Sunday, December 29, 2019
Essay on Yankââ¬â¢s Absurd Inheritance in The Hairy Ape
Yankââ¬â¢s Absurd Inheritance in The Hairy Ape It is intriguing how Eugene Oââ¬â¢Neill stages the audience for The Hairy Ape. When the curtain opens upon the forecastle of the transatlantic liner, the audience is immediately beset by Yankââ¬â¢s seemingly unassailable sense of identity. ââ¬Å"Everting else dat makes de woild move, somepââ¬â¢n makes it move. It canââ¬â¢t move without somepââ¬â¢n else, see? Den yuh get down to me. Iââ¬â¢m at de bottom, get me!â⬠(261). Yank trumpets himself, in effect, as the prime mover of the industrial world. He ââ¬Å"belongsâ⬠because that world, like its metonym the ocean-liner, depends upon him to function: ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢m de ting in coal dat makes it boin; Iââ¬â¢m steam and oil for de engines . . . Steel, dat stands for de whole ting! And Iââ¬â¢mâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦Treat ââ¬Ëem rough, datââ¬â¢s meâ⬠(255). When the ââ¬Å"alienation effect intervenes,â⬠notes Brecht in his discussion of Chinese acting, it does not inhib it the spectatorsââ¬â¢ emotions but instead disengages those emotions from their implicit connection to character so that they ââ¬Å"need not correspond to those of the character portrayedâ⬠(Willet 94). It is not so much that Oââ¬â¢Neillââ¬â¢s audience, at the beginning of the play, reacts with Yank, as it is that his audience reacts to Yank. Oââ¬â¢Neill, then, stages his audience to be as critical towards, as they are sympathetic to, both Yankââ¬â¢s ideology in this opening scene and to his struggle to belong in the scenes that follow. It is clear that Oââ¬â¢Neill intends Yank, at least in part, as a modern day Everyman. In an interview for the New York Herald Tribune in 1924, Oââ¬â¢Neill describes Yank as ââ¬Å"a symbol of man, who has lost his old harmony with natureâ⬠; but Yank is not exclusively symbolic, for later in the same interview, Oââ¬â¢Neill admits, ââ¬Å"I personally do not believe that an idea can be readily put over to an audience except through charactersâ⬠(110). It is, instead, that Yank is an allegorization of humanityââ¬âboth ââ¬Å"an abstract expressionistic symbolâ⬠and ââ¬Å"a concrete dramatic character,â⬠to borrow Peter Egriââ¬â¢s terminology (98). But if Yank is an Everyman whose struggles allegorize those of humanity, then he is clearly an Everyman made strange. The reason why Oââ¬â¢Neill distances his audience undoubtedly derives from what he considers to be
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