РефератыИностранный языкBrBrecht Jones And Artaud Essay Research Paper

Brecht Jones And Artaud Essay Research Paper

Brecht Jones And Artaud Essay, Research Paper


In LeRoi Jones’s play, “Dutchman,” elements of realism, naturalism and


non-realism abound. The play features characters such as Clay, a


twenty-year-old Negro, Lula, a thirty-year-old white woman, both white


and black passengers on a subway coach, a young Negro and a conductor.


All of these characters take a ride that, for each, ends with different


destinations and leaves the audience to sort through the details and


find conclusions themselves. In this play, Jones uses realistic,


naturalistic and non-realistic elements to convey social issues such as


racism in the author’s own disillusioned style. Jones’s portrayal is


supported with the influences of Bertolt Brecht and Antonin Artaud,


whose own disillusionment enhanced their works and greatly diversified


theatrical conventions. “Dutchman” is a play that should be talked


about by its audience so they can take part cleanse themselves of the


issues within, therefore, as many conclusions can be drawn by the


individu! als exposed in this play as there are numbers of people that


have seen or read it.


Realism and naturalism arose out of a world which was


increasingly becoming scientifically advanced. Airplanes,


railroads, automobiles, steamboats and communication advances


such as television, radio, the telephone and the telegraph


increased the speed and the amount of information that human


beings can send. Realism and naturalism ” . . . arose in part


as responses to those new social and philosophical conditions


(Cameron and Gillespie, pg. 335).” Following in a realistic


style, Jones sets his play in contemporary times and in a contemporary


place- the subway. Jones sets the scene with a man sitting in a subway


seat while holding a magazine. Dim and flickering lights and darkness


whistle by against the glass window to his right. These aesthetic


adornments give the illusion of speed associated with subway travel.


Realists believed that the most effective purpose of art was to improve


humanity by portraying contemporary life and its problems in realistic


settings. Jones depicts racism and murder in a modern setting to


remind us that racism and racially motivated murders are not issues


only relegated to our nation’s past, nor is the issue of


institutionalized racism.


Jones also used non-realistic elements in his play and was


probably influenced by Bertolt Brecht in doing so. Brecht once


wrote that ” . . . to think, or write or produce a play also


means to transform society, to transform the state, to subject


ideologies to close scrutiny (Goosens, 1997).” Jones was


influenced by Brecht by producing a play in a revolutionary


poetic style which scrutinizes ideologies of race. Jones also


modeled Brecht’s style of character development, creating


^verfremdung’ (estrangement). Brecht reasoned that ” . . . man


is such and such because circumstances are such (Goosens,


1997).” This effect explains the murder of Clay resulting from


a society that has perpetuated institutionalized racism and


segregation as historically acceptable. Brecht’s aspiration


was to provoke an audience into reforming society and to leave


an audience with the n

eed to take action against a social


problem in order to complete an emotional cleansing coined,


^Theatre of Alie! nation.” Jones undoubtedly has the same


goal in mind while creating “The Dutchman.”


Antonin Artaud also had an influence on the theatre, and


possibly on Jones. “Artaud advocated a total spectacle with


lights, violent gestures and noise in place of music (Barber,


1990).” Artaud’s style for theatre and cinema, envisioned as


Theatre of Cruelty, shattered representations of spoken


language and carefully orchestrated theatrical action. Artaud


directed his fury against a society which was in a state of


constant confrontation by favoring controlled writing against


dream imagery. Jones’s use of dialogue where nothing is what


is seems unless spoken by Clay is an example of Artaud’s style


of fury. Lula exemplifies this also through her dialogue with


its slippery candor which eventually causes Clay to respond


candidly with a fury of his own. This fury expresses more


truth about the minds of black America in a nutshell than


countless books on U.S. interracial relations have portrayed.


The play nears its conclusion as Lula violently kills Clay with


wild and raw ob! literation, ending this carefully


orchestrated plot. The use of realistic and naturalistic elements as


well as non-realistic elements makes LeRoi Jones’ play, “Dutchman,” a


hybrid. The realistic elements include the setting (a subway coach


racing along through the subterranean world of lights and busy


stations). The characters, Clay and Lula, are real people with real


histories and real agendas facing a real issue- racism. The


non-realistic elements which predominate in “Dutchman” include Brecht’s


verfremdung and the element of Theatre of Alienation, as well as


Artaud’s racy dialogue and violent gestures elemental in his Theatres


of Cruelty. Because “Dutchman” is a hybrid, it deserves a new


categorization that represents Jones’s style. A term that can describe


this style is “Theatre of Illumination.” The Theatre of Illumination


sheds light on each individual’s unconscious reasoning which forces the


audience to reveal its own consciousness. When this happens, the


audien! ce can be ready to challenge their own judgements in a


constructive way. On the surface, there can always be supported


reasoning found for any prejudice or preconceived notion, but the


Theatre of Illumination transcends the surface preoccupations of


reasoning and dissolves the mists that shroud everyone’s apparent


opinions and renders humanity naked, infantile and in our primordial


state of seeking love and acceptance. In this state, we search for


anyone who will unconditionally love us, and accept them for that. The


Theatre of Illumination awakens our hearts with yearning, sobbing and


human repentance as we realize the wrongs that are possible, and also


realize how useless those wrongs actually are.


Bibliography


Barber, Stephen. “Antonin Artaud.” 1990.


Cameron, Kenneth and Gillespie, Patti. Enjoyment of Theatre. Allyn and Bacon, Boston, 4th ed. 1996.


Goosens, Shay. “Bertolt Brecht: A Theatrical Genius.” 1997.


Jones, LeRoi. Dutchman. William and Morrow, New York, New York. 1964.

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