| Post-Driven Developments by Jerry WhiteOne of the best pieces of general-interest film criticism that I
recall reading in the last few years appeared in the Times Literary
Supplement on 7 February 2003. Murray Smith's "Darwin and the
Directors" was a carefully considered, accessibly written
examination of the relationship between cinematic aesthetics and
Darwinian theory, focussing particularly on film acting, facial
expression, and the role of the emotions on intellectual discourse.
And although old masters like Hitchcock and Robert Bresson featured
prominently, Smith indulged in none of the cinema-is-dead crap that
cinephiles are so often subjected to by America's army of provincial,
baby boomer critics. Indeed, he holds forth eloquently on Japan's
Takeshi Kitano and Hong Kong's Wong Kar-wai, both recent additions
to the Pantheon of world cinema. At one point he distinguishes
between a Hitchcock-type of director, as opposed to a Kitano/Bresson
sort, writing that:
"The fact that Hitchcock's approach is more "naturalistic,"
however, in the sense that his performers adopt expressions which
are manifestly similar to those we encounter in life, while in the
cases of Bresson and Kitano we find an attenuation of emotional
expression which we would find disturbing or even pathological in
life, does not render the evolutionary perspective on emotional
expression irrelevant. The latter kind of directors provide a more
culture-specific form of "negative evidence" for its
relevance; understanding how facial expression ordinarily functions
sharpens our appreciation of the aesthetic sculpting of expression
by particular artists."
If someone were to ask "why should we care about Darwinian
theory" at the beginning of the 21st century, I think you could
do worse than to point to that passage. This is a period in history
when arguments about supra-cultural elements of human behaviour,
or about the claims of scientific rationalism and such rationalism's
role in cultural (and sometimes religious debates), are inescapable
parts of intellectual life. What film criticism stands to gain from
Darwin's contributions to these sorts of arguments is important
(hence my dwelling on Smith), but it's a small part of the picture;
anyone interested in broad cultural arguments would do well to
familiarise him- or herself with Darwin's struggles to make sense
of the world around him. Janet Browne's two-volume biography of
the man would be an excellent place to start; volume 2, Charles
Darwin: The Power of Place, is what I'm looking at here.
While Browne surely focuses on the elements of Darwin's work which
dealt with transcendent elements of human existence and development,
she also places him squarely in the context of 19th century England.
His relationship to the colonial project is not much dealt with
here, although Browne mentions it briefly when talking about how
easy it was for him to support the North in the American Civil War
from the comfort produced by his investments in colonial enterprises.
The overall absence of the colonial, though, is not entirely a
surprise; the work of Darwin's most indebted to this English
institution, Voyage of the Beagle (originally published as Journal
of Researches in 1845) has been out for some while as The Power of
Place opens in 1858. What we do discover, though, is a distinctly
literary Darwin, a man genuinely passionate about reading and
writing. Of Darwin's influences, Browne writes that "[t]he
language he knew best was the language of Milton and Shakespeare,
steeped in teleology and purpose, not the objective, value-free
terminology sought (although rarely found) in science" (p59).
This literary connection is important; Browne clearly wants to place
Darwin in a line of great English visionaries, figures whose
subjective, polemical passion meshed with an uncompromising insight
into human nature. And she also sees science in terms that are
very similar to the institution of literary criticism as practised
in late-18th and early-19th century England, so vividly described
and thoroughly analysed in Terry Eagleton's book The Function of
Criticism. Writing about the public presence of Darwin's close
friend Thomas Huxley, she writes that "he told his patrons at
the Royal Institution that they were indisputably related to apes
He continued the line in lectures to working men delivered not far
away on the other side of Piccadilly. This second batch of lectures
was part of a regular series delivered by several old hands at the
School of Mines in Jermyn Street, where Huxley taught natural history
and purveyed cheap public instruction at sixpence a time The lectures
were lively and informative, attracting a large clientele"
(p138). While the University, and especially Cambridge, was an
important part of the institutional structure that formed Darwin,
Browne's visualisation of 19th century English science has very
healthy doses indeed of lay-scholars, of men (yep, almost entirely
men) anxious to get deeply lost in their gardens and their studies
and their evening lectures, in an attempt, paradoxically, to better
understand the world around them.
Another crucially important part of this world of reading and writing
was the post; Darwin emerges here as a consummate correspondent,
someone heavily invested in letter-writing. Browne explains it thus:
"Such a life obviously depended on the postal system, the
preeminent collective enterprise of the Victorian period, and Darwin
sensed the splendour of this organisation as readily as Anthony
Trollope, who, after novelising the nation before breakfast, would
(p13). This is a particularly elegant formulation on Browne's part;
she collapses a little cultural history (collective enterprises in
the Victorian period), a little biographical detail (Darwin and the
odd things he found splendid) and a little semi-narratological,
semi-institutional literary analysis (novelising the nation before
breakfast) all into a deliciously efficient sentence. It's typical
of Browne's style, which is both densely packed but also resistant
to simple grandeur. I don't say much about her style here not
because it's unimpressive but because it's so clearly integrated
into the project as a whole. To bring it back to film criticism,
like a movie by a really solid Hollywood craftsman or craftswoman
(Curtis Harrington, say, or Katherine Bigelow), you really want to
say more about the form, but you inevitably find yourself talking
about other stuff instead-for instance, the post. Darwin wrote to
and received letters from all manner of distinguished scientists
and (no doubt deeply eccentric) amateur naturalists, and Browne
tells us that he was meticulous about responding. As a result there
in an enormous record of some of Darwin's most intimate thoughts;
all of the negotiations, the uncertainty, the polyphony of scientific
progress, is available in a way that it wouldn't be if we had only
published material to rely on. The subjective elements become part
of this narrative, mostly as a result of the reach and scale of the
19th century English post.
Letter-writing became less of a passion and more of a chore for
Darwin when he started to become famous and was, as a result, deluged
with often very frivolous correspondence; Browne's positioning of
him as part of early, photography-driven celebrity is one way that
she shows him, and his cultural moment to be a kind of predictor
of the 20th- and 21st-century: "In the nineteenth century,
pilgrimages to literary figures began in earnest," Browne
writes. "Wordsworth was pestered in the Lake District, and
snoopers became such a nuisance to Tennyson on the Isle of Wight
that he fled to the closely wooded hills of Surrey. I can't be
anonymous by reason of your confounded photographs,' he complained
to Mrs. [Julia Margaret] Cameron in August 1868. Darwin discovered
his position was little different" (p382). Darwin had quite
a close relationship with Cameron, that most ambitious (and in some
ways most pretentious) of early photographers, and was photographed
by her on many occasions. But Darwin's eventual real fame' is quite
different from his status as a publicly engaged intellectual, with
his well-attended lectures and well-informed laymen correspondents,
that is presented earlier in the book. "Rafts of amateur
naturalists supplied snippets of information that must have stopped
even Darwin in his tracks-a frog inside a lump of coal, a hen that
laid eggs with clock faces on them, a hybrid cat-rabbit, beans that
grew on the wrong side of the pod in leap years, an avowal that the
human soul was really only magnetism" (388). Fame is presented
here as a harbinger of the banal; the tide had turned, and the 20th
century was not far behind.
But the other part of contemporary life that Browne's Darwin seems
to predict is globalisation. Browne spends some time discussing
the international circulation of Darwin's books, writing that
"[a]s a translated volume, Darwin's Origin of Species was
plainly dropping into a range of social contexts bursting with their
own continuing trends of thought, several of which already included
evolutionary ideas. The story was generally the same in Australia,
New Zealand, the United States of America, and Canada-each nation
divided from Britain by a common language. The Origin's author
plugged away at them all. Whether for him or against him, or willing
to meet him at some point halfway, men and women across the globe
began participating in one of the first international scientific
debates" (p262). Here is an intellectual committed to the
truth of his position at the same time as being passionate about
polemics and debate. Furthermore, this Darwin is intensely
internationalist and yet completely formed by the landscape of the
English countryside (which made his endless, garden-based tinkering
possible, to say nothing of the time he spent aboard the naval
vessel HMS Beagle). Think of how this negotiation between the
global and the local synchs up so nicely with that consummately
international-yet-rooted art form the cinema; think also of how
both Darwin and the cinema are perpetually torn between realist and
philosophical impulses. This is the face of reasonable globalisation.
To steal a phrase from Canadian film critic and philosopher Bruce
Elder, this is the Darwin we need.
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