Thursday, April 4, 2013

Realistic Unrealism in the Winter's Tale and a Rough Draft


Rachel Olson
English 382
Dr. Burton
28 March 2013
Choosing Not to Believe: Realistic Unrealism in The Winter’s Tale
“If you had to choose between romances and tragedies, which would you say is the genre most true to life?”  Well, first we’d have to decide what we mean by romances.  Instead of the kind involving romantic love, we’d be discussing the genre of William Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale.  But even after we discuss romance as a mixture of tragedy and comedy, we still have a tendency as a society to answer firmly, “Tragedy,” to what is true to life.  It is easier to believe that the worst is going to happen, that positive thinking is wishful thinking. Romances, however, are a mix of tragedy and comedy.  Although Shakespeare's romance The Winter's Tale has been accepted and enjoyed by the masses, the romantic elements of mixing genres and the influence of the supernatural within it have led to the critics’ rejection of the play on an intellectual level.  Leontes' interaction with the oracle in the play thus becomes a metaphor for this rejection of the romance, as it is a rejection seemingly based on a desire for “realism.”  In reality, this rejection of the romance of The Winter’s Tale is predicated on an inability to recognize that the romantic elements of the play—its mixture of genres and supernatural elements—are in fact what makes it realistic.
1.      Beef with Romantic Elements in The Winter’s Tale
1.1 Not Picky about Genres
Shakespeare’s decision to write a romance, or a “tragicomed[y],” does seem to have produced a play with a mishmash of literary genres—tragedy and comedy.  Romances involve separation and wandering, characteristic of tragedies, but end in reunion and reconciliation, like the ending of a comedy (Wells, A Dictionary of Shakespeare).  Leontes’ main flaw, his jealousy, is reflective of the main flaw of the heroes in tragedies.  King Polixenes personifies Leontes’ weakness: “This jealousy / Is for a precious creature; as she’s rare / Must it be great; and, as his person’s mighty, / Must it be violent” (Act 1, scene 2, l.452-5).  Suddenly, Leontes’ jealousy is a destructive animal which Polixenes correctly foretells will lead to great violence.  A tragic hero would respond without restraint to a situation that seems to be black and white (Mitchell). 
The play’s shift from tragedy to comedy is abrupt and clearly identifiable.  The shepherd repeats at the play’s shift from tragedy to comedy, “Heavy matters, heavy matters!” (Shakespeare, Act 3, scene 3, l.111).  In a repeated phrase, he has summed up the tragedy of the last three acts.  This shift is complete as he exclaims—in preparation for his own good fortune, and for Leontes’ eventual happiness—“‘Tis a lucky day . . . and we’ll do good deeds on ‘t” (Shakespeare, l.137-8, III, iii).  Shakespeare’s decision to end Leontes’ unhappy years with happiness and marriage is characteristic of comedy, as Dr. Burton points out.  “Tragicomedy” suits Shakespeare’s mishmash of tragedy and comedy, not decisively fitting into one category or the other.   
1.2  Supernatural Elements in The Winter’s Tale

2.      Both Ignored: Romances and the Oracle
It is because of the supernatural elements and mishmash of genres in the play that The Winter’s Tale has been met with contempt by critics.  This contemptuous attitude is reflected even within the play, in Paulina’s words about her friend’s, Hermione’s, statue coming alive: “That she is living, / Were it but told you, should be hooted at / Like an old tale; but it appears she lives” (Shakespeare, l.115-117, V, iii).  Paulina’s choice of the word “hooted” accurately describes others’ reactions to the supposed miracle of Hermione’s reawakening.  It also reflects the common attitude towards the believability of the plot of The Winter’s Tale.  The Oxford English Dictionary defines “hooting” as “call[ing] or shout[ing scornfully or abusively] at or after anyone,” which is what critics did during and after Shakespeare’s day.  In the 1600s, Ben Jonson expressed his dissatisfaction with Shakespeare’s apparently loose touch with reality.  Jonson considered Shakespeare’s seeming disregard for accurate “geography, [his] only partly explained sixteen-year concealment of Hermione, or [his] depiction of Leontes’ unprovoked jealousy” as the result of laziness and manipulation, not artistic judgment (Wells).  Just as Leontes ignored the oracle’s words, critics ignored Shakespeare’s play because they expected truth, not crudely conceived entertainment, from a successful playwright.
3.      The Oracle as a Metaphor for Romance
3.1 Supernatural Elements of the Oracle
Because of both the nature of the oracle and how his words are received, the oracle serves as a metaphor for the play The Winter’s Tale.  The assumed supernatural interference in people’s lives is evident as Leontes expects to hear the truth from the oracle because he or she is “the mouthpiece of the gods.”  In ancient Greece or Rome, an oracle was a priest or priestess “through which the gods were supposed to speak or prophesy” (OED).  Leontes is reassured that his comrades who have gone to the temple of Apollo will “bring all” “from the oracle” (Act 2, scene 1, l.185-6).  The synecdoche apparent in Leontes’ words—“all” to mean truth—reveals his trust in this supernatural power.  The oracle is capable of finding out “all” from the gods, meaning the gods are an integral part of these Sicilians’ lives, just as supernatural elements are an integral part of romances.  Romance has “the character or quality that makes something appeal strongly to the imagination . . . an air, feeling, or sense of wonder [or] mystery” (OED).  This sense of wonder comes from an other-worldliness, a connection with the world of the gods.  As Dr. Young, professor of English at Brigham Young University, explains, “Both the coincidences and the supernatural are expressions of an overarching power—the gods, the powers—that acts through time, through nature, to accomplish ends that humans don’t entirely understand.”  The gods are intimately involved in the lives of the characters who depend on the oracles to learn the truths the gods already know.        
3.2  The Oracle and Leontes
            Leontes wants to hear from the oracle not because he believes the oracle will acquit his wife of the charges against her, but because he believes the oracle will validate his jealousy.  He claims that his excitement to hear the words of the oracle is that he wants the truth: “The great Apollo suddenly will have / The truth of this appear. Prepare you, lords, / Summon a session . . . [Our lady shall] have / A just an open trial” (Act 2, scene 3, l. 198-203).  But his choice of words to describe Hermione in this same speech, before he has heard from the oracle, reveals that Leontes is not as impartial as he would like to appear, and that his trial for Hermione will not be either.  Leontes calls Hermione “disloyal” (Act 2, scene 3, l. 201).  He has already passed judgment on her actions, negated any thought that she is true to him.  Bruce Young, a professor of English at Brigham Young University, explains that Leontes’ jealousy is a sort of fear fulfillment: “At root, Leontes’s jealousy is an expression of insecurity.  This insecurity manifests itself in his difficulty believing that Hermione actually loves him . . . [and] in his not believing her to be as good and gracious as she seems. [He is] blinded by these failures of belief.”  Instead of being motivated by a search for justice, Leontes is blinded into thinking he will be happiest when Hermione is proven guilty. 
When the oracle does come, Leontes cannot believe that he is telling the truth because the answer Leontes has been given is not the answer he expected.  The officer reads the oracle’s words: “Hermione is chaste, Polixenes blameless, Camillo a true subject, Leontes a jealous tyrant, his innocent babe truly begotten, and the King shall live without an heir, if that which is lost be not found” (Act 3, scene 2, l. 130-33). In this moment, Hermione is expunged from all blame and Leontes’ friend Polixenes has been proven his true friend once again.  But Leontes does not join in with the actors who play the spectators here, who are prompted to cheer for the oracle multiple times (Tatspaugh). His reaction to Hermione’s supposed innocence is incredulity, not relief.  “Hast thou read the truth?,” he asks of the officer who speaks the oracle’s words (Act 3, scene 2, l. 134).  His emphatic repetition of his distrust of the oracle reinforces Leontes’s loss of judgment: “There is no truth at all i’ th’ oracle. / The sessions shall proceed; this is mere falsehood” (Act 3, scene 2, l. 137-8).  Because the source he looked to and trusted in has not validated his jealousy, he regards that source as duplicitous.  It is his distrust of the oracle that proves his own judgment cannot be trusted.       
4.      The Real Reasons for Resisting the Romance
4.1 Dismissing the Happy Ending
The Winter’s Tale also faces unavoidable resistance to being taken seriously because its romantic elements lead to a happy ending.  The play has been dismissed as “grounded on impossibilities,” just as Leontes dismisses the oracle’s words as having nothing of truth in them (Dryden).  But these impossibilities are more than Shakespeare’s faulty knowledge of geography; among these “impossibilities” is the idea that tragedy can end in happiness.  Such negative reactions to the play reveal that, as Dr. Young explains, “[T]he play uncovers and responds to our deep suspicion of happy endings . . .  Both [Leontes’ jealousy] and [our suspicions] are expressions of what might be called ‘fear fulfillment.’”  Leontes cannot believe that what would make him happiest is true, that his wife really is faithful to him.  After her experience of reading The Winter’s Tale in class, a student of Dr. Young’s wrote: “I like happy endings even though our class seemed to think that happy endings are unrealistic. . . . I guess that many times the ‘Happy Ending’ we’re looking for doesn’t always come.”  Leontes, like the members of Dr. Young’s class, does not want to trust in happy endings.  In speaking of his own feelings of jealousy, Leontes muses that “[a]ffection . . . dost make possible things not so held . . . dost . . . infect . . . my brains” (Act 1, scene 2, l. 138-146).  But his recognition of his own lack of reason does not stop Leontes from being controlled by his unreasonable suspicions.   
4.2 Dismissing the Supernatural
            This doubted happy ending is only possible because the supernatural intercedes in the lives of the characters in the play and in our own.  While skeptics have approached the scene of Hermione’s resurrection from the grave as a “’low contrivance,’” a crowd-pleasing technique, Bruce Young points out that “We all know that coincidences are part of real life, however much we may be put off by them in fiction, and many of us believe in, or have even experienced, the supernatural” (Wells, Oxford Companion, Young).  What is a very real part of many people’s lives—the supernatural—is the only way there can be a happy ending in The Winter’s Tale.  Antigonus’ dream of Hermione appearing to him after her supposed death is evidence that her death occurred; in other Shakespearean plays, it is only after a character has died that the character can appear in a dream to another (Siemon).  If this is so, then the supernatural is needed to intervene where sixteen years of time have not been able to heal a repentant Leontes’ wounds: “Whilst I remember / Her and her virtues, I cannot forget / My blemishes in them” (Act V, scene 1, l. 6-8).  Perhaps a hyperbolic amount of grieving, the sixteen years Leontes experiences after losing his wife reveals that this now-changed man can find deserved happiness in no other way than to have his dead wife with him again.  As Paulina explains, Hermione’s statue must bequeath her “death to numbness,” must do something that requires supernatural intervention (Act 5, scene 3, l. 102).  It isn’t until after this intervention that Leontes can forgive himself and enjoy the results of his repentance.          
5.      Romance as True to Life
5.1 A Self-Conscious Play
            Shakespeare’s decision to make the play a self-conscious one reminds us that even the seemingly unrealistic elements of the play are part of a more important plan.  Shakespeare’s honest admittal that the incorrect geography referenced in the play and other mishaps certainly are present makes those mishaps less important in determining the play’s validity.  As a gentleman explains after hearing of the reunion of Perdita and Leontes, “This news, which is called true, is so like an old tale that the verity of it is in strong suspicion” (Act 5, scene 2, l. 29-31).  By putting into words the suspicion the audience might feel in hearing this fantastic tale, Shakespeare reminds the audience that he understands their suspicions, their reluctance to admit the reality of a tale with a common happy ending, done so many times before.  As Meek explains in his essay on ekphrasis in The Winter’s Tale, “Shakespeare . . . often uses such representations to reflect on the possibilities and limitations of his own poetic and dramatic art (389). But the play’s self-consciousness reminds the audience that they should move past this feeling and embrace the truth of this tale.  Although the gentleman has heard the tale before, this doesn’t truly diminish the tale’s legitimacy, as Perdita really is returned to her father after a sixteen-year separation.  Despite the gentleman’s unwillingness to believe, the true tale has taken place.    
5.2 Shakespeare’s Conscious Decision to Change Pandosto
Shakespeare’s intentional changing of the novella Pandosto: he changed it for some reason
5.3 The Right Mixture of Tragedy and Comedy
Surprisingly, compared to tragedy in this situation, romance is true to life, mixture of tragedy and comedy
1.       “It is required you do awake your faith”
            End with the statue scene, with Hermione, with Leontes: “it is required you do awake your faith”

Works Cited
http://www3.dbu.edu/mitchell/comedytr.htm
(Wells, A Dictionary of Shakespeare). 
Dr. Burton 
Shakespeare, William. The Winter’s Tale. Ed. Frank Kermode. New York: Signet Classic, 1988.               Print.
Siemon, James Edward. “‘But it Appears She Lives’: Iteration in The Winter’s Tale.PMLA 89.1             (1974): 10-16. Web.
Tatspaugh, Patricia E. The Winter’s Tale: Shakespeare at Stratford Series. Croatia: Arden                          Shakespeare, 2002. Web.

The Oxford English Dictionary: hooting, oracle, romance
(Wells). 
Young, Bruce. “Teaching the Unrealistic Realism of The Winter’s Tale.” Approaches to   Teaching Shakespeare’s The Tempest and Other Late Plays. Ed. Maurice Hunt. New            York: Modern Language Association, 1992. 87-93. Web.  

But it Appears she lives” by James Edward Siemon:

2 comments:

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  2. - I loved your intro Rachel! It was well written and instantly engaged me. Also, good work with the distinction between the reception of the play from the masses vs. the reception from intellectuals.
    - you incorporated the primary text a good amount, but I would suggest looking more closely at your quotes in terms of formal analysis.
    -Each section of the essay had a solid topic sentence that everything within the section related to. It wasn't always clear as to how each section related back to your thesis though, so you might want to add in a little clarification there.
    -good use of secondary sources. I really felt like the quotes/evidence included strengthened your argument.
    -...I'll be honest I was kind of lost on the last two sentences of 5.1

    Hope this helps! And so far, I think it's really good!

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