Vows, Veils, and Masks: The Performance of Marriage in the Plays of Eugene O'Neill by Beth Wynstra (review)

IF 0.1 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER COMPARATIVE DRAMA Pub Date : 2023-11-27 DOI:10.1353/cdr.2023.a913251
Alexander Pettit
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The application of this truism to wives in O'Neill, however, turns out to be tricky: they <em>do</em> seem a sour and conniving lot, and O'Neill himself <em>was</em> a lousy husband, serially. Thus, as Wynstra observes, the tradition of dismissing these characters as \"undependable,\" \"dangerous,\" \"predatory,\" \"bitches,\" and, in a depressingly Medieval twofer, \"not only lustful but dishonest\" (13). These were the judgments both of 1980s feminists troubled by behaviors of O'Neill's stage-wives and of earlier critics who had discerned attitudes in \"the Master\" (as O'Neill's third wife called him) that they found unobjectionable, per se. No one seems to have considered the possibility that O'Neill's stage-wives might manifest the assessments of causality broadly characteristic of modern drama, naturalism most pointedly.</p> <p>Wynstra corrects this error. In her reckoning, reactive dismissals \"halt curiosity about—and more important, empathy for—the heavy burdens and responsibilities that women shoulder, both in O'Neill's time and in our own\" (175). Her main lines of argument are complementary if not always confluent. First, she positions the wives in the evolving discourse about companionate marriage and uxorial identity promulgated in the \"women's magazines\" of the post-Progressive Era. Second, she posits an O'Neill who habitually \"depicted smart, complex women\" (114). Misogynistic aspects of O'Neill's plays that have been \"used to diminish or dismiss the [wives],\" she asserts, are actually \"rooted in and connected to the cultural norms and expectations for women of the time\" (175). To assume that O'Neill endorsed the totalizing jackasseries <em>du jour</em> is to ignore the nature of an oeuvre preoccupied with society's desecration of the individual. We needn't like Ruth Mayo in <em>Beyond the Horizon</em> any more than we like Hickey in <em>The Iceman Cometh</em>. O'Neill asks us to understand his characters' deformities. Wynstra complies.</p> <p>As her chapter subtitles indicate, Wynstra organizes her book around stages of courtship and marriage, with nods to theme: \"Promises of Marriage,\" \"Early- and Middle-Stage Marriages,\" \"Infidelity and Balance of Power,\" and \"Nostalgia and Narrative-Making in Late Stages of Marriage.\" The schema enables her to present an O'Neill who pondered questions of fidelity, mutuality, and responsibility throughout his career. The recursiveness of O'Neill's thought validates Wynstra's eschewal of chronology and enables a narrative that sometimes, delightfully, <strong>[End Page 288]</strong> feels like a <em>bildungs</em>-play peopled by a succession of characters negotiating the way-stations of marriage. Within each chapter, diverse wives align across the decades of the playwright's career and the genres in which he worked. Wynstra's command of the full corpus is evident throughout.</p> <p>The roster of \"engagement plays\" in Wynstra's opening chapter telegraphs an appropriate lack of interest in qualitative judgments (55): the jejune <em>Now I Ask You</em> and <em>Bread and Butter</em> serve alongside the better and better-known <em>All God's Chillun Got Wings</em> and <em>The Great God Brown</em> and the chestnuts <em>Beyond the Horizon</em> and \"<em>Anna Christie</em>.\" The \"impetuous and passionate\" proposals tendered and accepted in these plays bolster popular myths about romance as the basis of compatibility (16). O'Neill, Wynstra demonstrates, favors quick expository sections that counterpoint a couple's effusions of love and their ignorance of each other. She instances Ruth Atkins's failure to comprehend Robert Mayo's sudden, florid proposal: \"Nothing indicates that she has heard or processed the content of what he says; instead, she is lured by the poetic way he says things, despite the lack of evidence that he actually possesses artistic talent\" (39). But if Ruth is a fool, she's society's...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":39600,"journal":{"name":"COMPARATIVE DRAMA","volume":"85 12","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"COMPARATIVE DRAMA","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/cdr.2023.a913251","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Vows, Veils, and Masks: The Performance of Marriage in the Plays of Eugene O'Neill by Beth Wynstra
  • Alexander Pettit (bio)
Beth Wynstra. Vows, Veils, and Masks: The Performance of Marriage in the Plays of Eugene O'Neill. Studies in Theatre History and Culture. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2023. Pp x + 214. $92.50.

In this confident and overdue analysis of Eugene O'Neill's staged wives, Beth Wynstra reminds us that dramatizing shabby behaviors can be a form of inquiry rather than a revelation of one's own depravity. The application of this truism to wives in O'Neill, however, turns out to be tricky: they do seem a sour and conniving lot, and O'Neill himself was a lousy husband, serially. Thus, as Wynstra observes, the tradition of dismissing these characters as "undependable," "dangerous," "predatory," "bitches," and, in a depressingly Medieval twofer, "not only lustful but dishonest" (13). These were the judgments both of 1980s feminists troubled by behaviors of O'Neill's stage-wives and of earlier critics who had discerned attitudes in "the Master" (as O'Neill's third wife called him) that they found unobjectionable, per se. No one seems to have considered the possibility that O'Neill's stage-wives might manifest the assessments of causality broadly characteristic of modern drama, naturalism most pointedly.

Wynstra corrects this error. In her reckoning, reactive dismissals "halt curiosity about—and more important, empathy for—the heavy burdens and responsibilities that women shoulder, both in O'Neill's time and in our own" (175). Her main lines of argument are complementary if not always confluent. First, she positions the wives in the evolving discourse about companionate marriage and uxorial identity promulgated in the "women's magazines" of the post-Progressive Era. Second, she posits an O'Neill who habitually "depicted smart, complex women" (114). Misogynistic aspects of O'Neill's plays that have been "used to diminish or dismiss the [wives]," she asserts, are actually "rooted in and connected to the cultural norms and expectations for women of the time" (175). To assume that O'Neill endorsed the totalizing jackasseries du jour is to ignore the nature of an oeuvre preoccupied with society's desecration of the individual. We needn't like Ruth Mayo in Beyond the Horizon any more than we like Hickey in The Iceman Cometh. O'Neill asks us to understand his characters' deformities. Wynstra complies.

As her chapter subtitles indicate, Wynstra organizes her book around stages of courtship and marriage, with nods to theme: "Promises of Marriage," "Early- and Middle-Stage Marriages," "Infidelity and Balance of Power," and "Nostalgia and Narrative-Making in Late Stages of Marriage." The schema enables her to present an O'Neill who pondered questions of fidelity, mutuality, and responsibility throughout his career. The recursiveness of O'Neill's thought validates Wynstra's eschewal of chronology and enables a narrative that sometimes, delightfully, [End Page 288] feels like a bildungs-play peopled by a succession of characters negotiating the way-stations of marriage. Within each chapter, diverse wives align across the decades of the playwright's career and the genres in which he worked. Wynstra's command of the full corpus is evident throughout.

The roster of "engagement plays" in Wynstra's opening chapter telegraphs an appropriate lack of interest in qualitative judgments (55): the jejune Now I Ask You and Bread and Butter serve alongside the better and better-known All God's Chillun Got Wings and The Great God Brown and the chestnuts Beyond the Horizon and "Anna Christie." The "impetuous and passionate" proposals tendered and accepted in these plays bolster popular myths about romance as the basis of compatibility (16). O'Neill, Wynstra demonstrates, favors quick expository sections that counterpoint a couple's effusions of love and their ignorance of each other. She instances Ruth Atkins's failure to comprehend Robert Mayo's sudden, florid proposal: "Nothing indicates that she has heard or processed the content of what he says; instead, she is lured by the poetic way he says things, despite the lack of evidence that he actually possesses artistic talent" (39). But if Ruth is a fool, she's society's...

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誓言、面纱和面具:贝丝·温斯特拉《尤金·奥尼尔戏剧中的婚姻表演》
代替摘要,这里是内容的简短摘录:回顾:誓言,面纱和面具:尤金·奥尼尔戏剧中的婚姻表演贝丝·温斯特拉亚历山大·佩蒂特(传记)贝丝·温斯特拉。誓言、面纱和面具:尤金·奥尼尔戏剧中的婚姻表演。戏剧历史与文化研究。爱荷华城:爱荷华大学出版社,2023。Pp x + 214。92.50美元。贝丝·温斯特拉(Beth Wynstra)对尤金·奥尼尔(Eugene O'Neill)笔下的妻子们进行了自信而迟来的分析,她提醒我们,将卑劣的行为戏剧化可以是一种探究,而不是对自己堕落的揭露。然而,将这一真理应用到奥尼尔的妻子身上却显得有些棘手:她们看起来确实是一群刻薄而纵容他人的人,而奥尼尔本人则是一个糟糕的丈夫。因此,正如温斯特拉所观察到的,传统上把这些角色贬为“不可靠”、“危险”、“掠夺性”、“婊子”,在令人沮丧的中世纪双重建议中,“不仅好色而且不诚实”(13)。这些是20世纪80年代的女权主义者的判断,他们被奥尼尔的舞台妻子的行为所困扰,而早期的评论家们也发现了“大师”(奥尼尔的第三任妻子对他的称呼)的态度,他们认为这些态度本身是无可非议的。似乎没有人考虑到奥尼尔的舞台妻子们可能会表现出现代戏剧中对因果关系的广泛评价,其中最尖锐的是自然主义。Wynstra纠正了这个错误。在她看来,反应性的驳回“停止了对女性所承担的沉重负担和责任的好奇,更重要的是,停止了对女性所承担的沉重负担和责任的同情,无论是在奥尼尔的时代还是在我们自己的时代”(175)。她的主要论点虽然不总是一致,但也是相互补充的。首先,她将妻子置于后进步时代“女性杂志”中关于伴侣婚姻和女性身份的不断演变的话语中。其次,她假设奥尼尔习惯性地“描绘聪明、复杂的女性”(114)。她断言,奥尼尔戏剧中“被用来贬低或贬低(妻子)”的厌女方面,实际上“根植于并与当时对女性的文化规范和期望有关”(175)。如果认为奥尼尔认可了今日的总混混系列,那就是忽视了这部专注于社会对个人的亵渎的作品的本质。我们不需要像《地平线之外》中的露丝·梅奥,就像我们不需要像《冰人来了》中的希基一样。奥尼尔要求我们理解他笔下人物的畸形。Wynstra加以遵循。正如章节字幕所示,温斯特拉围绕求爱和婚姻的各个阶段来组织她的书,并向主题致敬:“婚姻的承诺”、“早期和中期婚姻”、“不忠和权力平衡”以及“婚姻后期的怀旧和叙事”。这种模式使她能够呈现一个在整个职业生涯中思考忠诚、相互关系和责任问题的奥尼尔。奥尼尔思想的递归性证实了温斯特拉对时间顺序的回避,并使叙事有时令人愉快地感觉像是一部由一连串人物协商婚姻的驿站组成的成长剧。在每一章中,不同的妻子在剧作家几十年的职业生涯和他的作品类型中排列。温斯特拉对整个语料库的掌控贯穿始终。温斯特拉在书的第一章中列举了一系列“参与剧”,恰如其分地显示出他对定性判断缺乏兴趣(55页):《现在我问你》和《面包和黄油》与更出名的《上帝的小鸡长了翅膀》和《伟大的布朗上帝》以及《地平线之外的栗子》和《安娜·克里斯蒂》并列。这些戏剧中提出和接受的“冲动和激情”的建议,支持了关于浪漫是和谐基础的流行神话(16)。温斯特拉指出,奥尼尔喜欢用简短的说明性段落来对比一对夫妇流露出的爱意和他们对彼此的无知。她举了露丝·阿特金斯(Ruth Atkins)未能理解罗伯特·梅奥(Robert Mayo)突然提出的华丽提议的例子:“没有任何迹象表明她听到或处理了他所说的内容;相反,她被他富有诗意的说话方式所吸引,尽管没有证据表明他确实拥有艺术天赋”(39)。但如果露丝是个傻瓜,她就是社会的……
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来源期刊
COMPARATIVE DRAMA
COMPARATIVE DRAMA Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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0.10
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发文量
23
期刊介绍: Comparative Drama (ISSN 0010-4078) is a scholarly journal devoted to studies international in spirit and interdisciplinary in scope; it is published quarterly (Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter) at Western Michigan University
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In Memoriam: Clifford O. Davidson: 1932–2024 "Simply Sitting in a Chair": Questioning Representational Practice and Dramatic Convention in Marguerite Duras's L'Amante anglaise and The Viaducts of Seine-et-Oise Rewriting Idolatry: Doctor Faustus and Romeo and Juliet Measuring Protagonism in Early Modern European Theatre: A Distant Reading of the Character of Sophonisba Theater, War, and Revolution in Eighteenth-Century France and Its Empire by Logan J. Connors (review)
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