Rock 'n' Roll  is the new play by Sir Tom Stoppard. It is said to combine, in some hard to  predict Stoppardian fashion, the stories of both Pink Floyd's acid-casualty Syd  Barrett and of Czechoslovakia between the Soviet invasion of 1968 and the Velvet  Revolution of 1989.
By my count, that makes Rock 'n' Roll Stoppard's ninth play to deal,  disapprovingly, with Eastern European Communism. The others are Travesties  (Lenin in Zurich], Every Good Boy Deserves Favor (inside a Soviet  psychiatric hospital where dissidents are imprisoned), Cahoot's Macbeth  (censorship in Czechoslovakia), Personal Foul (samizdat literature), Squaring  the Circle (Poland in 1980-81), and his trilogy The Coast of Utopia (the  rise of Russian radicalism in the 19th Century). The malignancies of Communism  are one of the most massive stories of our time, yet also one that has largely  been ignored by almost every other Western European or American writer of  Literature-with-a-Capital-L.
As this profile  of Stoppard in the Telegraph makes clear, one reason for this is that Stoppard,  by birth, is an Eastern European writer like Kundera or Solzhenitsyn. He was  born in Zlin, Czechoslovakia, but his family was driven out by Hitler before he  can remember. His father died in the Far East, and his widowed mother married a  British Army officer in India, from whom Stoppard acquired his English  patriotism. Stoppard's lack of alienation from traditional England is one of the  most attractive and rare qualities in a writer of his dazzling intellect.
And, indeed, his devotion to explaining the suffering of his fellow Slavs under  the Bolsheviks has a boyishly abstract quality to it. He gives the impression  that he decided as a good-hearted English schoolboy who believed in fair play  that he would do what he could for his native lands, even though he can't  remember them, and has stuck to that vow ever since, although nobody else in his  circles cared much about what had been done to the poor Slavs.
A striking irony is that Stoppard learned during the 1990s that he isn't Slavic  at all:
At 68, he  is still discovering himself. When he was a boy, his mother drew a veil over the  family's past. There had been a Jewish grandmother, she said, and this was why  they had to leave Czechoslovakia. Only relatively recently did he learn the  fully story.
His whole family was Jewish. Most of his relatives had been murdered in the  death camps. His father, once the house doctor at the Bata shoe factory in Zlin  ...
Stoppard grew up believing  he was roughly 1/4th Jewish. (When looking at pictures of Stoppard, you are so  struck by how much he looks like he could be the best-preserved  member of the Rolling Stones that it's hard to focus on what ethnicity he  might be.) But in the 1990s he finally saw a photograph of his father, who  turned out, I would say, to be the most Jewish-looking man in all history.  (Unfortunately, I can't find online the picture from Stoppard's article in Talk  magazine.)
It's interesting to speculate on what subjects would have interested Stoppard if  his mother had been forthcoming about his ethnic background. Would he have  instead written about the historical crimes of Nazism rather than the more  contemporary crimes of Communism? Would he have obsessed over the sins of the  Slavs (e.g., anti-Semitism) rather than their virtues (such as fortitude)? In  other words, would he have ended up like most of the other writers in the  English-speaking world?
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment