Bingo, Bond!
I've been reading through some plays of Edward Bond, who's bizarrely mesmerizing work, The Sea, we're hoping to do in one of our early seasons. Yesterday I came across an inspiring passage from his introduction to a play called Bingo (which is a loosely written biographical sketch focusing on some of William Shakespeare's crooked business dealings). The introduction is a stunning affirmation of the need for Art --theater especially-- as political ammunition, as a mirror to hold to society, and (most applicable to myself and my colleagues) as a means of maintaining personal sanity in an uncertain world. To be fair and honest, I read it with a certain super-natural gusto (sitting with goosebumps under a sunset, listening to apocalyptic music, and having consumed far too much espresso), but my enthusiasm for the passage has not waned a day and some mental distance later.
So, I will now quote a great quantity of it here on the blog while interjecting some of my own modest cometary:
I've never had quite as dark an opinion of industrialized societies as Bond ("stagnant and inhuman") and it should be noted that he was writing this introduction in 1973, the height of the Cold War, Vietnam, and Stagflation. Nonetheless, his lamentations regarding consumerism and what has become the bizarerity of macro-economic theory are worth consideration. I don't know too what extent I agree... but there is certain relevance to our present day recessionary concerns:
Next, Bond describes the dangerous scapegoatism and dehuminzation of national enemies propagated by Governments in their natural pursuit of increased power and control. Obviously the Vietnam war is a past concern... as you read the following, I suggest substituting the word 'desert' for the word 'jungle'.
In any case, that all was just the introduction to one of Bond's plays. I can't wait to take part in the staging of one in its entirety. And, hopefully, I've excited some of you enough to come and see his work. He's rather underplayed here in America and it's time for that to change.
So, I will now quote a great quantity of it here on the blog while interjecting some of my own modest cometary:
"Shakespeare created Lear, who is the most radical of all social critics. But Lear's insight is expressed as madness or hysteria. Why? I suppose partly because that was the only coherent way it could have been expressed at the time. Partly also because if you understand so much about suffering and violence, the partiality of authority, and the final innocence of all defenseless things, and yet live in a time when you can do nothing about it - then you feel the suffering you describe, and your writing mimics that suffering. When you write on that level you must tell the truth. A lie makes you the hangman's assistant. It betrays the victim and this is intolerable - because you are mimicking the victim, and the most important thing you know is the innocence you share with him. So if you lie the world stops being sane, there is no justice to condemn suffering, and no difference between guilt and innocence - and only the mad know how to live with so much despair. Art is always sane. It always insists on the truth , and tries to express the justice and order that are necessary to sanity but are usually destroyed by society. All imagination is political. It has the urgency of passion, the force of appetite, the self-authenticity of pain or happiness - imagination is a desire that makes an artist create. The truths of imagination are strictly determined and necessary. They aren't 'revealed' to artists, they have to work and train and learn so that they become skilled at discovering them. But every artist often feels that what he's created is 'right' and he's not free to alter it. It's life that in comparison seems arbitrary and random - because society is usually based on injustice or expediency but art is the expression of moral sanity. Philistinism is so shocking because it assumes that, on the contrary, creative imagination is arbitrary and random, a self-satisfying game, mere fantasy - instead of being vital to human development. And of course, what artists more frequently lack is enough of this creative imagination. Or perhaps they only play it down because they're told art is for the rich and intellectual, that science is work but art only luxury or play. Perhaps also because many people do in fact 'exist' without art. Well, they've only had to do so in modern industrial societies and that's one reason why these societies are stagnant and inhuman."Frederick Nietzsche once said “That is the kind of artist I love, modest in his needs: he really wants only two things, his bread and his art — panem et Circen.” If you've ever read any Nietzsche you know he didn't confess love too often. His reverence for the artist is a rare exception to a generally cynical critique of all men who live in the public sphere from priests to scientists to politicians. In Bond's writing, I appreciate this particular portrait of the artist: a man or woman who struggles always to understand the disparate qualities of the world, to run those observations through his or her own moral sense, and then to communicate that end-product to an audience. That communication is most significant and imperative when it operates bellow the flaccid plane of intellectualized rational appeals and acts directly through passions, instinct and innate moral senses. What generates a moral response? -- a cold radio broadcaster recounting the horrors of Nazi concentration camps or a film (Shindler's List for example)? I think most people can easily tune out the rational appeals of a journalist, but they are grotesquely entertained (and then spurred to action or thought) by an effective film or play.
I've never had quite as dark an opinion of industrialized societies as Bond ("stagnant and inhuman") and it should be noted that he was writing this introduction in 1973, the height of the Cold War, Vietnam, and Stagflation. Nonetheless, his lamentations regarding consumerism and what has become the bizarerity of macro-economic theory are worth consideration. I don't know too what extent I agree... but there is certain relevance to our present day recessionary concerns:
"Money is an important social tool. It's the means of exchange and of accumulating the surplus necessary to create modern industry. But we've reached a point where money isn't used to remove poverty but to create and satisfy artificial needs so that consumption will maintain profits and industry activity. Keynes said that to maintain effective demand in an economy it would be better to pay men for 'digging holes in the ground' rather than that they should be unemployed, but he added ironically that he presumed a 'sensible community' would find something more socially useful for them to do. Well, a lot of the trash we produce for civilized consumption is far more silly and dangerous than holes in the ground. And that's only concerned with keeping society running - the far more difficult work of making it civilized is mostly ignored. We think we live in an age of science, but it's also an age of alchemy: we try to turn gold into human values. "Surely since the rise of Milton Freedman's Chicago school of economic theory we've dispatched much of Keynes' disaster capitalism. But, an echo may remain in the oft-repeated appeals for increased consumption (and government deficits) and the contractionary results of saving.
Next, Bond describes the dangerous scapegoatism and dehuminzation of national enemies propagated by Governments in their natural pursuit of increased power and control. Obviously the Vietnam war is a past concern... as you read the following, I suggest substituting the word 'desert' for the word 'jungle'.
"It seems that sometimes people can be made to behave badly with frightening ease and rapidity, but it only seems so. Their awareness of human values doesn't simply vanish. People have faults... but human values are the most enduring things we have, stronger than our rational minds. We have the need and right to to protect ourselves and our families, and in a crisis we help those we know, not strangers - but it isn't easy for us to do this at others' expense or to make others suffer. It's difficult for human beings to be unkind, and unpleasant to be arrogant. There's always a reason for aggression, and the only effective weapon against it is to remove the cause. Fear is lack of understanding, and the only way to remove it is by reason and reassurance. Even the hate that comes from fear and aggression begins as a passion for justice. That isn't a paradox. Why did Shylock ask for his enemy's flesh? Because his own had been spat on.I'm also a true believer in the innate goodness of man (when he is aware of his actions) and also a true believer in the dangers of systems that by their nature strip men of their awareness in the name of collectivized control. I'm fiercely libertarian in ideology and loath nothing more than any force that seeks to divide our common humanity into sects, be they religious, nationalistic, or otherwise. Barring my own political missions, read on as Bond finishes by reiterating his mission as an artist.
There are two main sorts of political aggression. The first is the aggression of the weak against the strong, the hungry against the over-fed.That's easy to understand. The strong are unjust, and to survive and get elementary rights many people are forced to act aggressively. The second aggression is of the strong against the weak. How can America drop bombs on peasants in a jungle if, as I said, a sense of human values is part of his nature? It takes a lot of effort, years of false education and lies, indignity, shabby poverty, economic insecurity - or the insecurity of dishonest privilege - before men will do that. The ruling morality teaches them they are violent, dirty and destructive, that the only decent course open to civilized man is to act as his own jailer, and that men in jungles are even worse because they're as savage as animals and as cunning as men - history proves it. So he drops bombs because he believes that if the peasant ever rowed a canoe across the pacific and drove an ox cart over America till he came to his garden, he'd steal his vegetables and rape his grandmother - history proves it. And history like the Bible will prove anything.
An old fascist (or an old miser) is always bitter and cynical. Not because his conscience troubles him! - but because he lives in conflict with his fundamental sense of human values. Men can only be content when they live in peace and shared respect with other men. It seems odd to say these things in a century of fascism and brutality, but the world is unhappy and violent not because we're cursed with original sin or original aggression, but because it is unjust. The world is not absurd, it is finally a place for men to be sane and rational in. Of course demands for justice sometimes conflict. But the reason these conflicts are hard to resolve is that the judge is often more guilty than the other parties. Most established social orders are not means of defending justice but of defending social injustice. That's why compromises inside a nation or between nations are difficult to get, and why law-and-order societies are morally responsible for the terrorism and crime they provoke."
"I wrote Bingo because I think the contradictions in Shakespeare's life are similar to the contradictions in us. He was a 'corrupt seer' and we are a 'barbarous civilization'. Because of that our society could destroy itself. We believe in certain values but our society only works by destroying them, so that our daily lives are a denial of our hopes. That makes our world absurd and often it makes our own species hateful to us. Morality is reduced to surface details and trivialities. Is it so easy to live like that? Or aren't we surrounded by frustration and bitterness, cynicism and inefficiency, and an inner feeling of weakness that comes from knowing we waste our energy on things that finally can't satisfy us? That's true of all parts of society, from the theater of the absurd to the broken windows of a youth club. It's not so odd, then, to say that people are only happy when their lives are based on human values. If we survive we have only two possible futures. Firstly, as technological ants engineered from birth to fit into a rigid society. Or secondly, as people who live consistently by the values that are part of their nature."Bonds final binary: Techno-Fascism or Jeffersonian Utopia are extreme (perhaps he'd suggest that self-destruction is a far more probable denouement), but -at the very least- his call to the artist for articulation of moral sanity is a noble one. It is a call that I personally, and, I think, all of us at 1st Stage intend to help answer.
In any case, that all was just the introduction to one of Bond's plays. I can't wait to take part in the staging of one in its entirety. And, hopefully, I've excited some of you enough to come and see his work. He's rather underplayed here in America and it's time for that to change.
7 Comments:
Oh, come on now.
"Art is always sane"? What does that even mean?
Now, I do happen to agree with what you say at the end--that art can be used to articulate moral sanity. But just about everything else he says is rubbish. "The strong are unjust"? What does strength have to do with justice?
"How can America drop bombs on peasants in a jungle if, as I said, a sense of human values is part of his nature? It takes a lot of effort, years of false education and lies, indignity, shabby poverty, economic insecurity - or the insecurity of dishonest privilege - before men will do that."
Another fan of the conspiracy theory of history. This time, in the fun "I'm going to assume that human nature is a certain way, and then when I observe actual people behaving differently, I'm going to chalk it up to brainwashing" form.
And really, just that passage about sanity:
"Art is always sane. It always insists on the truth , and tries to express the justice and order that are necessary to sanity but are usually destroyed by society." How Rousseau (and, consequently, stupid) can you get? Justice and order are usually destroyed by society--justice is determined by the society, and creating order is the reason that society forms in the first place.
Bond is just full of a lot of nonsense like "Art is always sane" and "All imagination is political". These are meaningless phrases endemic of a frivolous mind.
I'd first like to say that I encouraged Adam to comment harshly on this post (He's not just innately this angry) I firmly believe that where politics and art intersect there always needs to be dialog not dogma.
So Adam and I will dialog a bit.
"'Art is always sane"? What does that even mean?"
asks Adam.
A good question. Part of what makes Bond a great playwright is conviction and simplicity of expression. It also makes him, perhaps, a lousy writer from a scholarly perspective. Big sweeping statements about the nature of nebulous esoteric concepts like Art are always precariously perched on plenty of assumptions and reifications. Nonetheless, what I like to assume Bond is articulating is the idea that Art is always presented in a form that is true (honest) to the content that fills that form. This coherence between message and presentation exist because Artistic creation begins and ends with the subjective perspectives, observations and interpretations of the artist
Follow me...
A scientist and Artist both create discrete quantities of information about a subject.
Say, a theory of gravity, and a painting of an apple falling to the earth.
What makes the scientist's theory "valid" is how universally and empirically true it is (does the theory work with both falling apples and falling planets? Have I been accurate to multiple perceived applications of my theory) This is why the field of science relies on unifying systems: the peer-review system, scientific method, etc.
What makes an artist's painting "valid" is how true to the artist's intentions the end product is (Did I make the apple as red as it looked to me? Did the painting evoke the same emotions in my gut that the original landscape did? Can I give that redness, those emotions to the audience?) This is why the fields of Artistic endeavor focus on training the artist to have fidelity of self expression (freedom of movement for the dancer, accuracy of brush technique for the painter, emotional availability and expression for the actor).
Thereby, we begin to see that Scientific Information Production is contingent upon the producer subverting and/or meshing his personal observations to/with the masses and thereby 'reality'(the search for the objective) while Artistic Information Production is contingent on the producer preserving his personal observations and expressing them faithfully regardless of the masses (the boldest expression of the subjective).
Work in science is generally judged by how well it conforms to a global standard. Work in art is often judged by how boldly it rejects a global standard (by presenting new/challenging/interesting --if perhaps erroneous-- perceptions of reality)
In this line of reasoning, the Artist is always sane because he is (hopefully) being as honest to himself as possible in his work. This may lead to art that is insane by cultural/moral norms but always sane (i.e. homogeneous) with regard to the subjective views of the producer.
Science or politics may be less 'sane' by this definition, because by acheiving objectivity (scientific truth) or political relativity (policy) we may often be ellucidating information that is in opposition to our personal wants.
Example: We create bombs that will, if used, destroy us all. This my be true to our communal wants of national superiority/geopolitical stability, but it is rarely true to our personal wants (WHY WOULD I PROMOTE A SYSTEM THAT POINTS INTRUMENTS OF DEATH AT PERFECT STRANGERS PROVOKING THEM TO POINT INSTRUMENTS OF DEATH AT ME AND MY FAMILY!) This is why we are often in agreement with military build up, but we are at the same time morally and personally uncomfortable.
I'm not saying that there is nothing personally satisfying about stability if it is derived from mutually assured destruction, but I doubt anyone would argue that it's an entirely 'sane' policy. It's MAD.
Nietzsche, in his Twilight of the Idols wrote enthusiastically of the divine personal truth of the 'Dionysian' artist: “Any distinction between a ‘true’ and an ‘apparent’ world — whether in the Christian manner or in the manner of Kant (in the end, an underhanded Christian) — is only a suggestion of decadence, a symptom of the decline of life. That the artist esteems appearance higher than reality is no objection to this proposition. For ‘appearance’ in this case means reality once more, only by way of selection, reinforcement, and correction. The tragic artist is no pessimist: he is precisely the one who says Yes to everything questionable, even to the terrible — he is Dionysian”
ASIDE: I continue to use Nietzsche as a reference point for my argument because a)he's just soooo dreamy, and b)a favorite short college paper of mine regarded this very subject: 'Nietzsche and the Artist'
Well your position is definitely more coherent than the one presented by Bond (to be fair, of course, I'm just going on the passages of his that you quoted). Still, I disagree with you.
What makes an artist's painting "valid" is how true to the artist's intentions the end product is
First off, I don't think that "valid" is a term that applies to art. Art is not right or wrong. Secondly, I have as little regard for intentions in art as I do for just about anything else.
Art is judged by how enjoyable it is; how much it speaks to us personally. I may be curious on some level as to what it was that an artist intended to accomplish, but I could be blissfully ignorant of this fact and it would make not an iota of difference with regards to how I felt about the piece.
An artist could have set out to express a perspective that I found contemptible; yet I may still love their work because my enjoyment of it may have no connection whatsoever to that perspective. Naturally it follows that the opposite is true as well.
Moreover, I see no special virtue in "rejecting" standards any more than in "comforming" to them. I also think it is naive to believe that the art you see flourishing is doing so because of what it rejects--in fact often its success depends upon reflecting the values of a community.
That community may consist of people like the ones around here that you're likely to attract to First Stage. Or it may consist of a community of artists, who are keeping track of one another and expressing themselves by the customs they have all become a part of. Either way, art in isolation I think is quite worthless.
I've told you this before, but I personally believe that the best art is that which connects us by our common enjoyment of it, and continues to do so across generations. To this end, I find the idea of the artist as duty-bound to social commentary as just silly. Good art can expose the subtle contours of human nature, be it pleasant or dark; but there reason to think that it should dwell on either.
(By the way, the link to your essay just takes you back to this post)
Typo in the last paragraph: "but there is no reason to think that it should dwell on either."
You misunderstand me. When I say valid I do not mean good or bad in a vacuum. I mean exactly what you said "how much it speaks to us personally." I was arguing that the most successful artists tend to be those that remain true to there own perspectives, honest to there intentions regardless of whether they conform or reject conformity to the cultural landscape to which they become part.
I'm not arguing intrinsic value. Art is still worth (either in $$$ or attention) what people are willing to pay for it. I'm merely suggesting that what people are willing to pay for (either in $$$ or attention) is based on something generally. We don't buy anything arbitrarily, we look for attributes, signals, and advertisements of quality. As a general rule in artistic matters... I would humbly suggest... that a common signal or incentive that art consumers might respond to is personal conviction and the bold expression of a subjective perspective. That, however, is a normative argument, and a perspective I develop as any competitor in a market might develop, in order to be successful in attracting consumers.
But my primary argument was positive, and, simply stated, it is this: Art makes no attempt at objectivity (otherwise why would a painting of a landscape by Van Gogh ever garner more $$$ --and cultural clout as ART-- than a photograph of the same). Art is art because it is always subjective. Things that aren't art, (other information goods) News, Policy, Science, all at least aspire to some objectivity. You and I both know that this is merely an aspiration (so maybe art and science are the same) but you and I know that in its aspiration one realm of information goods serves to create useful innovation, while in comfortable rejection of objectivity the other realm serves to create objects of great and unique beauty.
That's all well and good, but I'm still going to argue that the artist's "perspective" is entirely irrelevant. It may well be that they don't even have an articulated perspective or set of intentions when they are doing their work; they may just have a vague idea of what they are going for. When they are done, whether or not they are happy with the final product is also entirely irrelevant.
That's just what I happen to believe on the matter, in any case.
I've heard an interesting idea put forward by a philosopher of religion named James P. Carse which could possibly contribute a point that Bond alluded to but has been sorely neglected from my perspective.
Carse's basic premise revolves around Plato's notion of the poet in his Republic, in which they are supressed as long as they do one thing: what we could appropriately call "tow the party line" with our previous encounters with fascist, communist, or otherwise totalitarian systems of belief structures.
Interestingly though, Carse and Nietzsche both agree on one thing: each side in a debate or standoff requires its opponent to maintain its unique identity. At any time when there were Nazis, there had to have been Communists, Jews, Democrats, Foreigners, and any number of possible candidates for extreme positions of outward-directed ego formation. In essence, Nietzsche could have called himself the Anti-Christ in his philosophy because he stood for all the acceptance and subsequent spiritualization of the passions denied by the Christian Church. My favorite quote from him is, "The ideal saint is a eunuch." We can only have meaning if we have opponents.
On a side note, you two seem to have done sufficiently well in directing your own outward quarrel to draw reader attention into the morass of opinions and perhaps evoke an ongoing critique of the ideas presented in Bond.
The fascinating thing for me is how arbitrary the poets' truth can be. In Carse's terms, no system of philosophy can be vitally removed from the philosopher who created it, yet we see exactly this process occurring everywhere. A Marxist does not read the Communist Manifesto or On Alienation as the work of a single person within a historical narrative of thinkers, situation within the historiography of his time and with ensuing developments which shaped his thoughts from the main thinkers and associates of his time (i.e. Hegel, fellow materialists.) The system only makes sense in light of who created it, yet a system of metaphysics, such as Marxism, can be seen as an entire structure of thought which goes beyond the purview of a singly mortal creator's unique influence on history and can spiral into a mode of thinking which so dominates the vital cognitive functions of its devotees that it might as well have the status of Scripture during an Inquisitorial interview.
The artists that Plato seemed to fear were the ones who could hint at how easily we trick ourselves into believing our own righteousness. A suicide bomber and a philosopher have more in common when they cannot realize that they at least tacitly presume to speak for their God or System and have absolute belief in its invulnerability to critique or reason. Yet at the same time, neither seems to accept the fundamental premise of most scientists: any hypothesis can be refuted. Can you name a single statement in all of philosophy which has no been debated at least once? The possible ramifications of skepticism can encompass not only politics but our essentialist understanding of any outlook on the world.
An artist can frame a war in such a way as to question the "sacredness" of patriotism - Do we have to sacrifice entire generations in order to protect our interests, whether territory, resources, or values? Vietnam is now seen in many cases as an unnecessary war, yet what constitutes necessity in warfare? When no other options are available for diplomacy? When the other side needlessly attacks?
Gandhi supposedly once commented that the Jews in concentration camps should have allowed themselves to be completely annihilated in order to show the world the horrible atrocity to which the Nazis were capable. Regardless of the personal horror churning in my own stomach when I read a famous pacifist stating that millions of people should die to prove a point, was he directing our attention to the arbitrary assumption that war is necessary (whether provisionally or totally) or was he subtly indicating that any life of martyrdom presents our moral scales with a horrible balancing game?
Art has the ability to show us "real" events (in that they happened at one point or are vitally present) in their unfolding through a medium. In theater, we have to see that our art is no more necessary for the physical survival of a human being than say television. What makes one medium more widely accepted? Popular preference? Better programming? The quality of the storytelling? For that matter, can any variable we pick suggest anything other than an unknown to our Apollonian sense of rationality?
We often forget that even Apollo had his darker, mysterious side. After all, whose oracle inspired the story of Oedipus, the Iliad, and any number of mythical tales?
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home