References to Cultural and Historical Figures in Walker's Play
The dialogue in Joseph A. Walker's play The River Niger makes reference to a wide array of historical and cultural figures, both real and fictional. These references include the Shakespearean character Shy-lock, the African folktale figure Brer Rabbit, the blues great Lightnin' Hopkins, the comic book superhero Superman, the biblical King Solomon, Hollywood movie star Gary Cooper, and the notorious French writer the Marquis de Sade. A brief explanation of who each of these figures is, and the significance of each one to the meaning of Walker's play, will enhance the reader's appreciation of this dramatic work. In act I, John Williams and Dr. Dudley return to the Williams's house, drunk from an evening spent at the local bar. As is characteristic of their friendship, the two banter rather ruthlessly. When Dudley asks John for a drink ‘‘for the road,’’ he replies, ‘‘One for the road! Why didn't you buy one for the road before we hit the road? Shylock stingy bastard.’’ This comment refers to the character Shylock from Shakespeare's play The Merchant of Venice. Shylock is a Jewish lender who insists on extracting "a pound of flesh'' from a man who has not repaid his loan on time. "Shylock" has thus come into common usage to refer to a greedy, stingy creditor who uses extortion to collect his debts.
Shylock has become a controversial character among literary scholars, because, on one hand, he represents a common anti-Semitic stereotype of Jewish people as ruthlessly stingy and greedy, especially in matters of money-lending. Others, however, interpret Shylock as a spokesperson against society's unfair mistreatment of Jews; this interpretation is based on his famous speech to this effect, which begins, ‘‘Hath not a Jew eyes?’’
In Walker's play, John calls Dudley ‘‘Shylock" to indicate that he was stingy in not buying his own last drink while still at the bar. Throughout their banter, John has referred to Dudley as a "Jew.'' It is not clear if his character may in fact be part Jewish; rather, it seems that John is referring to Dudley, a successful African-American doctor, as a "Jew" to insult him. To further the comparison to Shylock, Dudley has recently lent a large sum of money to John to pay his rent. John is thus implying that for Dudley to request a drink from him is equivalent to Shylock demanding ‘‘a pound of flesh'' from the man to whom he has lent money.
Walker's repeated use of phrases such as ‘‘Godd—n black Jew doctor’’ in John's dialogue, and the reference to Shylock, seem to be anti-Semitic in their implications.
In the beginning of act II, John stops mopping the kitchen floor to sit down and work on the poem he is writing. Dudley, his friend and drinking buddy, stops by, and John tells him he's ‘‘just in time’’ to take off for the local bar. John says jokingly, ‘‘Do you know that, I—me—Lightnin' John Williams— more powerful than a speeding locomotive—do you realize that I have mopped this entire house by myself?'' This line includes references to two figures in American cultural history. The first is the great blues musician Lightnin' Hopkins. John is comparing himself to a great African-American blues artist because he has just been working on his own artistic creation—a poem—and is feeling proud of what he's written so far. At the same time, John is being silly by comparing the work of a great musician to the accomplishment of having mopped the floor of a house. Likewise, his use of the phrase ‘‘more powerful than a speeding locomotive’’ refers to the introductory lines of...
(This entire section contains 1670 words.)
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a Superman comic book story. Again, John is describing the accomplishment of his domestic chores, traditionally considered to be women's work, with a legendary image of pure, unchecked, masculine strength and power. This indirect reference is significant to a central theme of Walker's play, which is about African-American men feeling disempowered and emasculated by racial and economic oppression. By referring jokingly to the powers of Superman, John is expressing his feelings of comparative powerless-ness and emasculation.
In the beginning of act II, John plans to sneak out of the house without his wife's knowing in order to escape his housecleaning responsibilities and go out drinking with his friend Dudley. Dudley chides him for "always sneaking around like Brer Rabbit'' instead of acting like an ‘‘African warrior’’ and asserting himself with his wife. Brer Rabbit is a figure from African folktales which were transported to African American and then American culture with the slave trade. Brer Rabbit appears in a cycle of tales which fall into the culturally widespread category of the "trickster" figure. The "trickster" is a character, often an animal, who is able to beat out more powerful opponents through his cleverness; Brer Rabbit, for instance, outsmarts characters such as Brer Bear, Brer Fox, and Brer Wolf.
Brer Rabbit became well-known throughout American culture with the publication of ‘‘Uncle Remus’’ stories by the white writer Joel Chandler Harris (1848-1908) in the book Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Sayings (1880). Harris collected tales of Brer Rabbit from the oral culture of African-American plantation slaves and published them as a series of stories told by his fictional character Uncle Remus, an elderly African-American slave.
In Walker's play, Dudley's mention of Brer Rabbit is first of all a reference to the survival of African cultural roots from the days of slavery to contemporary African-American culture. Second, Dudley is suggesting that John is like Brer Rabbit, using cleverness to outsmart his wife, who is more powerful than he. Dudley contrasts such a trickster figure with the image of an "African warrior,'' thus making clear to John the extent to which he is disempowered and emasculated in his own home and family. One of Walker's primary concerns in this play is African-American men feeling disempowered and emasculated by white American society, as well as by the women in their own homes.
In act II, two of the members of Mo's revolutionary organization, Skeeter and Al, argue to the point where they find themselves holding each other at gunpoint. The stage notes indicate that, ‘‘In furious desperation, Skeeter suddenly reaches inside his coat, but Al is too quick. At about the same time, they both produce their revolvers.’’ As they face each other, Al says to Skeeter, ‘‘Don't make the mistake of thinking a sissy can't play that Gary Cooper s—t if he want to.’’ This line refers to the extremely popular classic Hollywood movie star Gary Cooper (1901-1961), who played the leading man in many films throughout the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, often as the hero in Westerns. He is perhaps most famous for his Academy Award-winning role in the Western High Noon (1952), which ends with one of the most famous shoot-out scenes in movie history.
In Walker's play, Al is referring to the ability of Cooper's Western characters to be fast-on-the-draw, as he manages to outdraw Skeeter. Furthermore, Al refers to himself as a "sissy," because he is a homosexual; in referring to Gary Cooper, Al is indicating that, although homosexuals are stereotyped as un-masculine, or "sissies," he himself can be compared to an icon of American masculinity and heroism.
In act II, during a confrontation with Mo and his fellow "revolutionary'' men, Jeff angrily refers to Chips as ‘‘Marquis de Sade.’’ The notorious Marquis de Sade (1740-1814) was a French writer and eccentric from whose name the term "sadism'' was derived. Throughout his life, de Sade was repeatedly arrested and imprisoned for kidnapping prostitutes and subjecting them to sexual tortures. During the 1780s, de Sade wrote and published several novels describing such sexual transgressions, the most well-known of which are Justine and One Hundred and Twenty Days of Sodom. Although officially banned in France, de Sade's writings became popular among artists and intellectuals during the nineteenth century, and today he is considered by some to have made a significant contribution to French literature. In Walker's play, Jeff refers to Al as the ‘‘Marquis de Sade,’’ because Al has just threatened to rape Ann at gunpoint and has repeatedly boasted of having had sex with a corpse. Unlike the cultural references discussed above, this one is not clearly associated with central themes of the play. However, since Al turns out to be the villain who betrays his fellow "revolutionaries" to the police, this reference works to establish him as a moral degenerate lacking in human compassion.
In act II, Mattie explains to Ann the extent to which her husband John, although now an alcoholic, was once extremely smart and studious. She tells Ann that his fellow college students ‘‘used to call him Solomon,’’ and that ‘‘some of his bummified wino friends still call him that. . . . Solomon!’’ Mattie is referring to King Solomon, who is legendarily the greatest king of ancient Israel.
Almost all historical knowledge of King Solomon and his reign is derived from biblical sources. Among Solomon's most noteworthy accomplishments was the great Temple of Jerusalem. In addition, Solomon is legendary for his wisdom and for his poetry as recorded in the biblical ‘‘Song of Solomon.’’
In Walker's play, the association of John Williams with Solomon is due both to his wisdom and to his skills and accomplishments as a poet. John is a talented poet whose greatest accomplishment is his poem ‘‘The River Niger,’’ which he recites to his wife shortly before his death.
Throughout the play, John's decline as a man is indicated by various actions, characterizations, and comments. His association with the astoundingly accomplished King Solomon suggests that John's potential as a poet and wise, learned man was never realized due to oppressive conditions of racism and poverty.
Walker's play includes a rich variety of references to cultural and historical figures, each of which adds depth and dimension to central themes of African-American cultural identity, black masculinity, and the effects of racism and poverty on the African-American family.
Source: Liz Brent, in an essay for Drama for Students, Gale Group, 2001.
Mother, Sister, Wife: A Dramatic Perspective
Perhaps no single work by a black American playwright has reached so vast an audience as Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun. A success on Broadway in 1959, the play enjoys frequent revivals by professional and amateur theater groups alike. It remains in print twenty-five years later, and the 1960 movie version appears regularly on our televisions. Unknown to this immense audience is the fact that A Raisin in the Sun responds to an earlier play by black playwright Theodore Ward and constitutes the middle third of a larger literary debate—a debate that began in 1938 when Ward's play Big White Fog opened in Chicago under the auspices of the Federal Theater Project. Playwright Joseph Walker contributed the final third in 1973 when he wrote his Obie winning play The River Niger. As the first of the three, Ward's play is innocent of any attempts ‘‘to correct’’ or to displace a precursor text. Big White Fog quite simply dramatizes the story of a long-suffering black family from Chicago's Southside during the ten years between 1922 and 1932. Hansberry in A Raisin in the Sun seeks to correct Ward's representation of black women and to place black political aspirations firmly within the traditional American bourgeois context by countering the revolutionary Marxist politics of Big White Fog. Although The River Niger equivocally endorses/ condemns sixties militancy, Walker really sets for himself a conservative, traditionally male political and social agenda. Stated quite simply, The River Niger valorizes male dominance and female submission. Together the three plays provide an interesting study of the influence black playwrights have on each other and reveal the power that dramatic representation possesses. The plays also demonstrate the influence of a playwright's personal political agenda in shaping character and theme.
The feminist revision of Big White Fog by Hansberry served as a catalyst to playwright Joseph Walker who in his play The River Niger challenges and faults Hansberry's representation of black men and women. In his play, Walker places before us another image of black men and women, one that is as politically charged as Hansberry's. Like her, he identifies his agenda in the play's dedication: "This play is dedicated to my mother and father and to highly underrated black daddies everywhere.’’ The question that the dedication raises is this: Will Walker in rehabilitating "highly underrated black daddies’’ adopt an antifeminist agenda? However, before we turn to the play to seek the answer to this question, it would be useful to look at Walker's personal reminiscences of his father and mother. As Hansberry's recollections of her mother inform her portrayal of women in A Raisin in the Sun, so too do Walker's. In a page-long sentence entitled ‘‘Joe Walker's Autobiography’’ that appears just after the dedication page in the text of the play, Walker writes:
. . . [daddy] was a bad-loud-talking dude of five feet eight inches tall, whom I once saw beat up a man six foot five because he insulted my seven-year-old dignity by beating the daylights out of me on account of I and my buddies were on a hate-little-girls campaign, throwing bottle tops at the cutest little brown oak girl . . . whom I don't think I really hated in retrospect because of her almond-shaped eyes—anyway, my pop was some dude . . . my ma, man, was a scornful bittersweet lovable crazy lady who was not quite as sweet as Mattie in The River Niger but who was pretty goddamn sweet and giving anyway.
Of course, Walker's play is not wholly autobiographical; however, he publicly acknowledges a correspondence between his mother and Mattie, the principal female character, and no doubt intends for there to be an equally strong correspondence between his father and the play's hero, John Williams.
Personal correspondence notwithstanding, The River Niger presents to us a family that obviously and purposely resembles the ones—or one—that we have seen in the two previous plays. There are three generations in the same household, the oldest person being a widow. There is a couple with children. The family struggles to survive financially. There is the question of Africa, and in this play a Jamaican cynic, a sort of anti-Garvey. And, of course, the play's denouement results from American racism and the efforts of this black family to resist and overcome this pervasive fact of life. A closer look at the family and the action of the play will reveal its important and self-conscious dissimilarities to A Raisin in the Sun. The River Niger opens with the Brooks/Lena analogue, Wilhemina Brown, creeping into the kitchen to sneak herself a drink. After pouring herself a cup of coffee, she "stealthily" locates her hidden bottle of Bourbon from which she pours into her coffee ‘‘an extremely generous portion.’’ This comic scene indicates the kind of treatment the elderly black woman will receive in the play and, of course, instructs us how to view her. But everything about her is not humorous. Like Brooks in Big White Fog,
Wilhemina, ‘‘a fair skinned black woman,’’ takes pride in her light complexion and never hesitates to boast of her bigotry. Although she describes her late husband as "black as a night what ain't got no Moon,’’ she happily disparages others who are black. To her daughter Mattie and son-in-law John, whom the playwright describes as "brown," Wilhemina brags of her children: ‘‘And ain't none of 'em black either. . . . Mattie's the only black child I ever spawned—my first and last, thank Jesus.’’ Wilhemina continues to drink and meddle and pontificate throughout the play, and she is the source of much comedy. However, Walker does allow her to redeem herself; she achieves this redemption as she acknowledges that she has played an important role in hampering and ultimately ruining her son-in-law's chances for success. Warning her grandson of the dangers of an early marriage, she confesses: ‘‘Look at your father. He wanted to be a lawyer, didn't he? Then I jumped on his back, then those two no good daughters of mine, then their two empty-headed husbands—then you. The load was so heavy till he couldn't move no more. He just had to stand there, holding it up.'' Conventionally in the drama, self-knowledge no matter how harsh, if honest, is never unwelcomed nor condemned. Yet when Wilhemina indulges in self-evaluation, the results go beyond individual follies and insensitiv-ity. She warns Jeff because she believes that her behavior is typical of female behavior; she cautions her grandson against marriage and women. In the larger political debate on the image of black women Wilhemina's self-assessment produces even worse fruit; women become the real and present danger. Men must be cautious. The conventions of drama only increase the ambiguity of Wilhemina's self-revelation/self-deprecation.
Perhaps ambiguity describes best the nature of Walker's representation of female characters. As the play's hero proclaims: ‘‘So we're contradictions—so what else is new?'' The principal female character, Mattie, described as "an embittered but happy woman'' in the list of characters, is one such contradiction. Mattie always knows her place as a woman. In the midst of a heated family debate, her husband declares: ‘‘I'm the head of this house.’’ She quickly responds, ‘‘Ain't nobody disputing that.’’ Like her mother, Mattie too understands her part in ruining her husband's chances for success. In a history of her married life given to her son's soon-to-be fiancée, Ann Vanderguild, Mattie tells of all the burdens she placed on John's back and of his failed potential. Finally she says: ‘‘I got nobody to blame but myself.’’ Mattie's sense of self is defined by her relationship to John and her unshakable belief that she, his loving black wife, with the help of her mother and sisters and their selfish husbands, turned John into a failure and an alcoholic. Because of this she is willing to accept anything that John does, including his playfully obscene and derisive behavior. But Mattie counts all of this as a part of her "treasure'' and offers a panegyric to John and presumably to the rest of the ‘‘highly underrated black daddies’’ in the world:
A good man is a treasure. White folks proclaim that our men are no good and we go 'round like fools trying to prove them wrong. And I fell right into the same old trap myself. That's why I can't get angry with that man no more. Oh, I pretend to be, but I'm not. Johnny ran a powerful race with a jockey on his back who weighed a ton. So now he's tired. Do you hear me? Tired—and he's put himself out to pasture—with his fifth a day, and I say good for Johnny. I knew he was a smart man. Good for Johnny. If our men are no good, then why are all these little white girls trying to gobble 'em up faster than they can pee straight?
While one assumes that the referent of "them'' in the sentence "White folks proclaim that our men are no good ...’’ is "White folks,'' it could also be ‘‘our men.’’ Consequently the meaning of this sentence is somewhat ambiguous. Whom are black women trying to prove wrong, white folks or their men? While it is clear that"white folks'' are wrong, black women are fools because they do not ignore the mendacity of whites; instead they give heed to it. Note that the praise of black men seems to require self-deprecation from black women. Racism alone does not destroy black men according to Mattie and the play; racism aided by black women proves to be the real culprit.
Mattie's devotion to her husband receives its final test at the play's conclusion, a conclusion that is in many ways a reprise of the last scene of Big White Fog. Through a series of blunders, a group of black militants arrive seeking refuge at the Williams' house. John, who has searched for a battlefield on which he could fight for his people, finally finds one, but he receives a mortal wound in an exchange of gunfire with a police informant whom he kills. Dying, John contrives a plot in which he will be thought guilty of an earlier shooting. After John dies, Mattie, so unlike Ella, takes control of the situation, proclaiming: ‘‘Shut up! And tell it like Johnny told you. He ain't gonna die for nothing, 'cause you ain't gonna let him! Jeff—open the door, son! Tell' em to come on in here! And you better not f—k up!" These are the last words of the play, and they are Mattie's. She, not her adult son, assumes control at her husband's death. Interestingly enough the play's end focuses attention on its own ambiguous treatment of black women. Mattie's strength is real and also a real asset at this time. For her to be less than strong would mock her husband's sacrifice. Yet the fact that she, rather than her son, assumes control promotes female dominance and matriarchy. Surely Walker intends us to view Mattie's powerful and unwavering response as good, but the situation that he sets up valorizes female strength. However, neither her son nor her husband, were he able, would object to this situation.
The ideological justification for Mattie's ascendancy can be found at least in part in the comments of Ann Vanderguild, the third female principal. Immediately after Ann arrives on the scene, she requests assistance in finding a job as a nurse from Dudley, the Jamaican doctor. He replies: ‘‘Oh, these strong black women!" "I'm only strong,’’ Ann responds, ‘‘if my man needs me to be, sir.’’ John enters the discussion with the proud observation: "You hear that, Dudley, a warrior's woman! A fighter. ...’’ Clearly the play endorses this concept of womanhood, and Ann lives by her motto. She allows Jeff to protect her and to make decisions for her. Never does she exert her will. When she asks to participate in the plot to discover the police informant, Jeff adamantly refuses to grant her permission; he agrees only after another man assures him that it will be safe: ‘‘It's safe, Jeff, I swear. You know I wouldn't have my woman doing anything that would put her in a trick. No jeopardy, man, I promise.’’ The ‘‘fighting lady Ann,’’ like Mattie, knows when to make meat loaf and when to fight; decisions, however, are always made within the boundaries established by the head of the household.
It is impossible to ignore in the characterization of Ann a certain amount of correction of Beneatha. First and foremost, Ann is a nurse, a traditionally female profession, and nurses, we all know, take their orders from (male) doctors. Nursing actually serves as an interesting metaphor for the role of women espoused by The River Niger. Women should be strong, but that strength should be circumscribed by male dominance. Beneatha accepts the authority of no one. Only when her brother demonstrates pride and dignity does she respect him as a man, but she never surrenders her ambition or assertiveness. Also, both Beneatha and Ann are central to their plays' discussion of black America's relationship to Africa. Beneatha longs to know her African past. From her African suitor she receives a proposal of marriage and an invitation to return to Africa to practice medicine. Beneatha is offered a future in Africa, a romantic, cultural and professional future: "Three hundred years later the African Prince rose up out of the seas and swept the maiden back across the middle passage over which her ancestors had come. . .’’ (A Raisin in the Sun). Ann, on the other hand, has come from South Africa; she comes to North America to escape the oppression in Africa. Her brothers have also had to flee South Africa for political reasons. Her father remains in jail nine years later because he, in a move that foreshadows John's, sacrifices himself for his sons' freedom and safety. There is neither romance nor a future in the Africa of The River Niger. The romance is in America and most significantly in the African-American male. The paradigm of A Raisin in the Sun is totally reversed in The River Niger. African-American men are the desired, the free and, as we shall later see, the new African.
What do we learn in The River Niger of this African-American man? The play's hero is a ‘‘bad-loud-talking dude,’’ the long-suffering John, the alcoholic poet who seeks a battlefield and finally dies for his people. He had the promise of a great future but because of American racism and four black women, he fails and puts himself out to pasture with a fifth a day. But all of this notwithstanding, he loves his wife Mattie, his mother-in-law Wilhemina, and his son Jeff. When he returns from a binge, having been gone six days, he explains to his wife: "I wanted to write a love poem— to you, Mattie. Words are like precious jewels, did you know that? But I couldn't find any jewels precious enough to match you, Mattie.’’ John's profession of love supposedly compensates for his disappearance and absence at a moment of great personal crisis for Mattie who earlier learns that she has inoperable breast cancer. But the play, like Mattie, truly loves John and indulges his every act.
While on his binge John writes a poem that he offers to Mattie as a token of his love. The poem, ‘‘The River Niger,’’ as John admits, ‘‘ain't a love poem.’’ It is, however, a panegyric to black manhood, and in it, the poet translates himself into Africa, transplanted to America, but Africa nonetheless.
I am the River Niger!
I came to the cloudy Mississippi
Over heels of incomprehensible woe.
I ran 'way to the Henry Hudson
Under the sails of ragged hope.
I am the River Niger,
Transplanted to Harlem
From the Harlem River Drive.
In this redaction of Langston Hughes's ‘‘The Negro Speaks of Rivers,’’ John claims for himself and his black compatriots the heroic past as well as an exclusive right to the African future. The trope that he employs incorporates and transcends the African past. Black American men, as Ann recognizes, possess the power to engender a pan-African world:
Holds hands, my children, and I will flow to the
ends of the earth
And the whole world will hear my waters.
I am the River Niger! Don't deny me!
Do you hear me? Don't deny me
Africa's glorious future will come when Africa in its manifestation as the American male is no longer denied.
But as ambiguity defines the nature of female representation, so does it define male representation. John's disappearance (desertion?) at Mattie's moment of crisis clearly raises questions about his reliability. He may be tormented by Mattie' s illness and impending death, but his response is not un-problematic. Similarly, John's death at the end of the play prompts questions; foremost among these is this: Is his death really meaningful? Does it achieve anything for blacks? John earlier tells Dudley that he seeks a battlefield on which to fight for his race. But John dies in a battle which produces a Pyrrhic victory at best and which wins only symbolic results. In fact, John falls victim to incompetent black revolutionaries as much as he does to white racism. After these revolutionaries fail to locate the police informant and to complete successfully a guerrilla action they arrive at the Williams' home in desperate need of assistance from competent black men. Finally the informant is discovered to be "the closet homosexual'' Al. John attempts to subdue Al, but Al fires and mortally wounds John. In the meantime, the police close in. In the end, John and Al are dead; the revolutionaries have accomplished nothing meaningful, and some impotent, entirely useless and, ironically, wasteful macho bravado has been displayed. John's death wins nothing. John believes that he will die for the cause he holds to be worth his life: ' T found it, Dudley—I found it... my battlefield—my battlefield, man! I was a b—h too....’’ Like so many other battlefields, this one too bears a waste of men. Painfully absent from this is any unequivocal, authorial comment on the waste of John's death. John himself proclaims it to be poetry and dies boasting of his prowess.
As in the earlier two plays the son learns something valuable from the father; machismo is the virtue John passes to his son Jeff. Walter Lee's son Travis learns from his father and grandmother a lesson in pride and dignity. Victor's son Les who converts his father to Marxist revolutionary politics also learns to be proud of his black heritage from his Garveyite father. Of course, Jeff learns things in addition to machismo from his father; foremost among these is a real sense of race pride. Like his father he seeks a battlefield, but Jeff intends to become a lawyer and to fight in the courts. He distrusts the revolution that the incompetent militants seek and presages the play's conclusion when he says: "The revolution ain't nothing but talk, talk, talk, and I ain't gonna waste my life on talk.’’ He will marry the "fighting lady Ann'' and presumably enjoy the status of pater familias. Jeff offers to assist his former gang in finding the informant, but wants no part of their urban guerrilla tactics. He wants to be his own man, free of the claustrophobic restrictions placed on him by others who have less than his best interest at heart. For The River Niger, Jeff is the future. He is black American manhood at its finest, self-assured, self-possessed. He is the heir of the River Niger.
As is often the case, in The River Niger machismo is accompanied by its near-cousin, misogyny; of course, the antifeminist agenda of the play does facilitate its descent into misogyny. We have noted earlier that there is some ambiguity in the representation of female characters, but that ambiguity is resolved when one considers the accumulated language of the play. Hostility, sometimes aggressive, sometimes subtle, characterizes the language of males about females in this play. One obviously must consider the play's idiom, a kind of streetwise, bad dude style; but coupled with the ideological goal of the play, this language cannot be dismissed as unintentionally hostile or as harmless. Examples abound, but none better than the clearly pornographic words of Dr. Dudley Stanton. Dudley, who earlier jokes of how his mother supported him through college and medical school by prostitution, tells of his medical examinations of women: ‘‘I distribute sugar pills and run my fingers up the itchy vaginas of sex-starved old b—s. Women who're dried up, past menopause—but groping for life. They pretend to be unmoved, but I feel their wrigglings on my fingers. I see 'em swoon with ecstasy the deeper I probe.’’ Although there is nothing else quite as excessive as this, the play finds ample opportunity to identify women as ‘‘b—s’’ and ‘‘superb—s.’’ Were this language restricted to a few individuals, it would be easier to see it as language that partakes in characterization and mimesis. But the language is used uncritically and in fact is a constituent part of the male behavior that the play valorizes. When John dedicates ‘‘The River Niger’’ to his ‘‘superb—h,’’ the play's pervasive hostility towards women, whether it is active or passive, becomes impossible to deny or overlook.
Although the misogyny articulated in The River Niger does have its unique roots in black American culture, this misogyny is no worse than that which permeates Western culture. What differentiates the manifestations of misogyny in black culture from its manifestations in the majority culture are the permutations that result from racism. The systematic sexual abuse that black women suffered in America during slavery and well into the twentieth century is widely documented. To consider this abuse to be only the libidinous excesses and license of white men is to misunderstand the political nature of that abuse. Black women had no real political control over their bodies, and their husbands, brothers, fathers and lovers were raped of their power to protect their women from the unsolicited sexual aggression of white males. Indeed, white males used their sexual power over black women as an emblem of the political power that as white men they held over black men. ‘‘Sexually as well as in every other way,’’ Winthrop Jordan writes in White Over Black: "Negroes were utterly subordinated. White men extended their dominion over their Negroes to the bed, where the sex act itself served as ritualistic re-enactment of the daily pattern of social dominance.’’ In effect, the bodies of black women became the battlefield on and over which men, black and white, fought to establish actual and symbolic political dominance and to demonstrate masculine prowess. Truly black men had more than wounded machismo at stake here: the lives and safety of their female relatives and friends were in real danger. Yet the passive role thrust upon black women by this struggle in a very real way served to minimize their individuality and humanity and to objectify them as possessions and symbols. Also because the victimization of black women was intended to humiliate, to emasculate black men, female oppression paradoxically became a version of male oppression and consequently could be construed to be less significant than male oppression. The oppression of black women by white men when viewed only in its racist context, allows for the continuation of that oppression by black men. Nor should we forget that there was an obvious political reason for black men to establish their dominance over black women. Of course, black men would neither desire nor establish a system of oppression against their mothers, sisters, wives and lovers as ruthless and brutal as the one white men instituted against black women, but because the oppression of black women by white men was so politically charged and in part aimed directly at black men, the relationship between black men and black women necessarily reflects these facts. Additionally there exists the belief that the black mother in preparing her son to survive in a racist America ‘‘must intuitively cut off and blunt [her son's] masculine asser-tiveness and aggression lest these put the boy's life in danger.'' Accordingly, Grier and Cobbs hypothesize in Black Rage: ‘‘. . . black men develop considerable hostility toward black women as the inhibiting instruments of an oppressive system. The woman has more power, more accessibility into the system, and therefore she is more feared, while at the same time envied. And it is her lot in life to suppress masculine assertiveness in her sons.’’ Grier's and Cobbs' failure to distinguish here between female lovers and mothers should not go unnoticed. The assertion made here is that all black women partake in this emasculating activity and that all black men respond with a general hostility toward women. Calvin C. Hernton in his book Sex and Racism in America offers yet other and somewhat contradictory reasons for alleged male hostility towards females: ‘‘... there arose in me an incipient resentment ... towards all black women—because I could not help but compare them with white women, and in all phases of public life it was the Negro female who bowed her head and tucked her tail between her legs like a little black puppy.'' The important common denominator here is racism, but its release becomes misogyny. Whether or not we agree with Grier's and Cobbs' assessment or Hernton's is irrelevant. These ideas, expressed as they are, go a long way to explain how racism informs sexism in black America. And it is from this that The River Niger takes shape. No matter what Hansberry's intentions, to those who subscribe to this image of black women, Lena, Ruth and Beneatha all seem to participate in that emasculating tradition identified by Grier and Cobbs.
Related to the problem of misogyny and machismo in The River Niger is the question of sexual identity. Who among the characters is trustworthy and a true heir of the River Niger? The women who know their role in a male dominant society become the play's ‘‘superb—s.’’ Men who demand and exercise male prerogative over women and win for themselves hierarchical power over their male colleagues are the play's real revolutionaries. Its counterrevolutionaries are those who do not align themselves with this paradigm, most notably Al, the ‘‘closet homosexual,’’ police informant. However, Al's sexuality is really over-determined in this play. His sexual passivity—and the play makes it clear that he is passive—symbolizes his separation from real black manhood and hence real blackness. Al does not understand his blackness: he denies Africa and the play's definition of manhood. By not being true to his manhood, Al cannot be true to his blackness. Perversely, he defends the majority culture that oppresses black people, that dams the River Niger. Al proves to be untrustworthy and the ‘‘real men,’’ Jeff, John and Dudley, must ferret the Als out and destroy them.
It is, finally, the intraracial intersexual struggle that seems to consume The River Niger. At the end of Big White Fog, the Marxists are moving the Masons' furniture back into the house. The hoped for revolution—were it to come—would protect the dispossessed. In A Raisin in the Sun, the furniture is being moved out and the dispossessed move to take possession of their dream deferred. At the end of The River Niger there is no movement. Everything including the furniture remains in place; the movables are fixed. John dies not for a cause but to demonstrate a point: black men, black fathers are heroic and heroically macho. The play calls on black women to learn this lesson before it is too late, before they are bereft of their men. Yet the real irony of this conclusion is its unintended feminist correction of Big White Fog; Mattie does exactly what Ella ought to do. But Mattie is left to protect the past, to insure that John's sacrifice does not turn into an egregious waste. Nothing else stands to be won. We move nowhere, out of nothing, towards nothing. Source: Anthony Barthelemy, ‘‘Mother, Sister, Wife: A Dramatic Perspective,’’ in Southern Review, Vol. 21, No. 3, Summer 1985, pp. 770-89.
Mythic Patterns In River Niger and Ceremonies in Dark Old Men
There are a number of ways one might approach setting criteria for evaluating Afro-American drama. We might say, for instance, that a significant number of these plays employ reversals of the American minstrel tradition, and thus move from tragedy into satire and farce (i.e., Douglas Turner Ward's Day of Absence). Or we could say that some plays use the mysticism of Black folk tradition as a basis for building their character types (i.e., Jean Toomer's Balo and Adrienne Kennedy's The Owl Answers). We may argue that Black music (spirituals, blues, jazz) provides the key, so to speak, which enables us to decode a large number of Afro-American plays. And, finally, we could trace the development of Afro-American drama thematically by ascertaining the point(s) where the playwrights seem to be concerned with freedom, social protest, theatre for a Black audience, and so on.
Though each of these approaches is valid in itself, in this essay I want to discuss another way of criticizing Afro-American popular drama. In many of these plays, there is a tension between the linear and the mythic conceptions of history. These two conceptions are diametrically opposed views, for the linear consciousness advocates the annihilation of the Black historical past, while the mythic consciousness threatens to keep the past alive through the social conditions of the present. The former attempts to substitute for the Black historical past a version of progress which, by its very nature, implies that the conditions Black people have had to live under are vestiges of a bygone age of disharmony. According to this theory, Black people are no longer slaves, but have been integrated as full participants in society. The extent to which Black people have not become full participants in American society indicates their unwillingness to accept the routes the larger society has created for them. Within the linear conception of history, the events which produced and continue to sustain the psychological enslavement of Black people are a set of discontinuous events linked together chronologically. But these events have no real connection to one another except that they happen along a particular part of the historical cycle. These events have no real connection to the present social conditions of Black people in the sense that Black people's present social predicament is simply the result of their lack of ability to take advantage of opportunities. The linear historical consciousness negates the past in favor of a distorted version of the present and an obscure vision of some distant future.
In contrast to the linear historical conception, the mythic view of history insists on the constant recreation of the Black historical past through the actions of white Americans against Black people. Within the mythic consciousness, slavery is not a vestige of a bygone age of disharmony but is alive in the segregation of Black people in the ghettos, in the lack of employment for Black youths, and in the aborted dreams of Black people in general and Black men in particular. This vantage point implies that there is no such thing as a distant past and obscure future, but that there is only a radical present which is constantly recreated through the suffrage of Black people. The mythic view threatens to destroy the linear conception, since the former is better able to substantiate its claims to truth than the latter. All one has to do to support the mythic view is to point toward the present conditions of Black people. To substantiate the linear conception, one must formulate a set of abstractions which gather strength from philosophical musings, and not from historical reality or from present social conditions. The oppression of Black people tends to create a mythic consciousness wherein "progress" is not seen as something achieved through the humanistic grace of Anglo-Americans, but is rather the product of sacrifice by Black Americans. Progress, in this sense, is not organic but is an imposed system on linear history. This is viewed within the mythic consciousness as not really progress, but as appeasement.
Since Black people, for the most part, live within the mythic consciousness, they are constantly put at odds with the linear system in their attempts to cope with American society. This conflict is presented in Afro-American popular drama not as vague abstractions of massive struggles of light and dark forces, of good and evil powers, but as real tensions between characters who represent either side of the dichotomy. The tension is seldom resolved, since it would take an herculean effort to synthesize moral turpitude with pragmatic choices to bring the conflict to an end. Instead, Afro-American playwrights seem to provide the reader with an analysis of the problem and to suggest different strategies by which to resolve it. Two plays which illustrate this thesis are Joseph Walker's River Niger and Lonne Elder's Ceremonies in Dark Old Men; these show the tension between myth and history.
The River Niger centers on the struggle of John Williams, a fifty-year old Black man who is characterized as an "alive poet.’’ John is a poet both in the sense that he writes poems and in that he sees the Black experience not as something which is fixed and dictated by history, but as a massive unshaped potential which must be given form by human experience. John's struggle is against the role of manhood which has been created and sustained by American culture. Manhood in this specific context refers to John's ability or lack of ability to reach his goal, which was originally to be a lawyer, and to provide material goods for his family. John can realize neither potential, and thus is trapped within a conception of humanity from which he cannot escape. This continual battle creates a mythic consciousness for John in that each time he confronts his wife, Mattie, and her mother, his inability to realize his aborted goal is kept alive. The constant confrontation between his past and present leads John to frustration, and, finally, to alcohol. In his prison house, so to speak, John attempts to realize his dream through his son, Jeff, by convincing him to become a lieutenant in the Air Force. The tension between John's past and Jeff s present produces the plot in The River Niger.
The play begins with John struggling to write a poem he has been working on for some time. As the opening scene gets underway, John reads aloud three lines of his poem:
I am the River Niger—hear my waters. I wriggle and stream and run. I am totally flexible—
The tone of this poem suggests that John's plight in writing is the same as that of Black people who are struggling against oppression. Just as John is having difficulty moving the poem from passive to active voice, Black people experience hardships moving their experience from historically determined events to constitutive actions. John as poet is symbolic of the struggle of Black people in general and of Black men in particular—the fight against linear history as an enslaving force. In fact, linear history espouses the notion that Black men are worthless, shiftless, lazy, and so on. John's wife, Mattie, discusses this idea that Black men are no good. ‘‘A good man is a treasure,’’ Mattie says. "White folk proclaim that our men are no good and we go 'round like fools trying to prove them wrong. . .If our men are no good, why are all these little white girls trying to gobble 'em up faster than they can pee straight?'' We find that John is fighting against this conception of Black men through poetry. For poetry is not something removed from reality, ‘‘art for art's sake.'' It is "what the revolution's all about—never lose sight of the true purpose of the revolutions, all revolutions—to restore poetry to the godhead!’’ John believes that Black poetry is experiential; he comments that the Empire State Building was built from over three hundred years of Black poetry. All accomplishments by Black people form the core of Black poetry. It is within this poetic philosophy that John wants to find his battlefield. But John's battlefield is not such that it will enable him to win himself a piece of the American dream. It is the kind of battlefield which will allow him to regain his dignity and to make a positive impact on humanity from his own cultural base. John's search for this battlefield engages the tension between the linear and the mythic conceptions; the former advocates no need for a battlefield since a measurable amount of progress has occurred in America, while the latter insists on the constant need for a battlefield, since social conditions have changed little since slavery for Black people.
The other characters in this play intensify this struggle. Mattie, an embittered Black woman, is referred to by her mother as "the only Black child I ever spawned—my first and last, thank Jesus.’’ Mattie—locked within this foreshadowing statement—turns the burden of her heritage inward toward herself and John; she blames herself for his psychological castration. John wanted to go to law school, but Mattie let her relatives impose so heavily on their relationship that John was forced to give up his career goal and work odd jobs to support the family. Her guilt over John's turning to alcohol, combined with her own mastectomy, lead Mattie to self-destructiveness. She assumes the position of a martyr in her defense of the alcoholism of both John and her mother.
Much of Mattie's plight has been created for her by her mother, who is a very color conscious woman. Mattie's mother stands at the midpoint of the tension between John and Mattie, since she has been directly responsible for the abortion of John's career and for Mattie's failure to find fulfillment in womanhood. Joseph Walker conveys the tension symbolically through the grandmother's actions. On the one hand, she claims to be a Christian, while on the other hand, she hides whiskey in the house and sneaks a drink whenever the family is not around. She embodies both the problem of one struggling against the linear conception of history through the memory of her husband, whom she describes as a proud Black man, and the urge to accept the linear conception through her emphasis on color and proper social decorum.
The forces represented by Mattie and her mother threaten to return John to the Black historical past— to hopelessness and psychological slavery. In an effort to free himself, John turns to fulfilling his dreams through his son, Jeff. He wants Jeff to make an accomplishment which will serve as proof that Black men in particular can fulfill the role of manhood. Since the armed forces offer one of the clearest available avenues toward manhood, John pressures Jeff into enlisting in military school. As the plot begins to shape, we see the entire family anxiously awaiting Jeff's return from the Air Force as a commissioned lieutenant.
In John's struggle to have Jeff fulfill his hopes, he doesn't see that Jeff rejects his intervention in his life. The son views his father's attempts to push him to a goal as an imposition of progress on his version of history, which is mythic. Jeff does not think moving into the world dominated by White people is an accomplishment; he thinks it is ‘‘selling out.’’ He would rather work from within the Black community to effect social change. But in his rejection of his father's route to manhood, Jeff finds that the Black community has its own pitfalls, in the form of gangs masquerading as revolutionary organizations.
The conflict between Jeff and his father is caused by different views regarding accomplishments. John sees Jeff's commission, not as an act of loyalty to his country, but as an accomplishment, as ‘‘another fist jammed through the wall.’’ John wants to be able to participate in American society fully, for he regards such a participation as his birthright. He doesn't want American society torn down completely; he only wants it modified. Jeff, on the other hand, wants to annihilate linear history by totally destroying American civilization. An accomplishment which helps to perpetuate the American mythos is tantamount to nothing for Jeff.
But Jeff's view of history is altered drastically when he confronts the street gang of which he was once a member, which has now been transformed into a self-styled revolutionary group. The leader of the gang, Mo, has put together a band of street-level Blacks composed of his girl friend, a homosexual (Al), a dope addict (Skeeter), and a sexual degenerate (Chips), whom Mo calls Famaldehyde Dick for raping an embalmed corpse. Those Mo has recruited are bound together by their sordid past, which does not provide the necessary bond for trust and devotion for one another needed for true revolutionary activity. The leader of the gang feels, like Fanon, that the call for revolution will cleanse the street level Blacks he has enlisted in his group. Yet, in his idyllic philosophy, Mo realizes that he needs leadership to complement him; therefore he attempts to enlist Jeff.
Jeff, however, initially rejects Mo's incessant demands that he become a member of the group, in the same way as he rejected his father's attempts to push him into the Air Force. He also finds that he must confront his grandmother, who pressures him to marry a "decent girl'' and not the one to whom Jeff is presently engaged. In his selection of a viable path toward manhood, Jeff unintentionally paves the way for his father to find the battlefield for which he has been searching all his life. Finally, Jeff decides to join Mo's group on his own terms, not knowing that Mo's organization is being held responsible for the death of a local politician. Al, one of Mo's gang members, is also an undercover policeman; he informs the authorities of the group's intentions and brings about their downfall. At the end of the play, the police surround John's house. Al, the informer, pulls a gun on the gang and demands that they reveal the killer of the politician. John enters through the kitchen, hears the commotion, and shoots it out with Al. Al is killed instantly, while John is seriously injured. Here, John is given the chance to attain his final goal. He achieves manhood by taking the blame for the entire group and by insisting that they tell the police that he alone was responsible for the gang's activities. John finds his battlefield in death and breaks the cycle of linear history.
John's poem is completed as he moves from passivity to constitutive action. The forces which have threatened to destroy his mythic consciousness are held at bay, while John carves a realistic path for himself. John's death, then, is not tragic in the sense of his being ousted from society in order to return the moral world intact to the reader. The world is better in that he has been a part of it. His death is a conscious choice, a moral strategy. In a statement near the end of the play, John realizes what poetry actually is. He says while dying that he doesn't care about the poems he has been trying to write all of his life, but that"this is poetry, man—what I feel right down here and now.'' John finds that he has created his own path to realization of manhood, even though, for him, finding his own way means to contradict everything for which he has struggled all along. Yet the path he chooses acknowledges the mythic sense of history and thus annihilates the linear conception.
Ceremonies in Dark Old Men presents his conflict in a different way. The shadow of the deceased mother in this play looms as the manifestation of the linear consciousness. Mr. Parker's daughter, Adele, constantly reminds her father and two brothers of their failure to achieve manhood through employment. Adele, the sole supporter of the family, keeps her mother's memory alive by confronting the family with the reason for Mrs. Parker's untimely demise. In one scene Adele challenges her father's devotion to her mother: "What about Mama? She died working for you! Did you ever stop to think about that! In fact, did you ever love her? No!!.’’ The conflict between Adele and the castrated men produces the mythic consciousness in the play.
Adele, as the breadwinner in the family, is likewise the source of moral authority. For it is she who attempts to place limits on the illegal actions her father and brothers wish to undertake. But placing these restrictions does not resolve the source of conflict between moral turpitude and pragmatic action. Even though her father might try to keep Adele happy because she pays the rent, he still feels that his dreams have been aborted and are unreachable through the route dictated to him by history— getting a job. To Mr. Parker, a job is simply a way of aborting his dreams. In the opening scene of the play, his longtime friend, Mr. Jenkins, questions the validity of Mr. Parker's masquerading as a barber when he could "count the heads of hair you done cut in this shop on one hand.’’ Mr. Parker replies, "This shop is gon' work yet; I know it can. Just give me one more year and you'll see. . .Going out to get a job ain't gon' solve nothing—all its gon' do is create a lot of bad feelings with everybody. I can't work! I don't know how to!’’
The irony in this statement is not that Mr. Parker really doesn' t know how to work, but that the kind of work he is accustomed to doing is obsolete. He was a minstrel man who has been outdated by the lack of historical consciousness of the new Black generation. He is part of a distinct age of slavery and oppression. For Mr. Parker to acknowledge this fact is tantamount to him accepting the linear view of history, which advocates the annihilation of the Black historical past. Adele intensifies this struggle by her incessant demands that her father and brothers get a job. When faced with this dilemma, Mr. Parker, his two sons, Theopolis and Bobby, and his best friend, Mr. Jenkins, choose an alternate route to fulfillment of manhood; they accept an offer from ‘‘Blue Haven,’’ a Black gangster, to turn the barbershop into a front for manufacturing and selling bootleg liquor. But in doing this, Mr. Parker throws into chaos the moral world Adele has sought to keep intact. Bobby puts his talents at thievery to work for Blue Haven; Mr. Parker embezzles money from the enterprise to reclaim his lost youth; and Theopolis is left to do all the work.
Blue Haven symbolizes a path through which Black men can gain access to manhood, the ability to determine one's destiny. Such an ability has been stifled by segregating Blacks, by confining them to ghettos, and by prohibiting them from entering the labor force. Blue Haven—regardless of his moral code—represents an achievement for Black men, an achievement which, in its very essence, attests to the inhumanity Black people have experienced in America. Blue Haven is able to conceal his immoral actions from Mr. Parker, Theopolis, Bobby, and Mr. Jenkins, because of the attractiveness of the route he offers them. If they participate in Blue Haven's organization, they can regain the dignity they have lost in their confinement in the ghetto. After all, they have not sought jobs actively, not because there is little chance of them finding a suitable one, but because they do not wish to work for white people. To work for white people is tantamount to acknowledging the linear historical consciousness and to participating in the destruction of the mythic conception. Blue Haven's offer acknowledges the Black historical past and provides them with a route to fulfilling their role as men without ‘‘selling out,’’ so to speak.
Just as John Williams must die in The River Niger to unify the cosmos which has been thrown into chaos in his search for a battlefield, Mr. Parker's youngest son, Bobby, must die in order for the family to be shocked into reality. Bobby's death while participating in a robbery attempt for Blue Haven's gang returns Mr. Parker and the rest of the family to the moral world where they see that Blue Haven's offer was not a viable choice, but only the appearance of one. Blue Haven has simply inverted the world, overturned societal values, not for the good of Black people as a whole, but for his own selfish purposes. The route Mr. Parker and his son, Theopolis, must find to manhood cannot be defined in opposition to that dictated by history. It must be firmly grounded in the Black historical past and must contain a viable vision of the future.
Ceremonies in Dark Old Men attempts to resolve the tension between the linear and mythic conceptions, but falls short. At the end of the play, the family decides to stand on moral grounds and to reject Blue Haven's enterprise in their barber shop. They make a decision to throw the equipment Blue Haven has placed in the barber shop into the river and to confront him when he comes to collect his money. The strength the family acquires in the death of B obby might lead one to think that they will triumph, as a family, over the efforts of Blue Haven to keep them in the business of making bootleg liquor. But this resolution is somewhat superficial. Blue Haven's character is drawn in such a way that his presence dominates the play. The tone of the play shifts when Blue Haven enters the scene—the entire moral world is overturned when he makes his offer to the family. A character with this type of appeal cannot be dispensed with in such a perfunctory manner. When the play ends, there is still the feeling that Blue Haven is going to come back to the barber shop to collect his money, only to find that the family has rejected his business and has destroyed his equipment. The family must still confront the gangster with more than moral philosophical rantings. All that is finally resolved in the play is that Blue Haven represents a facade, not the resolution to the conflict between the linear and mythic conceptions of history.
The problem that is presented in these two plays is common to a large number of Afro-American plays which are aimed at large audiences. These plays attempt to present the problem DuBois speaks of in Souls of Black Folk. Black people live within what DuBois called ‘‘the veil,’’ that is, the realization that one is neither a part of American society nor a member of a distinct ethnic group which is tied to linear history. In other words, Black people experience a double-consciousness which manifests itself in the tension between the linear and mythic conceptions. In developing criteria to evaluate these plays, one must realize that drama, unlike other literary genres, is often construed as a direct manifestation of reality and not as something remote and suspended from historical reality. Afro-American playwrights have been required to make their plays directly responsive to the needs of oppressed peoples, and they have done so by presenting the conflict in the consciousness of Black people. This can serve as a basis for developing parameters within which one can operate when discussing the subject. And it can hopefully provide the dramaturgical enterprise with the perspective with which it can categorize Afro-American popular drama.
Source: Chester J. Fontenot, ‘‘Mythic Patterns In River Niger and Ceremonies in Dark Old Men,'' in Melus, Vol. 7, No. 1, Spring 1980, pp. 41-49.