Tuesday 4 November 2014

‘The Mourning Becomes Electra’


Subject: The American Literature (Paper-10)

Study: MA

Year: Semester – III

Guided By: Heenaba Zala

Submitted To: Department of English

University: MKBU

‘The Mourning Becomes Electra’


Prologue:
          ‘Mourning Becomes Electra’ is a play or rather we can say it a play cycle because it is a Trilogy. It was a part of The American Literature. It was written quite earlier but it was first executed on 26th October, 1931 at Broadway, New York City. And here we can mention that this play performed very well on stage and on audience’s mind because it was run for more than 140 shows in a year only. It was written by Eugene O’Neill, an Irish American Playwright.
He was Noble Laureate and Pulitzer Prize Winner for his plays. These names are enough to just sketch his image and place in field of literature. He was born and brought up in New York City and his life was much reflected in his works of literature.
“There is no present or future- only the past, happening over and over again”                                      -Eugene O’Neill(O'Neill)
Here he tries to put his feelings and emotions about life into words. He resolutely believes that life ha so contemporary time or no upcoming time. Life is just past. Life is just a former. Life is just a history. And as we also believe that history repeats itself and so it occurs repetitively in one’s life. As he was a son of an actor, plays, dramas, and theaters are inheritance for him. But he also saw a very dark phase in his life, too. His dark side is also reflected in most of his works. He was bitterly pinned by problems and destiny during his childhood. He also suffered from alcoholism and depression, too. He was hunted by problems and that situation leads him to the point of suicide, too. (Editors)But at the end he died natural death after so many health problems. May be he was destine for it only.

Tragedy:
          Basically ‘Tragedy’ is a form of drama. It contains human suffering.It generates catharsis among the audience. This word basically derives from classic Greek language.
“It is restful, tragedy, because one knows that there is no more lousy hope left. You know you're caught, caught at last like a rat with all the world on its back. And the only thing left to do is shout -- not moan, or complain, but yell out at the top of your voice whatever it was you had to say. What you've never said before. What perhaps you don't even know till now.”   -Jean Anouilh
‘Tragedy’ gives chance to make their self free and relax to the audience. It is very famous and prominent form of literature. The pessimism of the Greeks may have been equally black, their tragedies just as aware of the crime of existence, still “they would have despised”, as William James observed, “a life set wholly in a minor key, and summoned it to keep within the proper bounds of lachrymosely”. The dissetisfaction, exhaustion, and apathy which O’Neill’s tragedy increasingly reflected were conditions completely foreign to Greek tragedy. The Greeks were never so contemptuous of life as to seek consolation in death, nor so afraid of death as calm their fears by promising themselves the fulfillment after death. All that they had vainly earned for in life. O’Neill is not to be censured for the predicament, in which he found himself, or for the fashion in which he chose to extricate himself, but rather of misinterpreting his dream. For however ingeniously he substituted the premises of a rationalistic psychology, however adeptly h interpolated his allegory, however glibly he spoke of fate and destiny crime and retribution, guilt and atonement, his dream in tragedy was not the Greek dream. The play Mourning Becomes Electra’ has much in common with the grand style of ancient Greek tragedy. It is the suffering of human beings that results in an ennobling effect. The characters have complex psychological hang-ups which contribute towards their doom. On the Greek pattern we have a trilogy with three parts: The Homecoming, The Hunted, and The Haunted. Whereas in the Greek cases, the psychological aspect is disguised and barely identifiable, in O’Neill it constitutes the essence of drama.

‘Mourning Becomes Electra’ is also that type of tragic drama which creates such catharsis among the audience. It creates flow of emotions among the audience. This play is divided into basic three parts:
-        Homecoming
-        The Hunted
-        The Haunted



In Mourning Becomes Electra, O’Neill exemplified what Schopenhauer declared to be the “true sense of tragedy”, namely “that it is not his own individual sins the hero atones for, but original -sin, i.e., the crime of existence itself.” so, devoted as he to this conception, that he permitted it to inform the entire trilogy. It Reconciles to Death the appearance of Mourning Becomes Electra subsequent to Krutch’s estimate in 1929 of modern tragedy gave Crutch no cause to revise his assertion that the “tragic solution of the problem o existence, the reconciliation to life by means of the tragic spirit is… only a fiction surviving in art.” Indeed, O’Neill’s play bears out the statement by achieving precisely the opposite results : Electra offers a solution not to the problem of existence but to that o nonexistence ; it reconciles not to life, but to death. Nor did O’Neil invoke that Tragic Spirit which Krutch regarded as the produce either of a “religious faith in the greatness of God” or of “aith in the greatness of man” although by 1932 it seemed to Krutch that he had satisfied this demand, that he had, in short, succeeded it investing man “once more with the dignity he has lost”. “The greatness of the plays”, he insisted, begging the question, “lays it the fact that they achieve a grandeur which their rational framework is impotent even to suggest.”
           
No play is ever written with a critical theory in mind. The creative writer doesn’t adopt a framework within which he has to put together his ideas. Such an attitude would place a severe restriction on his literary creation. Once the intended piece of literature takes a final shape and comes in the public domain, it is then that literary criticism and appreciation is applied. So is it with Mourning Becomes Electra. O’Neill is a master craftsman but in this play it so appears that he was
writing within the psychological and psychoanalytical framework. The play opens with ordinary people gossiping about the extra marital affairs of Christine, wife of Ezra Mannon. This is a Freudian start as sex is the base of human emotions. We come across the servant/gardener Seth who has the role of chorus of the old Greek tragedy. His comments are in the psychoanalytical tradition as he gives a free narration of the past, present and the future of the Mannon family. The arrival of Ezra Mannon introduces Lacan’s concept of the “Law of the Father”. He is the perfect patriarch who has exhausted himself in the struggle for gender and phallic supremacy. He served in the army, and then became the Mayor of the town, then a Brigadier-General in the civil war. On top of all he was a judge. When the head of the family is the be-all and end-all, it is natural that his offspring are likely to be stunted while growing in the shade of this majestic tree. This dwarfing of personality gives birth to castration complex of Lacan. The son feels obliged to love only one woman that is his mother. In the Freudian tradition this love to begin with may be innocent – the natural baby feeling for mother canget transformed into carnal emotion with clear physical characteristics. Same is the case with daughter Lavinia. She is in love with her father which Freud wouldinterpret as a consequence of Electra complex. This is explained in the play byher obsession for Adam Brant – her mother’s lover. Instead of going for the morebenign and gentle suitor Captain Peter Niles she is consumed by the passion forthe look alike of her father – Adam Brant. The playwright tells us that the loverhas all the features of Ezra Mannon. They look one and the same. Therefore, shebecomes a natural enemy of her mother. When it becomes clear to her she cannotpossess what she desires, she decides to put an end to the object of desire. Thedeath of Ezra Mannon through a heart attack induced in a moment of extremestress is both clinical and psychological in the Freudian context.

            In Mourning Becomes Electra, he was convinced that “once more we have a great play which does not ‘mean’ anything in the sense that the plays of Ibsen or Shaw mean something, but one which does, on the contrary, mean the same thing that ‘Oedipus’ and ‘Hamlet’ and ‘Macbeth’ mean––namely, that human beings are great and terrible creatures when they are in the grip of great passions, and that the spectacle of them is not only absorbing but also and at once horrible and cleansing.” Here, it seems Krutch is entirely wrong. Not only has he missed the “meaning” of O’Neill’s trilogy, he has discerned in O’Neill’s characters qualities that are mostly nonexistent. They are characters, moreover, whose passions are infantile rather than great, are a spectacle that is horrible but scarcely cleansing. Catharsis is a condition which O’Neill seldom achieved, preferring, as he did, narcosis or necrosis. That the deficiencies of Mourning Becomes Electra, when it is compare “with the very greatest works of dramatic literature”, are limited only to its language, is an opinion which, if our judgments have been even moderately sound, has little to be said in its support. There is equally little to be said for Krutch’s contrast of Ibsen and O’Neill and, wherein he finds that O’Neill avoided the central fault of Ibsen’s tragedies, namely, that they are “too thoroughly pervaded by a sense of human littleness to be other than melancholy and dispiriting.”

The Emotional Dynamics
More restrained than Krutch, George Jean Nathan never, comparedMourning Becomes Electra “with the very greatest works of dramaticliterature”, but he did declare it to be “indubitably one of the finest playsthat the American theatre has known”. Like Krutch, he mistookWeltschmerz for tragedy and ascribed purgative powers to hyper emotionalismand to the manifestations of a neurotic sensibility. ButNathan came closer to the truth when he observed that O’Neill’s“passionate inspiration “the sweep and size of his emotional equipmentand emotional dynamics” transcended the characters and the play., This isa euphemistic way of saying that Mourning Becomes Electra contains noadequate equivalent for the playwright’s excess of feeling. It is a fault thatis present in most of O’Neill’s plays, and O’Neill himself was apparentlyaware of it when in Mourning Becomes Electra he consciously shunned “themany opportunities for effusions of personal writing about life and fate.”If the trilogy is less effusive than some of the preceding plays, it’sgrandiosity lots threefold greater than most. If it contains less “personalwriting”, it is far from reticent concerning the author’s conception of lifeand fate, a conception which suggests that the glow felt by Nathan to bespreading over all–– “the glow that is O’Neill” ––is less “luminous andradiant” than feverish.

Instinctive Perception of Tragedy:
                  
Having defined “true tragedy...as a dramatic work in which the outward failure of the principle personage is compensated for by the dignity and greatness of his character”, Krutch concludes that “O’Neill is almost alone among modern dramatic writers in possessing what appears to be an instinctive perception of what a modern tragedy would have to be.” Yet one has only to strip Mourning Becomes Electra of its spiritual malaise, its Freudian machinery, its self conscious symbolism, its Gothic properties, its turgid style, is see how little better O’Neill has succeeded than Ibsen in satisfying Krutch’s definition of “true tragedy”. Ghosts, too, was a tragedy of family guilt in which the original scene is traced to the life-denying impulse. One side is happiness, on the other is “the source of the misery in the world” : law, order, duty. Living in the house polluted by her husband’s profligacy, Mrs. Alving, the counterpart of Christine, revolts against the restrictive virtues which society has imposed upon her and which prevented Alving from finding “any outlet for the overmastering joy of life that was in him”. Oswald, haunted by his father’s sin, suffers not only physical consequences thereof, but repeats––like Orin––the parents’ behaviour. Where Orin is afflicted with a stubborn case of Weltschmerz, and. complications induced by a wound in the head––the dowry of the Mannons in general, Ezra in particular––Oswald suffers from congenital syphilis–– the indirect actions. When, at the conclusion of the tragedy, Oswald locks himself and his mother inside their haunted house for paying out the family curse much as Lavinia is. Surely the madness of a paretic is not more melancholy and dispiriting than the masochism of a woman who denies herself the pleasure of dying.


‘The Mourning becomes Electra’ with Greek Myth:
          It is acontinuation of the Greek tradition. It is rare to find two principal complexes“Electra” and “Oedipus” in one work of art. Here we have both as parallelthemes. The tragic implications as will be observed are of the kind that generatesemotions of purgation and emotional relief. However, it’s set in a modern (20thcentury) milieu. The characterization, the story line, the plot are all reflective ofthe ancient traditions. The names and sequence have been modified to serve theplaywright’s intentionality. The substitution is shown with the main charactersresembling the principal dramatis personae of the past: Lavinia Mannon –Electra; Christine Mannon – Clytemnestra; Ezra Mannon – Agamemnon; CaptainAdam Brant – Aegisthus; Orin Mannon – Orestes; Captain Peter Niles – Pylades.Instead of the Trojan War, here in the background we have the American CivilWar. Clytemnestra had waited for ten years for her husband to return from the
conflict. Although she had governed well, she had committed the mistake oftaking on a lover in the form of Aegisthus. With him she had conspired to put todeath her hero husband. In the play under review, it is Christine who hascuckolded Ezra Mannon. Christine is far more venomous than Clytemnestra.Whereas the latter had some grievance because her spouse had sacrificed theirdaughter Iphigeneia to please the gods; Christine had no such anger to beredressed. For her it was a simple case of husband change. Having got bored orfed up with one Patriarch, she wanted to experience the ecstasy of love. Up to thispoint the story may be taken as a recasting of the Greek myth. What happensahead is O’Neill’s own interpretation. In this case the daughter Lavinia too is in
love with the mother’s paramour and hence an opponent. There is a strong psychoanalytical stance as the daughter is expressively preoccupied with“Electra” complex. She is consumed by love for father and is obsessivelyinvolved in revenge for his death. Christine is sly and malicious and she plans themurder in a cunning manner. Knowing that the husband has a heart condition, shelets it be known in the public about the gravity of his ailment. Meanwhile sheconspires with Brant to make sure that the plans do not prove abortive. She asksfor poison with the stratagem being that on his return she would copulate withhim and in a fit of frenzy make him suffer from an induced heart attack. Ithappens as planned and when Ezra asks for his medicine, she gives him thepoison. Consequently he dies, only to give birth to a series of violent revengekillings. When the brother Orin returns from the war, the sister Laviniamanoeuvres him in a situation where he kills Brant. Before he does so, thereader/audience has to undergo the sordid experience of yet anotherpsychological aberration, in the form of incestuous relationship between motherand son. Thus the killing of Brant serves three purposes; the father is avenged,the mother is punished and the rival is eliminated. The cursed house of Atreus(Mannon) suffers multiple moral lapses. There is incest between the brother andsister. In all the tragic happenings, it is Lavinia who is the prime factor of
personality shortcomings. She would neither like her brother to have a normalrelationship with Hazel nor allow herself to have ties with Captain Peter Niles. Inthe end, she drives Orin to madness and suicide just as she had driven her motherto frustration and suicide. Finally she draws the curtains on her own self and optsfor the life of a recluse. A mood of tragedy prevails over the entire unfolding ofthe dramatic sequences. All the characters yearn for respite and redemption butthere is none. The most pitiable individual is the mother Christine who one feelsdeserves a break from the monotony and misery of a star-crossed marriage. It isin her death that the audience reach the climax of tragic empathy. The therapeuticeffect is felt as the viewer is shocked into a trance like state of cataclysm.

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