The mix of the
rational and sexual in modernity is nowhere better mirrored than in Euripides’ The
Bacchae (HB62/2)
Pentheus, king of Thebes, is a totally split personality. He at omce cages
Dionysus in the pursuit of social order, then succumbs to his temptations of
wild and ill-clothed women frolicking on the hillsides.
He is almost the
picture of someone who uses “nice calculations” (Euripides, The
Bacchae and other Plays, Penguin Classics 1954, page 188) in a very
bureaucratic sense, ticking all the boxes of officialdom, law and order.
But is that
rational – or pettiness? “The insane man is the man who has lost everything
except his reason” – GK Chesterton (The
False Apollo). A rational man, in
the classical sense, must have empathy so as not to be cut-off from nature’s
call.
Pentheus’s rationality is only skin-deep so that, when Dionysus offers
his thrilling sights from a wood,
“I would give a large sum of gold to see that.” (page 206)
Yes, indeed, money is the very heart and soul of reason, when it is
applied to pleasure! Pentheus cannot release his mind from the petty
calculations of officialdom in his wood-spying antics, persuading himself it is
just research (“just”, legal) - and calls down berserk frenzy of the capering
Maenads.
(page 215)
It is this ungodly mix of petty officialdom with sex which is so very
modern. This is what I call the dark metamorphosis whereby calculation (number)
and sex become one through the dominion of thought.
This is wholly unnatural, since sex is a dance like the Maenads. It is
being like the wild animals and, in fact, in the play,
(page 203)
Pentheus’s pettiness brings down the savagery of the wild women, who
cannot abide his calculating infiltration.
Pentheus could be taken to represent number (or money) as against the
spirit of dance that partakes of the beast in the field, running round with gay
abandon (P14) This spirit
when roused is blood and power, or as gentle as the lamb. The two sides of
nature, predator and prey.
Also plants, since the women wear garlands and other bits of shrubbery.
The spirit of the plants, I just recalled, was invoked at Findhorn community by
Dorothy MacLean and others (having just seen her obit.)
The play does also make reference to the fate of Actaeon, the hunter who was turned into a deer and slain by the hounds of Diana (Artemis).
HB31
The 1972 Jean-Luc
Godard film Tout va Bien does have a few similarities with the Euripides
play. The scene of the factory takeover has a sequence of singing and dancing “grevistes”.He is desperate, and starts running round the building. Finally he breaks a window. It is a sort of Latin humour, crude and lewd, that would have gone down well in ancient Greece (see Aristophanes P47) The reality of his distress is the savagery of the anarchists versus the rational and numerical.
Pentheus is
torn apart by his mother and sister