{"id":8227,"date":"2020-04-28T11:27:25","date_gmt":"2020-04-28T10:27:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cassandravoices.com\/?p=8227"},"modified":"2020-04-28T11:27:25","modified_gmt":"2020-04-28T10:27:25","slug":"an-a-b-c-of-irish-modernism-apocalypse-boredom-crack","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/2020\/04\/28\/an-a-b-c-of-irish-modernism-apocalypse-boredom-crack\/","title":{"rendered":"An A.B.C. of Irish Modernism: Apocalypse, Boredom, Crack"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>In a powerful 1997 essay, Seamus Deane suggested that the twin forces that beset modern Irish writers such as W.B. Yeats and James Joyce were those of Apocalypse and Boredom.<a href=\"#_ftn1\" name=\"_ftnref1\">[1]<\/a>\u00a0 Both the culture in which the writers lived and the art-works they produced are marked by phasic interruptions into colonial despondency of revelatory dramas and epiphanies:<\/p>\n<p>In Yeats&#8217;s work&#8211;plays and essays, we may feel at times that a little boredom might be something of a relief from the constant appropriation of almost everything that happened in his lifetime to a visionary apocalypse in which all that is &#8216;past, or passing or to come&#8217; flashes up in a conflagration that consumes time and exposes eternity. What I want to suggest here is the natural alliance between Joycean boredom and Yeatsian apocalypse in relation to temporality and therefore to history.<a href=\"#_ftn2\" name=\"_ftnref2\">[2]<\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_8243\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-8243\" style=\"width: 674px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-8243\" src=\"https:\/\/cassandravoices.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/04\/YeatsGrave-300x169.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"674\" height=\"380\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-8243\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">&#8216;visionary apocalypse&#8217; W.B. Yeats. (c) Daniele Idini.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Deane\u2019s proposal reflects something of the deadlock of revisionist and radical criticism in Irish Studies in the 1990s \u2013 a political\u00a0 deadlock which has largely passed into desuetude in the post-Good Friday atmosphere. If revisionism proposed a certain constitutional conservatism and was a bit of a bore, the radical cultural critics wielded a language which was apocalyptically difficult to understand in its more <span style=\"color: #0000ff;\">post-post-structuralist<\/span> modes. And what was lost in the debate was something of the <em>craic<\/em> of ordinary people, and the points of cracked reality in ordinary life which do not succumb easily to academic enquiry.<\/p>\n<p>Methodologically, of course, we find ourselves these days stretched across wide and strange territories of discourse and discipline, and at a very late stage in the drama of literary criticism from Leavis to Baudrillard.\u00a0 Contemporary criticism has a surfeit of entry points and elaborations, resembling a quantum field in its complexity. I could, whilst sticking only to a psychological theme, find many feminist responses to one essay in late Lacan. Or I could argue for yet another return to a missed aspect of a deconstructed Freud. I would prefer though to draw simple and broad brush-strokes which would not incite the total indignation of a casual reader. My psychological terms are broadly popular (the aesthetic terms are more or \u00a0less commonly known in academia since Bakhtin).\u00a0 And the argument is willingly simple: that \u2018Apocalypse and Boredom\u2019 as a binary needs a mediating term (<em>Crack<\/em>) which turns out to be dizzyingly deconstructive in its implications. Modern scholars cannot either manoeuvre round or simply ignore this post-structuralist facet of a text but must, as <span style=\"color: #0000ff;\">Terry Eagleton<\/span> has suggested, go through theory and out the other side.\u00a0 And wisdom is to be found in many places including the most demotic and the most abstruse.\u00a0 Our common language in the end must be the structures of wisdom, and Derrida has as much a claim to them as does the greatest \u2018realist\u2019 of a pub in Grafton Street. <a href=\"#_ftn3\" name=\"_ftnref3\">[3]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Deane&#8217;s broad historical binary can be broadened to include a psychological dimension and also an aesthetic principle for the detailed analysis of culture, society and art. The psychological dimension appropriate to Irish modernism, I shall argue, is <em>manic-depressive<\/em> in structure. The corresponding aesthetic principle is a principle of <em>carnival-nihilism <\/em>where the hyphen suggests an affinity with the related manic-depressive psychology. The hyphen should suggest that the prior term in each case (mania, carnival) is not necessarily adjectival but has also an intimate link with its sister terms depression and nihilism. Adding these terms to Deane&#8217;s we might produce a more complex matrix for the discussion of Irish modernism for there are fascinating dialogical correspondences between manic, carnivalistic and apocalyptic phenomena, as indeed there are between depressing, nihilistic and boring colonial experiences. In the process of thus broadening the terms of reference, we will discover the emergence of that third term which ironises the solemnities of apocalypse and boredom: the term known to our common culture as <em>crack<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>It is a question of corollaries of structure. Manic-depression is episodic and interruptive of quotidian life in the same way that apocalyptic and boring experiences can be said to be episodic diversions from\u00a0 the &#8216;normal&#8217; functioning of a happy democratic culture. Mania wrecks routine, and depression makes us incapable of routine. The terms carnival and nihilism are not new, but in an internal relationship with each other they form an aesthetic principle which deforms the more staid genre of tragi-comedy which is often taken by older critics to represent an aesthetic &#8216;norm&#8217; for representing the human condition.<a href=\"#_ftn4\" name=\"_ftnref4\">[4]<\/a> Carnival,\u00a0 like mania, achieves a disruption of normal boundaries, hierarchies and empirical states of mind.\u00a0 Depression and nihilism can kill our sense of the value of the ordinary. Christian apocalypse disrupts boundaries (&#8216;ye shall be as gods&#8217;), hierarchies (&#8216;I am the Alpha and Omega&#8217;) and forms of empiricism ( &#8216;they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory&#8217;). But it is also true that boredom can at its extreme give us an extremely interesting sense of what eternity might be like.\u00a0 In a Derridean sense each of these terms when pushed to its limit can turn into its opposite: there is nothing more boring than an over-long carnival, and nothing more likely to reveal \u2018the hidden\u2019 than a night of nihilistic visions.<\/p>\n<p>The dialogical inter-action of these terms furnishes us with both &#8216;vertical&#8217; and &#8216;horizontal&#8217; opportunities if we imagine the structure thus:<\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Apocalypse\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Boredom\u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0(Socio-cultural level).<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Mania\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Depression\u00a0\u00a0 (Psychological level)<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Carnival\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Nihilism\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0(Aesthetic level).<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Taken together as a matrix of six terms we can begin to be experimental, and the advantage of adding psychological and aesthetic terms is to furnish us with a complex language for discussing the contingencies of modernist culture: what, for instance, might a manic-nihilism resemble, say in the early Nietzschean plays of W.B. Yeats such as <span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theatredatabase.com\/20th_century\/william_butler_yeats_003.html\"><em>Where there is Nothing<\/em><\/a><\/span>? Could we consider the possibility of a carnival of boredom in Joyce&#8217;s <em>Dubliners or <\/em>Brendan Behan&#8217;s<em> The Hostage<\/em>? How might a sense of apocalyptic depression inform Sean O&#8217;Casey&#8217;s\u00a0 <em>The<\/em> <em>Silver Tassie<\/em>? The terms are reversible, too, and this adds a further level of vocabulary to our exploration of forms: what is the function, for instance, of a depressive carnivalism in the plays of <span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"https:\/\/cassandravoices.com\/society-culture\/culture\/meeting-samuel-becketts-genius-in-person-and-his-plays\/\">Samuel Beckett<\/a><\/span>, a nihilistic apocalypse\u00a0 at the end of O&#8217;Casey&#8217;s <em>Purple Dust<\/em> and a boring mania in the work of Denis Johnston and Spike Milligan?\u00a0\u00a0 I will now explore some of these terms more categorically and then go on to demonstrate how their presence can best be detected in the work of Sean O&#8217;Casey, a writer placed in the &#8216;minor&#8217; category of modernists behind Joyce and Yeats, but who may come into his majority when seen as the first realist of <em>crack<\/em>.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7432\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7432\" style=\"width: 677px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-7432\" src=\"https:\/\/cassandravoices.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/02\/IMG_0857-300x215.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"677\" height=\"485\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7432\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"https:\/\/cassandravoices.com\/society-culture\/culture\/meeting-samuel-becketts-genius-in-person-and-his-plays\/#prettyPhoto\">Samuel Beckett<\/a><\/span>, illustration by <span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/this.is.artsyfartsy\/\">Malina\/Artsyfartsy<\/a><\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<ol>\n<li><em><strong> Mania.<\/strong><\/em><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>In 1921, at the height of European\u00a0 modernism, the German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin described manic depression for the first time as involving &#8216;a heightened distractibility&#8217;, a &#8216;tendency to diffusiveness&#8217;, and &#8216;a spinning out the circle of ideas stimulated and jumping off to others&#8217;. <a href=\"#_ftn5\" name=\"_ftnref5\">[5]<\/a>\u00a0 In 1924 the Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler concurred and drew a parallel with artistic production:<\/p>\n<p>The <em>thinking<\/em> of the manic is flighty.\u00a0 He jumps by by-paths from one subject to another, and cannot adhere to anything.\u00a0 With this the ideas run along very easily and involuntarily, even so freely that it may be felt as unpleasant by the patient&#8230;.<\/p>\n<p>Because of the more rapid flow of ideas, and especially because of the falling off of inhibitions, artistic activities are facilitated even though something worth while is produced only in very mild cases and when the patient is otherwise talented in this direction. The heightened sensibilities naturally have the effect of furthering this.<a href=\"#_ftn6\" name=\"_ftnref6\">[6]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>We should notice the stress here upon the &#8216;heightened&#8217; sensibility of the maniac for this reminds us of the heightened sensibility required to experience epiphany and revelation. We should also note the &#8216;falling off of inhibitions&#8217; for this is a feature we will observe in our analysis of carnivalesque activity. The rapid flow and spinning of ideas also reminds us of some of the features we associate with modernist texts such as <em><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><a style=\"color: #0000ff;\" href=\"https:\/\/cassandravoices.com\/current-affairs\/comment\/leopold-bloom-and-the-art-of-loafing\/\">Ulysses<\/a><\/span>. <\/em>In short, the phenomenon of mania touches upon both frenetic literary activity and apocalyptic or transformative experience.<\/p>\n<ol start=\"2\">\n<li><em><strong> Depression.<\/strong><\/em><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Seamus Deane refers in his essay to the &#8216;marks of boredom&#8217; he detects in Joyce, Beckett and Kafka.\u00a0 They include:<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; &#8216;dinginess of physical circumstance and dress&#8217;,<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; &#8216;extreme routinization of action and speech&#8217;,<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; &#8216;an individual eloquence that derives from consensual banalities&#8217;,<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; &#8216;a sense of personal insignificance&#8217; ,<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; &#8216;the belief that one is &#8230; in a void &#8230;.&#8217;\u00a0 <a href=\"#_ftn7\" name=\"_ftnref7\">[7]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Let us contrast this list with a list of depressive symptoms described by Irish psychiatrist Anthony Clare:<\/p>\n<p>&#8216;-Feelings of guilt or worthlessness<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; Loss of concentration<\/p>\n<p>&#8211; Loss of energy and noticeable tiredness of fatigue<\/p>\n<p>-Suicidal thoughts &#8230;<\/p>\n<p>-Agitation or marked slowing down (retardation&#8217;).<a href=\"#_ftn8\" name=\"_ftnref8\">[8]<\/a><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_8245\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-8245\" style=\"width: 216px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-8245\" src=\"https:\/\/cassandravoices.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/04\/SeanOCasey-216x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"216\" height=\"300\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-8245\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Sean O&#8217;Casey, Image by Reginald Gray.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>It is clear from these lists that clinical depression and cultural boredom are intimately related.\u00a0 As we shall see in the work of Sean O&#8217;Casey, the subject feels that he has been broken into pieces.\u00a0 It is an experience of extreme boredom as a form of disintegration which results, paradoxically, in a form of apocalyptic fear:<\/p>\n<p>[The depressive] feels solitary, indescribably unhappy, as &#8216;a creature disinherited of fate&#8217;; he is sceptical about God, and with a certain dull submission, which shuts out every comfort and every gleam of light, he drags himself with difficulty from one day to another.\u00a0 Everything has become disagreeable to him; everything wearies him &#8230;\u00a0 he thinks he is superfluous in the world, he cannot restrain himself any longer: the thought occurs to him to take his life without his knowing why.\u00a0 <em>He has a feeling as if something had cracked in him<\/em>, <em>he fears that he may become crazy, insane, paralytic, the end is coming near.<\/em> (Italics inserted).<a href=\"#_ftn9\" name=\"_ftnref9\">[9]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Colonial depression is a much more disintegrative experience than the term &#8216;boredom&#8217; allows.\u00a0 The depressive is opened up to extraordinarily painful inner confusion and despair as he &#8216;cracks&#8217; under the strain of living a false life. The only redemptive feature of the experience lies in the fact that extreme depression can become a form of revelation of capitalism&#8217;s utter inner monotony.\u00a0 The depressive subject can become aware of his extreme oppression through his consciousness of his fractured personal moods.\u00a0 There is , also, as we shall see, something redemptive and ironical about that &#8216;crack&#8217;.<\/p>\n<ol start=\"3\">\n<li><em><strong> Carnival.<\/strong><\/em><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>So much has been written about carnival in recent decades that the term has sadly been recuperated as a &#8216;boring&#8217; academic category.\u00a0 We can crack open the term however when we inflect it with an analysis of its relationship with mania and nihilism.\u00a0 The classic description of the function of carnivalism belongs to Mikhail Bakhtin:<\/p>\n<p><em>The laws, prohibitions, and restrictions that determine the structure and order of ordinary, that is noncarnival, life are suspended during carnival&#8230;.\u00a0 All distance between people is suspended, and a special carnival category goes into effect: free and familiar contact among people.<\/em><a href=\"#_ftn10\" name=\"_ftnref10\">[10]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>It is a characteristic feature of mania that the patient demonstrates a &#8216;loss of inhibitions, particularly sexual and social&#8217; and displays an &#8216;infectious mood &#8211; humorous, jocose, euphoric.&#8217;<a href=\"#_ftn11\" name=\"_ftnref11\">[11]<\/a> The maniac also enjoys breaking the boundaries of propriety- talking to people familiarly on the street, entering private property without permission, cocking a snook at policemen and authority figures.\u00a0 In a sense, we might think of carnival as a form of collective mania licensed by its social contract. The maniac is stigmatised because of his solitude- his actions are not very different from those of the carnival clown. &#8216;The basic principle of grotesque or Carnival realism&#8217;, writes Michael Bristol, &#8216;is to represent everything socially and spiritually exalted on the material, bodily level.\u00a0 This includes cursing, abusive and irreverent speech, symbolic and actual thrashing&#8217; and so on.<a href=\"#_ftn12\" name=\"_ftnref12\">[12]<\/a>\u00a0 The patient in a manic phase often dresses bizarrely, curses abusively and irreverently, thrashes around\u00a0 and confuses his own body with that of a god. Mania is, in a sense, a one-man carnival.<\/p>\n<p>&#8216;Carnival&#8217;, writes Bakhtin, &#8216;celebrates the shift itself, the very process of replaceability, and not the precise item that is replaced,\u00a0 Carnival is, so to speak, functional and not substantive. It absolutizes nothing, but rather proclaims the joyful relativity of everything.&#8217;<a href=\"#_ftn13\" name=\"_ftnref13\">[13]<\/a>\u00a0 The maniac, remember, is identified by his infectious mood, flights of ideas, pressurised speech with fast punning and rhyming, loss of judgement and inhibition. The maniac, too, proclaims the joyful relativity of all relationships, concepts and objects. There are clear structural connections, then, between the forms of apocalypse, mania and carnival, and I would suggest that mania is the mediating element between the two apparently unconnected forms of apocalypse and carnivalism.\u00a0 In one grotesque twist, the Christian apocalypse is all about the burning flesh of men, and carnival too (L. <em>carne<\/em>) concerns the destiny of the flesh.\u00a0 We might indeed view the Last Judgement through one grotesque optic as a kind of carnival of revelation.<\/p>\n<ol start=\"4\">\n<li><em><strong> Nihilism.<\/strong><\/em><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Nihilism is the rationalisation of boredom and depression.\u00a0 It is, as it were, the ideology of melancholy.\u00a0 Where people merely act bored or depressed, as in, say, Joyce&#8217;s <em>Dubliners ,<\/em> there is at least hope that some relief might come from the pain of their condition.\u00a0 These characters are not committed ideologically to the notion that life is meaningless but are merely acting out the paralysis of a cycle of colonial history<em>.\u00a0 <\/em>Nihilism, however,\u00a0 perceives the permanent negation of teleology, divinity and broadly socio-spiritual meaning.\u00a0 It searches for the lethal nothingness at the heart of any project and proclaims this as its secret truth.\u00a0 In conjunction with carnivalism as part of the couplet carnival-nihilism, nihilism acts as a corollary to the depression in manic-depression though with an even greater sense of finality.\u00a0 Where the maniac is reduced, in time, to the horrible vacuousness at the heart of his euphoria, the carnival subject, too, comes to understand that his destruction of all actually existing social forms conceals a secret and permanent nihilism. Carnival cocks a snook at authority but conceals from itself the secret vacuousness of its activity.\u00a0 It is a good thing to place a king&#8217;s crown on an ass&#8217;s head but it is also a gesture of hatred towards norms. Nihilism is thus the darkest of the six terms with which we are approaching Irish modernism because it emerges from the very heart of parodic action.\u00a0 But, in a final redemptive twist, we shall see that nihilism can be dialogised by the comical.\u00a0 Too much nihilism is, simply, funny, as James Joyce illustrates in his ironic parody of Catholic hell in\u00a0 <em>A<\/em> <em>Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man <\/em>and as Samuel Beckett discovered in<em> Waiting for Godot<\/em>. <a href=\"#_ftn14\" name=\"_ftnref14\">[14]<\/a>\u00a0 Several pages of doom and gloom can become amusingly intense.\u00a0 As we shudder at the crack of doom, we cannot help but be reminded of the <em>craic<\/em>.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_405\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-405\" style=\"width: 224px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-405\" src=\"https:\/\/cassandravoices.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/01\/Joyce-224x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"224\" height=\"300\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-405\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">\u2018I cannot enter the social order except as a vagabond.\u2019 \u2013 James Joyce, 1904<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p><strong><em>The Crack.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>To be cracked can mean, as we have seen, to be depressed to the point of madness,\u00a0 but to &#8216;have the crack&#8217; can mean the opposite: to be infected with carnivalistic joy. A crack can be a fault-line from which revelation might arise (literally &#8216;a seismic event&#8217; as Deane has it) or a blow inducing paralysis. <a href=\"#_ftn15\" name=\"_ftnref15\">[15]<\/a>\u00a0 It is an ambivalent term which mediates between our six analytical terms thus:<\/p>\n<p><strong>Apocalypse\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Boredom<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Mania\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0 <\/strong><em>Crack<\/em><strong>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Depression<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Carnival\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Nihilism.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><em>Crack<\/em> is the deconstructive term which mediates the transition from one side of the grid to the other. When apocalypse turns into boredom there must be a point at which a position is neither apocalyptic nor boring and I would suggest that the subject here acts like a manic-depressive. When mania begins to turn into depression the patient feels that he is cracking up in the manner described by Emil Kraepelin:<\/p>\n<p>He has a feeling as if something had cracked in him, he fears that he may become crazy, insane, paralytic, the end is coming near. <a href=\"#_ftn16\" name=\"_ftnref16\">[16]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>A post-apocalyptic culture can feel that the old moulds have been cracked but this can induce a morose fear for the future that can induce an anxious boredom. Contrarily, when a culture experiences the onset of an apocalypse it encounters heightened, euphoric feelings as in the 1916 rebellion where millennial fever gripped sections of the population of Dublin. As it becomes hypomanic society can have an almighty <em>craic<\/em> before its euphoria reaches its peak of revelation and collapses back into self-hatred and paralysis. <em>Crack<\/em> is therefore something of a <em>pharmakon<\/em>. A good night out in Temple Bar can be a \u2018cure\u2019 for depression, but the booze leaves us with a poisonous headache. A crack on the head from an Irish Brother can give us a poisonous hatred of authority, but can also cure us of all our idealism. <em>Crack<\/em> is undecided in its effects: both violent and creative, fun and pain, a break and a mould. It is a very archetype indeed of deconstruction, for what could be more ambivalent than a textual crack: a point where the text roars and collapses, enjoys and splits, surges and cleaves. At the very point where Beckett reaches his cracked vision of futility, we can\u2019t help but begin to crack up. There is no <em>craic<\/em> where there is no crack. And there is no crack where there is no <em>craic<\/em>.\u00a0 In fact, the term is not just a <em>pharmakon<\/em>, but the very possibility of there being a <em>pharmakon <\/em>because there could not be a limit which could not crack, crack being the condition of its hymenicity.<\/p>\n<p>Crack is a transitive term then but one which cannot sustain itself either as a form or a limit. We crack under pressure but then crack away at a solution. A crack in a cup is a pain but great <em>craic<\/em> if it causes our landlord to drop tea on his trousers.\u00a0 Ireland itself is cracked along its Ulster border, but the border itself is \u2018crackers\u2019.\u00a0 A crack cannot be a thing, by definition: but is certainly something. The crack may be Ninety in the Isle of Man, but the crackdown in the Dublin of 1916 was terrible.<u>\u00a0<\/u><\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Sean O&#8217;Casey and The End of the Beginning.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In the work of Sean O&#8217;Casey, nihilism is articulated as it emerges from the scandalous pranks of his exuberantly carnivalesque Dublin slum-dwellers. <a href=\"#_ftn17\" name=\"_ftnref17\">[17]<\/a> As his work progresses through the years of modernism and civil war, his vision becomes increasingly bleak, so bleak, in fact that it becomes, in an ironic twist, comical. O&#8217;Casey&#8217;s work hovers in the space of ambiguity created by the word &#8216;crack&#8217;\u00a0 which can represent both a fault or interruption in the smoothness of a quotidian continuum and a sense of comical social play (<em>craic<\/em>). &#8216;Mr O&#8217;Casey&#8217;, wrote Samuel Beckett, &#8216;is the master of knockabout in this very serious and honourable sense- that he discerns the principle of disintegration in even the most complacent solidities, and activates it to their explosion.&#8217;<a href=\"#_ftn18\" name=\"_ftnref18\">[18]<\/a>\u00a0 O&#8217;Casey&#8217;s wilful destruction of empirical solidities impressed Beckett philosophically (it was entropic) but also because, to use a contemporary phrase, it cracked him up.\u00a0 O&#8217;Casey was at his most amusing when he was being nihilistic and achieved his greatest spasms of laughter from his creation of &#8216;spasms of dislocation&#8217; in the art-work.<a href=\"#_ftn19\" name=\"_ftnref19\">[19]<\/a> In his 1934 play <em>The End of the Beginning, <\/em>two characters, Darry Berrill and Barry Derrill set about the destruction of an Irish country house with great relish and, in the process, wreck themselves:<\/p>\n<p><em>Darry falls down the chimney<\/em> &#8230; there&#8217;ll be a nice panorama of ruin &#8230; nothin&#8217; done but damage &#8230; \u00a0\u00a0I&#8217;m after nearly destroyin&#8217; meself!\u00a0 <a href=\"#_ftn20\" name=\"_ftnref20\">[20]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The country house should be read as symbolic of an emerging De Valeran pastoralism which both O&#8217;Casey and Conor Cruise O&#8217;Brien took to be a disappointment.<a href=\"#_ftn21\" name=\"_ftnref21\">[21]<\/a> &#8216;Our generation&#8217;, wrote O&#8217;Brien, &#8216;grew into the chilling knowledge that we had failed, that our history had turned into rubbish, our past to a &#8220;trouble of fools.&#8221;&#8216;<a href=\"#_ftn22\" name=\"_ftnref22\">[22]<\/a> O&#8217;Casey&#8217;s country house is an objective correlative of post- Free State Ireland&#8217;s paralysis in which his comedic pair stumble blindly about in a void:<\/p>\n<p><em>Darry (shouting madly)<\/em>.\u00a0 Barry, Barry, come here quick, man!\u00a0 I turned the key of the tap too much, &#8216;n it slipped out of me hand into a heap of rubbish &#8216;n I can&#8217;t turn off the cock, &#8216;n I can&#8217;t find the key in the dark.\u00a0 (p. 41.)<\/p>\n<p>O&#8217;Casey and O&#8217;Brien could agree upon the &#8216;heap of rubbish&#8217; that Irish history had become.\u00a0 Typically, however, O&#8217;Casey intensifies the nihilism in the sub-text of the play until its atmosphere becomes apocalyptic:<\/p>\n<p><em>I can&#8217;t do anything &#8230; I don&#8217;t know what to do &#8230;What in the Name of God has happened? &#8230; can you do nothin&#8217; right! &#8230; God grant that it won&#8217;t be the end &#8230; Is the clock stopped?\u00a0 For God&#8217;s sake, touch nothing &#8230; It&#8217;s as dark as pitch in there &#8230;<\/em>\u00a0 (pp. 21-30).<\/p>\n<p>At the centre of Free State Ireland, O&#8217;Casey surmised, there lay a <em>metaphysical<\/em> darkness and his play establishes an atmosphere of cosmic doom throughout. Strangely, though the effect of the treatment\u00a0 is comical because his pair of clots are so endearing, reminding us of Laurel and Hardy as they crash into furniture, disappear up and down chimneys and knock cracks in the walls of the de Valeran dream. We cannot tell whether the apocalypse of nihilism is serious or part of the <em>craic<\/em>. &#8216;Can&#8217;t you find anything?&#8217; asks Darry. \u00a0&#8216;I can see nothing&#8217; replies Barry, as the play reaches its climax (p. 24), but again, the effect is amusing in the manner of a cartoon where all the lights go out and we see just the cartoon rabbit&#8217;s eyes glowing in the dark. O&#8217;Casey is attempting a serious critique of his country&#8217;s post-apocalyptic (Easter 1916) boredom, but he discovers that boredom holds a potential energy within it which can explode into epiphanies of entropy, at which point he cannot decide whether to laugh or go mad. His culture is exhausted (&#8216;not a drop left in it, not a single drop!\u00a0 What&#8217;re we goin&#8217; to do n&#8211; &#8230;&#8217;) but hysterically explosive:\u00a0 &#8216;&#8230; <em>He lets go of the rope, and runs over to the oil drum.\u00a0 Darry disappears up the chimney<\/em>&#8216; (p. 33).\u00a0 For O&#8217;Casey, De Valeran Ireland is\u00a0 literally &#8216;cracked&#8217;,\u00a0 deformed in a vortex of nihilism and farce:<\/p>\n<p><em>He turns and sees that Darry has disappeared.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Lizzie (speaking outside in a voice of horror).<\/em>\u00a0 The heifer, the heifer!<\/p>\n<p><em>Darry (calling out).<\/em>\u00a0 Lizzie, Lizzie!<\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Lizzie rushes in as Darry falls down the chimney&#8230;.<\/em>\u00a0 (p.33.)<\/p>\n<p>The terms Apocalypse and Boredom are not adequate in their singularity to capture such ambivalencies.\u00a0 Boredom taken too far can rebound as a form of apocalyptic emptiness as in O&#8217;Casey&#8217;s work from 1923-34 where we encounter darknesses which take us beyond the merely paralytic state of Joyce&#8217;s <em>Dubliners <\/em>towards Beckettian nihilism. Apocalypse, too, can be strangely boring as we can note from my opening quotation where Seamus Deane speaks of the relief that we seek from Yeats&#8217;s constant revelations.\u00a0 We must seek mediating terms for the movement between Deane&#8217;s\u00a0 twin poles of analysis for, in the end, the terms begin to deconstruct one another.\u00a0 The first step in moving towards a more complex analysis is to introduce more specific psychological and aesthetic terms.\u00a0 The second step is to seek a mediating term for the deconstructive activity of this more complex matrix.\u00a0 In the term &#8216;crack&#8217; we have a term which mediates\u00a0 the ambiguities of the deconstructive inter-actions of apocalypse, mania and carnival, boredom, depression and nihilism.\u00a0 Yeats and Joyce may have wanted Ireland to aspire to being\u00a0 an Attic culture, but I would wish to install Crack within Seamus Deane&#8217;s\u00a0 paradigm to remind us that Ireland was always, already, a very Antic country<em>.<\/em> <a href=\"#_ftn23\" name=\"_ftnref23\">[23]<\/a><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\">[1]<\/a>\u00a0 Seamus Deane, &#8216;Boredom and Apocalypse: A National Paradigm&#8217; in <em>Strange Country: Modernity and Nationhood in Irish Writing since 1970 <\/em>\u00a0(Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1997).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref2\" name=\"_ftn2\">[2]<\/a>\u00a0 Deane, <em>Strange Country<\/em>, p. 171. For a discussion of manic-depressive activity in the life of W.B. Yeats, see my &#8216;&#8221;Down Hysterica Passio&#8221;: The Mood Structures of W.B. Yeats&#8217;, <em>Irish University Review<\/em>\u00a0 vol. xxviii, no. 2, Autumn\/Winter 1998, pp. 272-80.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref3\" name=\"_ftn3\">[3]<\/a>\u00a0 A very Derridean street name.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref4\" name=\"_ftn4\">[4]<\/a>\u00a0 See, for instance,\u00a0 David Krause, <em>Sean O&#8217;Casey: The Man and His Work<\/em> (London, MacMillan, 1960), pp. 86-89 and <em>passim<\/em>.\u00a0\u00a0 &#8216;Carnival&#8217; and &#8216;nihilism&#8217; should be thought of as standing to the extreme left and right, as it were, of the traditional terms &#8216;comedy&#8217; and &#8216;tragedy&#8217;.\u00a0 Where tragi-comedy suggests an organic genre in which its terms are nevertheless discrete, carnival-nihilism should suggest an aesthetic that is in creative contradiction with itself.\u00a0 For further discussion of the principle of carnival-nihilism, see my (unpublished) M. Litt. thesis, <em>Ideology and Dramatic Form in the Plays of Sean O&#8217;Casey, 1922-46<\/em> (Oxford, Bodleian library, 1994).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref5\" name=\"_ftn5\">[5]<\/a>\u00a0 Emil Kraepelin, <em>Manic-Depressive Insanity and Paranoia , <\/em>trans. R.M. Barclay, ed. G.M. Robertson (Edinburgh, E&amp;S Livingstone, 1921) in Kay Redfield Jamison<em>, Touched with Fire: Manic Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament <\/em>(New York , Simon and Schuster: Free Press, 1994), pp. 107-8.\u00a0 We might consider manic depression to be a &#8216;modernist&#8217; illness in the way that some writers have conceived schizophrenia to be a &#8216;post-modern&#8217; illness (see, for example, Frederic Jameson, &#8216;Postmodernism, or the cultural logic of late capitalism&#8217;, <em>New Left Review<\/em>, 146, pp. 53-92.)\u00a0 Where the schizophrenic patient loses touch with structures of space and time permanently, the manic-depressive experiences <em>episodic\u00a0 <\/em>disorientation<em>.\u00a0 <\/em>He is able to recuperate his identity<em>, <\/em>albeit tentatively, and thus retains a sense of ironic detachment from a self in crisis which a schizophrenic patient cannot since his very sense of self has collapsed into a permanent &#8216;flow&#8217; of disorder.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref6\" name=\"_ftn6\">[6]<\/a>\u00a0 Eugen Bleuler, <em>Textbook of Psychiatry<\/em>, English ed. A.A. Brill (London, Macmillan, 1924)\u00a0 in Jamison, <em>Touched with Fire<\/em>, p 108.\u00a0 The reader is referred to\u00a0 Jamison, <em>Touched with Fire, <\/em>pp. 262-3 (Appendix A)\u00a0 for the fuller Diagnostic Criteria of Mania.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref7\" name=\"_ftn7\">[7]<\/a>\u00a0 Seamus Deane, <em>Strange Country<\/em>, p. 170.<a href=\"#_ftnref8\" name=\"_ftn8\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[8]\u00a0 Spike Milligan and Anthony Clare, <em>Depression<\/em>, p. 35.<a href=\"#_ftnref9\" name=\"_ftn9\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[9]\u00a0 Emil Kraepelin in Milligan and Clare, <em>Depression<\/em>, pp. 23-4.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref10\" name=\"_ftn10\">[10]<\/a>\u00a0 Mikhail Bakhtin, <em>Problems of Dostoevsky&#8217;s Poetics<\/em>, Theory and History of Literature, Vol. 8, trans., ed., C. Emerson (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1984), pp. 122-3.<a href=\"#_ftnref11\" name=\"_ftn11\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[11]\u00a0 Milligan and Clare, <em>Depression<\/em>, p. 38.<a href=\"#_ftnref12\" name=\"_ftn12\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[12]\u00a0 Michael Bristol, <em>Carnival and Theatre: Plebeian Culture and the Structure of Authority in Renaissance England<\/em> (New York,\u00a0 Methuen, 1985), p. 22.<a href=\"#_ftnref13\" name=\"_ftn13\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[13]\u00a0 Bakhtin, <em>Problems<\/em>, p. 125.<a href=\"#_ftnref14\" name=\"_ftn14\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[14]\u00a0 See, for example, James Joyce, <em>Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man<\/em> (London, Minerva, 1992), pp.130-40 and Samuel Beckett, <em>Waiting for Godot <\/em>(London, Faber and Faber, 1965), pp.11-15<em>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref15\" name=\"_ftn15\">[15]<\/a>\u00a0 Deane, <em>Strange Country<\/em>, p. 170.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref16\" name=\"_ftn16\">[16]<\/a>\u00a0 Emil Kraepelin in Milligan and Clare, <em>Depression<\/em>, pp. 23-4.<a href=\"#_ftnref17\" name=\"_ftn17\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[17]\u00a0 See, for instance,\u00a0 Sean O&#8217;Casey, &#8216;The Silver Tassie&#8217;, <em>Collected Works<\/em> vol. ii (London, MacMillan, 1967) where a carnivalesque opening of great joy mutates into a despairing nihilism: <em>The sound of a concertina playing in the street outside has been heard, and the noise of a marching crowd&#8230;.\u00a0 Shouts are heard&#8211; &#8216;<\/em>Up the Avondales!<em>&#8216; ; &#8216;<\/em>Up Harry Heegan and the Avondales!&#8217;<em> Then steps are heard coming up the stairs, and first Simon Norton enters, holding the door ceremoniously wide open to allow Harry to enter &#8230; carrying a silver cup joyously&#8230;. <\/em>(p. 25).<\/p>\n<p><em>cf<\/em>.:<\/p>\n<p><em>Teddy<\/em>:\u00a0 Strain as you may, it stretches from the throne of God to the end of the hearth of hell.<\/p>\n<p><em>Simon<\/em>.\u00a0 What?<\/p>\n<p><em>Teddy<\/em>.\u00a0 The darkness.\u00a0 (p. 89).<\/p>\n<p>[18]\u00a0 Samuel Beckett writing about <em>The End of the Beginning<\/em> in &#8216;The Essential and the Incidental&#8217;, Thomas Kilroy, ed., <em>Sean O&#8217;Casey: Twentieth Century Views<\/em> (London, MacMillan ,1975), p. 167.<a href=\"#_ftnref19\" name=\"_ftn19\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[19]\u00a0 Beckett, &#8216;The Essential and the Incidental&#8217;, p. 168.<a href=\"#_ftnref20\" name=\"_ftn20\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[20]\u00a0 Sean O&#8217;Casey, &#8216;The End of the Beginning&#8217;, <em>Five One Act Plays<\/em> (MacMillan, 1990),\u00a0 p. 33.\u00a0 Further references to this play can be found in the text.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref21\" name=\"_ftn21\">[21]<\/a>\u00a0 This pastoralism would later produce the De Valeran vision of a countryside &#8216;bright with cosy homesteads, whose fields and villages would be joyous with the sounds of industry, the romping of sturdy children, the contests of athletic youths, the laughter of maidens; whose firesides would be the forums of the wisdom of serene old age.&#8217;\u00a0 (Eamon De Valera quoted in David Krause, intro., <em>Cock-a-Doodle Dandy <\/em>(London, MacMillan, 1991), pp. 15-16.\u00a0 In <em>Cock-a-Doodle Dandy<\/em> , O&#8217;Casey developed the point made in\u00a0 <em>The End of the Beginning<\/em>&#8211; that the boredom of pastoralism concealed an apocalyptic force (the cock) which could rip its pretensions apart.<a href=\"#_ftnref22\" name=\"_ftn22\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[22]\u00a0 Conor Cruise O&#8217;Brien, &#8216;The Embers of Easter&#8217;, O.D. Edwards and F. Pyle, ed.s, <em>1916: The Easter Rising<\/em> (London, MacMillan, 1968), p. 231.<a href=\"#_ftnref23\" name=\"_ftn23\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>[23]\u00a0 For an interesting essay on the relationship between antics and melancholy, see Harry Levin, &#8216;The Antic Disposition&#8217;, <em>Hamlet: A Selection of Critical Essays<\/em>, ed. John Jump (London, MacMillan, 1968), 122-36. The word antic derives etymologically from the Italian <em>antico<\/em> (antique) which gives the phrase &#8216;Antic country&#8217; a satisfyingly Yeatsian accent.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In a powerful 1997 essay, Seamus Deane suggested that the twin forces that beset modern Irish writers such as W.B. Yeats and James Joyce were those of Apocalypse and Boredom.[1]\u00a0 Both the culture in which the writers lived and the art-works they produced are marked by phasic interruptions into colonial despondency of revelatory dramas and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":196,"featured_media":8241,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[625,1314,1877,2044,4594,4787,8198,8213,8909,9914,10254],"class_list":["post-8227","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-history-2","tag-apocalypse-and-boredom","tag-carnivalistic","tag-conor-cruise-obrien","tag-craic","tag-irish-modernism","tag-james-joyce","tag-seamus-deane","tag-sean-ocasey","tag-terry-eagleton","tag-w-b-yeats","tag-yeatsian"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/8227","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/196"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=8227"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/8227\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=8227"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=8227"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/casswp.eutonom.eu\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=8227"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}