaching knavery and lechery, causing
God to visit the plague on London, leading youth into idleness and extravagance,
affording meeting places for harlots and customers, aiding the Pope,
and corrupting maidens and chaste wives.
[page
14] The basic assumption for these crimes stems from Tertullians
and St. Augustines concern for causal relationships and the effects
theatre has on its audience. If a person attended the theatre, then
that person would be influenced by the production and act out that influence
in society. In A Treatise Against Dicing, Dancing, Plays, and Interludes
(1577), John Northbrooke writes,
In their plays you shall learn all things that appertain to craft,
mischief, deceits and filthiness, etc. If you will learn how to be
false and deceive your husbands, or husbands their wives, how to play
the harlot, to obtain ones love, how to ravish, how to beguile,
how to betray, to flatter, lie, swear, forswear, how to allure to
whoredom, how to murder, how to poison, how to disobey and rebel against
princes, to consume treasures prodigally, to move to lusts, to ransack
and spoil cities and towns, to be idle, to blaspheme, to sing filthy
songs of love, to speak filthily, to be proud, how to mock, scoff
and deride any nation . . . shall you not learn, then, at such interludes
how to practice them?(21)
While Northbrookes view is based
on plot and character of the Elizabethan drama, that view displays little
understanding of theatre itself. The Puritans saw theatre as a form
of direct negative influence on peoples behavior and, consequently
on the quality of moral life in society.
The
Puritan notion of quality of moral life in the Elizabethan age related
to salvation. If a person chose to ignore sacred teachings, he was succumbing
to temptation by Satan, his soul would be lost, and he would be eternally
damned to hell. If enough people were to succumb, then an entire nation
would fall, barbarian people would conquer the land, and the gospel
would be lost. Herein lies the heart of Puritan reasoning for the power
struggle: a genuine fear of eternal damnation linked to the loss of
a quality of life in society based on salvation.
Puritan
thought followed the early Christian world-view of the duality of God
and Satan. Because the theatre influenced a mass of people, because
Elizabeth I at times used the theatre as [page
15] a political weapon, and because theatre demonstrated
ungodly thoughts and actions, the Puritans regarded the theatre as source
and service to Satan. Puritan exaggeration was based on a high level
of anxiety and fear. Northbrooke describes theatres as houses of Satan
and asserts that religious themes in drama are sacrilegious. He writes:
Satan hath not a more speedy way, and fitter school to work and teach
his desire, to bring men and women into the snare of concupiscence
and filthy luste of wicked whoredom, than those places and plays and
theatre are. . . . It hath stricken such a blind zeal into the hearts
of the people, that they shame not to say, and affirm openly, that
plays are as good as sermons, and that they learn as much or more
at a play, than they do at Gods work preached. . . . Many can
tarry at a vain play two or three hours, whereas they will not abide
scarce one hour at a sermon.(22)
To
Stephen Gosson (1554-1623) in Schoole of Abuse, the entire classic
drama was infected by the blasphemy and immorality of paganism and almost
all of the English stage was infected by the abuses of the theatre.
Yet Gosson insisted that his intention was not to banish or condemn
drama, but to chastise its abuses. Drama contained the germ of its own
disintegration and he asserted that disintegration had already taken
place in his own time. The delights and ornaments of drama intended
to make moral doctrine more pleasing were in reality mere alluring disguises
for obscenity and blasphemy.(23)
Besides
founding their argument on causal relationships and effects, the Puritans
also used authority as a foundation for argument. Consequently, defenders
of theatre also used authority to counter Puritan argument. Three sources
of authority were scripture, classic scholars, and, to the Puritans,
a vague but powerful innate knowledge of Gods law.
To
the Puritans, the innate knowledge of Gods law meant that whoever
listened to and followed Gods law had righteous authority to judge
thought, behavior, and influencing aspects [page
16] of society. This way, the Puritans claimed to be the
elect of God, and to exercise authority over others not of like mind.
In Elizabeth I and the Puritans, William Haller offers a history
of Puritan political and social involvement. The Puritans promoted a
change of authority over the church from Pope to the Crown. However,
because the Crown, as authority over the church, did not follow the
Puritan idea of Gods law, the Puritans elected themselves to be
authority over the church. Haller writes:
Authority over the church was understood to mean authority to declare
what was required of rulers and subjects alike by the universal law
which God had written in the breasts of all men and which no man could
disobey save at the peril of his soul. It meant authority to say what
doctrines should be taught, how worship and discipline should be carried
on, and who should control those functions and services.(24)
Since neither the church headed by the
Pope nor the Crown followed Gods law, the Puritans necessarily
needed to fill the moral void. Consequently, when an influential Puritan
said that the theatres were houses of Satan, others in society supported
his authority to make that statement. This way, a Puritan gained prestige
and power.
In
The Art of English Poesy, George Puttenham (c. 1529-1590) tried
to tie the innate knowledge of Gods law to a playwrights
God-like gift in order to offer a defense. However, his defense was
extremist; he related playwrights to creators and tried to endow them
with the same kind of authority and prestige reserved for the elite
Puritans. To Puttenham, a playwright or poet was a creator like God
who formed a world out of nothing. Playwrights and poets were the first
priests, prophets, legislators, philosophers, scientists, orators, historians,
and musicians of the world. From the beginning, they had been held in
the highest esteem by great men, and the nobility, antiquity, and universality
of their art proved its preeminence and worth. With such a history and
such a nature, it was sacrilege to debase drama or to use it on any
unworthy subject or for ignoble purposes.(25)
[page
17] The authority of scripture offered Puritans irrefutable
evidence against theatre. Northbrooke asserts that St. Ambrose ordered
theatre to be utterly abolished, for no theatre is mentioned in scripture.(26)
The argument was that because scripture did not reference theatre, then
theatre had no place in Gods kingdom. Defenders could not touch
that source of authority.
Defenders
needed to find a way to overcome the obstacles of scripture as authority,
and the self-proclaimed authority of the Puritans. They turned to the
authority of classic scholars as their basis for defense. In A Defense
of Poetry, Music, and Stage Plays, Thomas Lodge (c. 1558-1625) replied
to Gossons attack by almost entirely appealing to the authority
of classical scholars. He strung together classical names and dug up
old Boccaccioan principles of allegorical and moral interpretation to
point out dramas efficacy as a civilizing factor in primitive
times and as a moral agency ever since. To Lodge, drama was a heavenly
gift and should be condemned only when abused.(27) In this respect he
agreed with Gosson.
In
Sir Philip Sidneys Defense of Posey, we find a more supportive
and substantial defense. Sidney (1554-1586) introduced the criticism
of the Italian Renaissance to England nearly twenty-five years after
Minturno and Scaliger published. Consequently, his defense follows Italian
criticism and justifies theatre as true, moral, and useful.(28) Through
Sidney, the Renaissance argument following the criteria of reality,
morality, and utility offered a strong and substantial defense. The
Puritans ignored it.
Lingering Prejudice Today
The
puritanical philosophy of life and objections to the theatre linger
within todays Christian arena. Within most if not every denomination,
there are some people who believe [page 18]
conduct to be the supreme arbitrator in life. That is, they
believe that a person is according to how he or she behaves. They strive
to follow dictums of behavior, for themselves and for others, in order
to become a righteous people. Being righteous, then, they can attain
a good life after death as well as respond to the world in meaningful
ways.
Under
this philosophy, objections thrive against theatre. The content of drama
portrays a false world; it is not real. Morally, the theatre is objectionable
in both content and in practice. It serves to arouse emotions that in
turn hurt the spiritual life of the spectator. Furthermore, the theatre
has no use. It does not function to help people behave morally, thereby
does not help them become a righteous people.
Yet
Christianity as a whole has shifted away from the Puritan ideal. Instead
of what a person does defining who he or she is, who a person is determines
what she or he does. Focus has shifted, then, from an outward appearance
to an inward state of being and a process of becoming. Behavior comes
from the person. Todays Christian doctrine attempts to reveal
guidelines for each individual to inwardly grow and develop as a human
being by revealing concepts and philosophies that help people understand
the world and their relationship to it. Therefore, the goal is not to
dictate behavior, but to help develop the individual as a unique human
being having attributes and worth.
Under
the same goal, todays Christian doctrine does not aim to dictate
the content and structure of dramatic art, but allows theatre the freedom
to exist within the confines of its own art form. The mere appearance
of theatre is no longer a valid issue. Morality, utility, and reality
are not the criteria for theatre under todays ecclesiastical frame.
The theatre is no longer shackled with rules and precepts in order to
fit under the standards of a particular doctrine. Just as todays
theatre cannot be the same as the Roman theatre, the theatre within
todays Christian arena cannot be the same as the theatre within
the medieval Christian arena. And yet, the dilemma remains.
Endnotes
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Henry Osborn
Taylor, Ancient Ideals: A Study of Intellectual and Spiritual Growth
From Early Times to the Establishment of Christianity (New York:
The Macmillan Company, 1913) 374.
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Lucian,
trans. A.M. Harmon, Vol. 5 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1962)
217.
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Tertullian,
"On the Spectacles," Dramatic Theory and Criticism,
ed. Bernard F. Dukore (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., 1974)
85-93.
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Plato, The
Republic of Plato, trans. Francis M. Cornford (Oxford, England:
Oxford Unitersity Press, 1941) 337-339.
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Wallace
K. Ferguson and Geoffrey Bruun, A Survey of European Civilization,
4th ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1969) 88-89.
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Will Durant,
The Story of Civilization, Vol. IV: The Age of Faith: A History of
Medieval Civilization Christian, Islamic, and Judaic From
Constantine to Dante: A.D. 325 1300 (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1950) 69.
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Joel E.
Spingarn, A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance,
2nd ed. (New York: Columbia University Press, 1908) 6.
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George
Saintsbury, A History of Criticism. Vol. I: Classical and Medieval
Criticism (New York: Dodd, Mead, and Co., 1900) 381.
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Saintsbury
381. Also see St. Augustines Confessions, Book 3, Chapter
2.
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John Northbrooke,
"A Treatise Against Dicing, Dancing, Plays, and Interludes,"
in Dukore 160-161.
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John Northbrooke,
160-161.
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Stephen
Gosson, "School of Abuse," in Dukore 177-183.
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William
Haller, Elizabeth I and the Puritans (The Folger Shakespeare
Library: Folger Books, 1964) 2.
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George
Puntnham, "The Art of English Posey," in Dukore 166-168.
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Northbrooke,
in Dukore 161.
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Thomas
Lodge, "A Defense of Poetry, Music, and Stage Plays," in Dukore
166-168.
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Sir Philip
Sidney, "Defense of Poesy," in Dukore 172-173.
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