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           Daniel Larner, Ph.D.Western Washington University
 Comic Ritual in a Tragic World:Lessons in the Metaphor of Drama
 I. The Metaphor   Metaphor 
        and drama share an essence: transformation. A metaphor carries one world 
        of meaning to another, enlarging what it comes to by what it brings along 
        with it. What is at stake is a meaning, which is transformed to something 
        quite beyond its original state.   Drama 
        takes an action done by characters, and transforms it from the mundane 
        to the meaningful, carrying meaning from the realm of its factuality to 
        wider worlds. Seen this way, drama transforms all action to the act of 
        understanding, of putting some sort of prop under mere fact, of supplying--by 
        some combination of rational, imagistic, associative, and poetic means--context, 
        explanation, cause, meaning, analogy, connection, relation.   The 
        fact of death, transported by metaphor in one ancient vision of the world, 
        sees death not just as the opposite and terminus of life, but also as 
        order turned to disorder, ambition turned to destruction, strength and 
        wisdom turned to weakness and foolishness. And this in turn is transported 
        into (that is, becomes a metaphor for) a world where sudden changes of 
        fate, mediated by the gods, are the barometers of wisdom. This is the 
        world of tragedy, in which our most luminous visions and most courageous 
        efforts to understand, to preserve, and to improve may be reversed into 
        chaos, destruction and death. The irony could not be more profound or 
        more total. A world where this can happen is a tragic world, where our 
        fates are an agonizing mystery, death is imminent, violence is capricious, 
        maiming, and deadly, striving can be dangerous, and pain is permanent.   Similarly, 
        imagine a domestic world, concerned only with patching up its problems 
        and moving on with life. Surviving, getting the best of the person next 
        to you in a competition for food, money, or a mate, is transported to 
        (becomes a metaphor for) getting ahead in society, wanting to learn from 
        mistakes, overcome problems, and promote harmony in the widest possible 
        circle. This, in turn, is transported into (becomes a metaphor for), a 
        world where these are the sole concernswhere peace reigns and lives 
        continually improve, uninterrupted and unaffected by the sober uncertainties 
        and heavy burdens of the tragic universe.   [page 
        100] In comedy, a world where the essential action is domestic, 
        there is a moving together, a healing, a joining of the once separated 
        couple who are to create the new generation and continue the flow of life. 
        The ironies of this world are those of ignorances, stupidities, foibles 
        exposed, and dignities deflated. In this world, the defective and the 
        guilty are not dangerous or deadly, but merely ridiculous. They can recover 
        and learn, and re-integrate into the community. This world is protected 
        from violence. If violence occurs, it is not serious (a slap, a punch, 
        a fall) and the wounds heal. Even bruised egos heal and the characters 
        learn what they need to learn to change their ways and get along.   Comedy 
        is healing, accommodating and including, while tragedy is explosive, destroying 
        families and even civilizations for the sake of enlarging vision. That 
        is, if the comic vision is the building or repair of a community, affirming 
        domestic custom and the wisdom of social virtue, the tragic vision affirms 
        only that we can strive to understand, strive to choose wisely. This latter 
        vision is achieved ironically, in an extreme encounter with limits. We 
        learn how large our deeds, human understanding, ambition and striving 
        can be by watching those much larger than ourselves exceed their limits 
        and get crushed.  II. The Comic Mirror   Within 
        this tragic vision, there is an implied comic mirror, lurking on the other 
        side of the deepest ironies. This comes out most eloquently in farce. 
        Farce approaches tragic vision by being the opposite of realism, eschewing 
        the mere factuality of things, and the flat ironies that accompany them. 
        In realism, things are what they are, and only what they are. Whatever 
        implication or meaning we may assign to them has a tendency to collapse, 
        to be patently ironical (it is what it is but nothing more) in a world 
        of mere factness.(1)   In 
        farce, however, fact functions in a world wildly distorted, working by 
        a logic which may be clear, but which is wacky and impossible. "Is 
        man no more than this?" Lear asks. If man is but a "bare, forked 
        animal," he is a lot less than we took him for. This is, or can be, 
        deeply ridiculous, deeply amusing. When Laurel and Hardy's determined 
        politeness and civil [page 101] good 
        manners turn suddenly to infantile rage, causing them to wreak methodical 
        destruction, piece by piece, on whatever object attaches to the person 
        they are angry at (automobile,(2) grocery shop,(3) house(4)), the destruction 
        is funny. In defense of their dignity and respectability, they tear apart 
        something valuable which belongs to whoever impugns that dignity, like 
        a child tearing apart another child's teddy bear. And the offending party 
        retaliates, creating new destruction and new humiliation. With each round 
        of the battle, the destruction, and the fun, escalate.   Looked 
        at literally, this is pathological. Laurel and Hardy, and whomever they 
        are fighting with, are committing felonies. Looked at metaphorically, 
        the violence is transported to a world in which the threat of violence 
        and destruction is displaced into something far less dangerous and more 
        familiar. It is like our primal response as babies to the game of peek-a-boo. 
        In the first instant, the emergence of a face from a hidden place is frightening. 
        But an instant later, it is recognized--that's Mommy or Daddy or Uncle 
        Harry!--and the fear is replaced by recognition and vented by laughter. 
        The whole process is so much fun that, as we all know, if the child is 
        young enough it can be repeated almost endlessly. Thus in farce, the metaphor 
        allows us to recognize that this is, after all, only dignity and property 
        that are being destroyed, not lives and civilizations. While the world 
        is being torn apart, in small, it is being affirmed in large. We can feel 
        that momentary twinge of horror--he's tearing the walls of that house 
        down!--then laugh and indulge ourselves in the infantile fantasy without 
        ruining the larger world of meaning we think we see and persistently count 
        on being there. And in fact, the ritual of farce is in part a ritual invocation 
        of that larger world, an implicated order, held in abeyance, banned for 
        the evening by agreement, vital by virtue of its absence. It may be possible 
        to claim that the farce is the sacrifice to the tragedy, as if by performing 
        the farce, by admitting this level of fabulous destruction and disorder, 
        we stave off the necessity of the tragedy.   [page 
        102] The cruelty of lots of comedy counts on this. The cruelty 
        is funny because it assures us that even if we cross the line, even if 
        our violence somehow becomes heinous, even if we might perpetrate a holocaust 
        (or fail to stop one), the meaning revealed by the consequent ironies 
        will not fail us, as bitter as it may be. This is not the homey comfort 
        of some interpretations of savior religions, but the grit of Greek irony, 
        filtered through the vision of Lear--the world may share nothing of our 
        values and visions, and may trample us; but we can see that, can understand 
        it, can appreciate the gap between the importance we think we have and 
        the triviality or inconsequence that attaches to even to the largest of 
        our accomplishments, failures, or visions. "As flies to wonton boys 
        are we to the gods. They kill us for their sport." In some perspective, 
        no matter what the horror, we are comic, ridiculous. This is the vision 
        of the abyss, the darkness made visible by tragedy, but made bearable, 
        brought back to human dimension by comedy, especially by violent comedy. 
        We come together in the recognition of the larger, more frightening world, 
        through the much smaller domestic world of houses, cars, slapsticks, and 
        rolling pins.   Let 
        me offer two illustrations. The first is from one of Laurel and Hardy's 
        films, Tit for Tat,(5) in which they are just setting up an electrical 
        appliance shop and run into trouble with the grocer next door. The grocer 
        thinks, erroneously, that Ollie has made advances on his wife. He marches 
        into their store, insults them and breaks something. "Take that." 
        Then, with an harumph, he leaves. Laurel and Hardy go to his shop and 
        retaliate, in turn, by breaking something there. Then the war escalates, 
        with the grocer destroying more and valuable items in the electrical shop 
        and Laurel and Hardy doing the same in the grocery, finally pushing the 
        grocer into a basket of eggs and dumping another basket-full over his 
        head.   But 
        the kicker is that every time Laurel and Hardy decide to retaliate for 
        the grocer's latest raid, and leave their shop to invade his, an anonymous 
        man in a double-breasted suit and fedora enters their shop and steals 
        something from it. Each time, when Laurel and Hardy return to their shop, 
        they encounter him leaving, appliances in hand. Unfailingly, he greets 
        them politely, and they unfailingly return the greeting, never taking 
        notice of the fact that he is carrying items out of their store. Finally, 
        the man returns with a large truck and completely empties the store! While 
        the form of this sequence is the old reliable running gag, the [page 
        103] metaphorical effect is horrifying. It is as if the universe 
        had it in for our heroes. Just when they are down and under attack, everything 
        is taken from them! Why isn't this devastating? I suspect it is for the 
        same reason that in cartoons, when a character is ironed flat by a steamroller, 
        he always re-inflates to chase again. In this farcical word, no loss is 
        permanent. Healing is magical, and our dignified gents will be back again 
        soon to do battle with the next assault on their pretentious dignities. 
        This whole process is frightening. This world is nasty and vindictive 
        and destructive. But it's frightening in the same way peek-a-boo is frightening. 
        For a moment, deep down, it might look like tragedy, but we quickly recognize 
        our old friend, farce. The sacrifice is offered, made, and accepted.   The 
        second illustration is from Charlie Chaplin. Michael Wood, reviewing books 
        by Joyce Milton and Kenneth S. Lynn on the life and work of Chaplin, repeats 
        Milton's quotation from Chaplin about his theory of comedy: "An idea 
        going in one direction meets another idea suddenly....You shriek."(6) 
        Chaplin illustrates his theory by describing himself as the tramp, dignified 
        and serious, approaching an easy chair, spreading his coat-tails with 
        an elegant gesture, and sitting on a cat. "Nothing funny about it, 
        really," says Chaplin, "especially if you consider the feelings 
        of the cat. But you laugh." And Wood recalls Chaplin as Adenoid Hynkel 
        in The Great Dictator, playing both Hynkel, the ranting Hitler 
        parody, and the tramp--this time a Jewish barber--who, when he gets his 
        chance to speak about fighting for democracy, starts modestly, but gets 
        swept away by his enthusiasm and also ends up in a rant. Says Wood, "Ranting 
        is ranting....An idea going in one direction meets another idea, and Chaplin 
        plays both ideas, [making] the meeting ground...his [own] face."(7) 
        We laugh, but it hurts to remember who Hynkel really stands for, and the 
        torture and genocide of the Nazi era, just as it hurts to think about 
        the feelings of the cat, or the feelings of the poor sap who had that 
        basket of eggs dumped on him, or his house torn down, board by board.(8) 
        Laughing at destruction is the sacrifice to the God of Fear. Wood ends 
        his article this way: "Chaplin's movies, and indeed his life, remind 
        us of all the tramps and others who don't make it to Easy Street, 
        who get to dress up only as themselves, and whose roles do become destinies, 
        because [page 104] the play they are 
        in is endless and all there is."(9) Thus the metaphor of farce reminds 
        us of the real circumstance it distorts. It hurts to think of the ironies 
        of ordinary life and hopelessness many of us face. But whether it is violent 
        destruction or entropic decay, it is precisely the comedian's art to release 
        the laughter, to make us laugh anyway, to help us rise above the seriousness 
        of it all and see it as ridiculous. When we agree to watch, we have sealed 
        the bargain with the sacrificial victim. When we laugh, the sacrifice 
        has been accepted.  III. The Ritual Dance of Offer and 
        Sacrifice  In David Mamet's Oleanna we can 
        see tragedy and comedy doing this same intimate, mirrored dance of offer 
        and sacrifice.(10) Mamet's play is particularly interesting in this context 
        because it begins as a relentlessly domestic problem. There is a dispute 
        between a teacher and a student, and an effort made to heal it. But the 
        teacher, John, is often condescending, and obtuse. For a teacher, he is 
        a remarkably poor listener, arrogant and self-absorbed. The student, Carol, 
        is confined by a kind of learning disability (or developmental stage) 
        that allows her to understand only formulaic, true-or-false answers to 
        questions and explicit instructions about what to do next. The result 
        is that when she asks her very literal questions, John's [page 
        105] misplaced attempts to reason with her become lectures, 
        ever more one-sided, more convoluted, and more impossible to understand. 
        She becomes more confused and desperate, since she understands nothing 
        of his meanderings, asides, footnotes, allusions, elucidations, and explanations. 
        He, blindly believing that more explanation will cure the situation, launches 
        into one line after another of critical exposition, term definition, issue 
        discussion, and even personal anecdote about his own life, past and present. 
        He vainly believes, in the name of patient pedagogy and reason, that this 
        will illustrate the clear truth, produce mutual understanding, and solve 
        the problem. |