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           George A. Scranton, Ph. D.Seattle Pacific University
 Love And Lovers:Mutuality, Sin, Grace And The Future In Moliere's Vision Of Comedy
 Introduction And Definitions:   Seemingly 
        following Aristotle's lead many people have thought of comedy as the lesser 
        and ludicrous side of serious drama, that is tragedy, which causes audiences 
        to weep and be purged of pity and fear. Many playwrights who view the 
        world from a comedic perspective however think of their work as significantly 
        dealing with essentially the same issues as "serious drama" 
        but with a different perspective, a different vision of the human experience. 
        Some philosophers and theologians also think of comedy, and the audience's 
        responsive laughter, as meeting human needs as deeply as the purgation 
        by tears. Indeed it is currently being argued that the Biblical point 
        of view, while not lacking seriousness and tears, is comedic rather than 
        tragic (Frye and Buechner). It is from this perspective that I chose to 
        approach and explore some of the relationships between Moliere's dramatic 
        comedy and a theology of mutuality. An Extended Definition Of Dramatic 
        Comedy:   Dramatic 
        comedy is experienced in the communal setting of the theatre where personal 
        reactions and responses are constantly reinforced, modified or checked 
        by that communal awareness of the setting. The collective response of 
        spontaneous laughter and the inherent approval of applause become significant 
        ways in which the audience affirms and apprehends the play's observations 
        and resolutions regarding the human condition and its "virtual future" 
        (Langer).   While 
        tragedy is seen as individualistic in its implications, dramatic comedy 
        consistently has been understood as a microcosm with broader societal 
        implications (Kronenberger). What happens to the central and secondary 
        characters provides the crucible in which implications for both the individual 
        and society are tested.   [page 
        162] The most usual shape the action of dramatic comedy takes 
        is that of the chiasm. Society is seen to be in some state of imbalance 
        that threatens its very continuance. The action of the dramatic comedy 
        traces the movement of society, by way of the characters embroiled in 
        that action, toward imminent disaster, collapse, or failure, only to be 
        rescued by some fortunate twist of the plot. This rescue brings about 
        a rebalancing of society by way of a reaffirmation of the traditional 
        societal norms, or a societal shift that may bring about a new more appropriate 
        power base for society (Frye, Langer, Fry, Sypher, Buechner, Rood).   Dramatic 
        comedy has traditionally seen itself as a corrective to the society in 
        which it has found itself. Comic playwrights have at times pilloried the 
        person who dared to transgress the societal norms of the age, and have 
        also held up to ridicule those societies that transgressed the humanity 
        of the individual. In either case the major dramatic comic playwrights 
        have sought to "correct the vices" of their age by their comedies 
        (Moliere, Kronenberger).   Anything 
        in human actions and responses that is perceived as non-human is fodder 
        for immediate and corrective laughter. Anything mechanical or mechanistic 
        in movement, thought, or reaction in a human is perceived by an audience 
        as laughable and in need of correction. (Bergson) The movement of dramatic 
        comedy traditionally has been from misunderstandings, antagonism, mechanistic 
        non-human responses and lack of mutuality toward understanding, acceptance, 
        and becoming more fully human in response and mutuality.   The 
        positive "virtual future" (Langer) that is suggested by the 
        playwright is for the specific individuals involved in the comic action. 
        It is also inclusive of the society at large implied by the play. The 
        society at the end of the comedy is normally more inclusive in that it 
        is open to everyone who accepts the miraculous twist that brought it about 
        and to everyone who does not violate its inclusive norms of mutuality.   While 
        not wanting to fall into the formalistic trap that suggests that dramatic 
        comedy is only defined by its form or structure I have addressed its spirit 
        as well. The spirit of dramatic comedy celebrates our capacity to survive, 
        to at least, endure (Corrigan). This spirit provides [page 
        163] happy endings as the natural, inevitable, eschatological 
        result of the comic vision. "Comedy is not just a happy as opposed 
        to an unhappy ending, but a way of surveying life so that happy endings 
        must prevail." (Kronenberger)   The 
        "Ladder of Comedy" moves from the low comedy of obscenity to 
        the high comedy of ideas that attacks the sacred cows of a given society. 
        It includes physical comedy, slapstick, plotting devices, witty dialogue 
        and comedy that grows out of character.(1) Its breadth is wide and the 
        humorous responses of audiences to any specific rung on the ladder will 
        vary significantly. Some dramatic comedies are mildly humorous and kindly 
        in disposition, others are vicious in attack and vitriolic in intention. 
        Each dramatic comedy however will find its own level and intensity of 
        humor to deliver its content and present its comedic vision.   Purposefully 
        or not every dramatic comedy has ramifications that are religious or theological. 
        Even purposefully negative attacks on religious beliefs or established 
        religion have obvious religious ramifications. The implications of dramatic 
        comedy to an eschatological vision of humanity suggest a profound faith, 
        or hope in the future.   The 
        comic vision of the future expects, relies on, or at least tolerates the 
        miracle that is necessary to bring about a "happy ending". That 
        which causes the lack of mutuality, the isolation or imbalance in society 
        is seen as the "problem" or sin, if you will, that needs to 
        be attacked, ridiculed, or rendered impotent by laughter. Through the 
        vision that demands survival and happy endings a miraculous plot twist 
        happens which is "beyond human knowledge and control" (Langer) 
        and insures a positive "virtual future" (Langer) for everyone 
        who accepts the miracle, and is willing to live within the bounds of the 
        resurrected community that is founded on love and mutuality. My Working Definition Of Dramatic 
        Comedy:   The 
        implications of the above suggested to me the following working definition 
        of dramatic comedy on which I have based the rest of my observations:   [page 
        164] Dramatic comedy is serious in its intentions, communal 
        in its experience, societal in its scope, chiasmic in its structure, corrective 
        in its goal, relational and inclusive in its implications, celebrative 
        and hope-filled in its spirit, humorous in its delivery, and religious/theological 
        in its ramifications.   To 
        deal with the potential breadth of this topic requires significantly more 
        time and space than allotted in this paper. It beckons me on to a more 
        thorough investigation of the various strands of this multifaceted relationship 
        in the future. In this present paper, however, the more immediate goal 
        was accomplished through; an analysis of several significant historic 
        theories of comedy, analysis and criticism of the dramatic comedies of 
        Moliere, and development and application of a relational theology of mutuality 
        as suggested by John Macmurray, Martin Buber and John Macquarrie. In this 
        process the theological issues of sin, grace, finitude, mutuality and 
        future community were identified as central issues of the dramatic comedy 
        tradition of Moliere as reflected in representative scripts from his oeuvre, 
        and the representative theories of dramatic comedy which suggest themselves 
        as applicable to his work. The Main Body of The Paper:   L. 
        J. Potts, in "The Subject Matter of Comedy," contends the main 
        concern of the comedy writer is to "discriminate between what is 
        normal and abnormal in human behavior."(2) What is normal does not 
        generally concern the comedy writer except as a yardstick by which s/he 
        measures the abnormalities s/he wishes to criticize. Sex is the one area, 
        he maintains, in which everyone can be said to be eccentric, or abnormal. 
        He elaborates his idea in the following statement:  
         The mere fact that no other human relationship is 
          so natural as this one; that the survival of the race depends on it; 
          and that it is the commonest disturbing [page 
          165] influence to which human nature and social life are 
          subject - this ensures that it should be the most persistent theme of 
          comedy.(3)   In the majority of his plays Moliere used the convention 
        of the classical young lovers of Plautus, Seneca and Menander as the norm 
        against which he showed the object of his criticism to be abnormal, and 
        therefore deserving of his criticism. By using this short-cut he identified 
        the stock naive, stupid, or taken-in young lovers as the good element 
        in the world of his plays. Any force that interfered with or opposed their 
        natural progression toward successful mating is immediately characterized 
        as evil, or undesirable, and worthy of his derision. It is "folly 
        to oppose this compulsion to mate, and what opposes properly falls under 
        a derisive light,"(4) according to Lehmann. Moliere then, by keeping 
        his eye on the classical young lovers as the norm, and their prosperous 
        mating and implied procreation as their normal behavior, characterized 
        those forces which opposed them as abnormal, faulty, or maladjusted, and 
        therefore worthy of his derisive laughter.   Moliere 
        further revealed his own ideals concerning love and lovers by his use 
        of non-classical lovers whose relationships were built upon mutual respect, 
        understanding, and altruistic concern for the well being of the other 
        party. These relationships were more mature and open, and did not require 
        those involved to be of similar age, as was true of the classical young 
        lovers. There was no young man to oppose the older man for the hand of 
        the girl in these depictions of more ideal relationships. They were built 
        upon loving mutual relationships rather than similarity in age, vitality, 
        and potential procreative ability.     However, 
        when youth and age did engage in a contest for the hand of a young girl, 
        Moliere, by relying upon the convention of classical young lovers, led 
        the audience to believe that youth should win and age be thwarted in his 
        attempts to win the young girl's hand. The aged (40's) contestant was 
        seen as the disruptive influence who was comic in his attempts to win 
        the girl and therefore worthy of ridicule.   [page 
        166] One form of love contest Moliere used to establish the 
        norm, against which he set his object for criticism, was a direct contest 
        between a father and son for the love of a young girl. Francis M. Cornford 
        has argued convincingly, in The Origin of Attic Comedy, that the 
        beginnings of this contest between age and youth as a comic device are 
        found in the traditional patterns of religious ritual. This ritual was 
        based on a Seasonal Pantomime (a Ritual Combat between the Old Year and 
        the New, Summer and Winter, or Life and Death), followed by a Sacred Marriage 
        to ensure the return of fertility to the race and a regeneration of nature.(5) 
        Whether Moliere's comedy followed this ritualistic theory of comedy because 
        it was so deeply ingrained in the very fabric of the comedic tradition 
        he knew, or because the sexual nature of humankind is a significant common 
        denominator in human inter-relationships and therefore very subject to 
        deviation, conflict, joy, and freedom is perhaps a moot point. It is most 
        probably a combination of these theories that made Moliere focus so consistently 
        on love and lovers, their problems and the movement to a final happy union 
        built on mutuality as the norm against which he showed those who caused 
        their problems to be abnormal and therefore worthy of his criticism.   Moliere's 
        comedies are most generally enlightened by Cornford's theory of the fertility 
        ritual pitting the young and old king in a combat. In this form the  
         good spirit and his antagonist are felt to be, after 
          all, only two successive representations of the same principle. . . 
          . The spirit of the new year and of its fertility is merely the spirit 
          of the old year come back again. The old year is a force of evil and 
          obstruction, only because he is old and has yielded to the decay of 
          winter.(6)    While 
        not attempting to force Moliere to adhere precisely to Cornford's formula, 
        we can see some potential explanations for an often repeated form used 
        by Moliere. In L'ecole Des Maris, L'ecole Des Femmes, and 
        L'avare the old man in each case must be defeated, not only because 
        he is evil and the source of obstruction to the youth's wedded happiness, 
        but because in his age he has "yielded to the decay of winter."(7) 
        These "old" men were Moliere's [page 
        167] approximate age in the first two plays and only a few 
        years his senior in the third. All three characters were performed by 
        Moliere in their original productions.(8) In the old man the promise of 
        new life through procreation is seen figuratively or factually as less 
        potent than in the youth. He is seen as another aspect of the cycle of 
        life in which the Old must eventually and continually be replaced by the 
        Young so that life and the race can continue. Fertility is insured in 
        the present, and is a promise for the future. |