Teaching went fairly well this term. The class design isn’t really where I want it to be quite yet, but it’s getting close. When you start applying for jobs, the vogue thing is to have a teaching philosophy. At some point I have to develop one of my own. It’s a while before I go on the market (there’ that nasty bit called the dissertation to finish first). But I’ve been pretty focused this term and so, I thought I would reward myself by allowing some philosophical musing. I’ve really scaled back on indulgences (like this blog) and I need to get cracking on cleaning the house and writing my oft-referred-to-seldom-seen research proposal. But some fun first.
The excerpt is from a play called History Boys, by Alan Bennett, the playwright who brought us, among other texts, The Madness of King George. Unlike most teacher stories, the teachers are very human. The play is a marvelously constructed study in different types of conflict The excerpt we’re going to read is the central intellectual conflict between the two leading characters, Mr. Hector and Mr. Irwin. Strangely, from my perspective, both are queer. Today, I'll do the exegesis and next time, I'll do the proper discussion.
HECTOR: | A romantic idealist who is obsessed with the ostensible purpose of education—that it help you live a good life. He is meaning, fleeing from the violence of being represented in a form. His self-image is that of a rebel who protects his students from, well, “mechanized petrification.” When Hector hits the boys, it’s typically with a rolled up paper and symbolic and not painful. The boys ham it up in response. They have a tender and deeply humorous relationship. Hector has a good deal of trouble with the problem that life cannot be lived entirely on the level of grand meaning. He has a reprehensible penchant for feeling up his male students’ crotches while taking them for rides on his motorcycle. His wife doesn’t know and apparently doesn’t care enough to find out. Hector is now stuck team teaching with Irwin because he got caught. |
IRWIN: | A tremendously gifted rhetorician with an all-consuming obsession with controlling his image in the eyes of others, he nonetheless comes across as engaging, affable and charming. He is a very able teacher. While he lacks a moral compass, his need to control his image prevents him from falling into the sorts of difficulties that have essentially done Hector in. In the play, the character’s fate is to be bound to a wheelchair and to become deeply corrupt. In the movie, he’s on crutches for a few weeks and he becomes less corrupt. |
DAKIN: | The best-looking boy in class and among the most clever in an exceptionally brainy class. He is already sleeping with the headmaster’s secretary. He is very aware of the queer characters’ sexual attraction to him. My guess is that he’s a Kinsey 2. Destined to be a lawyer, he is enormously attracted to Irwin, as Irwin offers him the power of becoming a player in the game. He has issues with Hector, although it doesn’t seem that getting felt up on a motorcycle is prominent among them. Ironically, he is the character who has the clearest view of Irwin’s immorality. Strangely, while I don’t think he shares that immorality, he does not seem disturbed by it. |
POSNER: | The youngest boy, probably a Kinsey 6, he has a deep crush on Dakin, who, while not encouraging Posner, is not at all upset by the fact. Posner is the only student that Hector will not feel up. My gut instinct is that the reason this is the case is that Posner is the only one of the boys who might really want to feel back. I doubt Hector is really up to something like that. Posner is Hector’s best student, although not his favorite. Posner does, however, care very deeply for the ideals of truth and beauty. He is the sort of boy who is wounded by his education. This is the type of wound that never fully heals. In the play, he winds up isolated and a little insane. In the movie, he becomes a teacher with a deep understanding of melancholy. |
It’s strange that Bennett should change the Irwin and Posner’s fate so dramatically for the film. Whether this is pandering to
Boys come in, followed by Hector. They sit glumly at their desks.
IRWIN | Would you like to start? |
HECTOR | I don’t mind. |
IRWIN | How do you normally start? It is your lesson. General Studies. |
HECTOR | The boys decide. Ask them. |
IRWIN | Anybody? |
The boys don’t respond.
HECTOR | Come along, boys. Don’t sulk. |
DAKIN | We don’t know who we are, sir. Your class or Mr Irwin’s. |
IRWIN | Does it matter? |
TIMMS | Oh yes, sir. It depends if you want us thoughtful. Or smart. |
The first criticism of teaching, if you will. Students are aware of their instructors’ expectations and clearly put on a performance. An inevitable part of any relationship of power, yet I imagine one that is not consonant with Hector’s self-image. Hector wants to break through the scene to a moment that is “real.” Timms is the class smart aleck. His suggestion that all the world, including Mr. Hector’s class, is a play, doesn’t go over very well with Hector.
HECTOR | He wants you civil, you rancid little turd. (Hits him.) |
TIMMS | Look, sir. You’re a witness. Hitting us, sir. He could be sacked. |
IRWIN | Settle down. Settle down. I thought we might talk about the Holocaust. |
HECTOR | Good gracious. Is that on the syllabus? |
The opening of the rift begins here. A statement like “Good gracious. Is that on the syllabus?” is almost completely bizarre for Hector, a teacher who routinely ignores syllabi. For him to ask a question like “Is that on the syllabus?” is a clear admission of discomfort.
IRWIN | It has to be. The syllabus includes the Second World War. |
HECTOR | I suppose it does. |
IRWIN | Though in any case the scholarship questions aren’t limited to a particular curriculum. |
Irwin has been hired by the headmaster to prepare the boys for scholarship examination to get into Oxford and Cambridge. A subject is a subject to him. He’s there to teach a technique.
HECTOR | But how can you teach the Holocaust? |
An ethical question directed at Irwin. To Hector, a subject’s not just a subject. Moreover, the question is not asking for the proper technique. Hector clearly means that one cannot teach the Holocaust.
IRWIN | Well, that would do as a question. Can you ... should you ... teach the Holocaust? Anybody? |
The question is neatly deflected. Presumably, from Hector’s perspective, this is a dilemma that is to be resolved by the instructor before class begins. But it’s always good form for a teacher to throw a hard question out to the room. Irwin is a master of form.
AKTHAR | It has origins. It has consequences. It’s a subject like any other. |
SCRIPPS | Not like any other, surely. Not like any other at all. |
AKTHAR | No, but it’s a topic. |
Akhtar speaks in the voice of the scientist. Our methods do not change because of how we feel about the subject. If they do, we have clearly not practiced ethical neutrality.
HECTOR | They go on school trips nowadays, don’t they? Auschwitz. Dachau. What has always concerned me is where do they eat their sandwiches? Drink their Coke? |
CROWTHER | The visitors’ centre. It’s like anywhere else. |
HECTOR | Do they take pictures of each other there? Are they smiling? Do they hold hands? Nothing is appropriate. Just as questions on an examination paper are inappropriate. How can the boys scribble down an answer however well put that doesn’t demean the suffering involved? And putting it well demeans it as much as putting it badly. |
Hector’s concern, then, is one of reverence—our reverence for the dead, for these dead who experienced and suffered “unspeakable” horror. To give a thing a name, to speak that name, makes the thing an object. It makes it subject to our power. The emotional impact of an object must, perforce, be less than that of an unfathomable source of awe. Objects are objects because they can be manipulated. Much like the name of God, Hector would not speak of the horror, for in his view we should not become desensitized to it. Such an awful thing should not lose its awe.
IRWIN | It’s a question of tone, surely. Tact. |
HECTOR | Not tact. Decorum. |
From the Oxford English Dictionary:
TACT: | Ready and delicate sense of what is fitting and proper in dealing with others, so as to avoid giving offence, or win good will; skill or judgement in dealing with men or negotiating difficult or delicate situations; the faculty of saying or doing the right thing at the right time. |
DECORUM: | That which is proper, suitable, seemly, befitting, becoming; fitness, propriety, congruity, especially in dramatic, literary, or artistic composition: That which is proper to a personage, place, time, or subject in question, or to the nature, unity, or harmony of the composition; fitness, congruity, keeping. |
Decorum refers to that which is appropriate to the object about which a person speaks. For Hector, to speak of this must be an act of reverence. Tact refers to what one says to win over the listener. To Irwin, what is central is understanding how to avoid the emotions that would prevent his point from being made. An object is an object. The key to dealing with objects is knowing how to use them. Whether the object is the subject of discussion or the subject who listens, an object is an object.
LOCKWOOD | What if you were to write that this was so far beyond one’s experience silence is the only proper response? |
DAKIN | That would be your answer to lots of questions, though, wouldn’t it, sir? |
HECTOR | Yes. Yes, Dakin, it would. |
DAKIN | ‘Whereof one cannot speak thereof one must be silent.’ |
Hector groans and puts his head in his hands.
| That's right, isn't it, sir? Wittgenstein. |
I have some pity here for Hector, although I feel Bennett is so good to him that I ought to be made of sterner stuff for the sake of justice. The hardest thing for a teacher to hear is that the point of his or her teaching, the point over which he or she has labored to persuade the student, has not sunk in at all. We try so hard to guide their attention to what we profess to be valuable. When we no longer occupy the stage of their mind however, it is shocking to see what they have instead taken from what we said. They’ve listened, but they have not taken the point. These moments of futility are the hardest ones for me to bear.
IRWIN | Yes. That's good. |
HECTOR | No, it's not good. It's ... flip. It's ... glib. It's journalism. |
OED tells us that, a journal is, among other things, “A record of public events or of a series of public transactions, noted down as they occur day by day or at successive dates, without historical discussion.” The word “journalism” is, of course, a round condemnation in this particular text. I can’t help thinking that the distinction of recording events without historical discussion is the reason why. Although, clearly, this attack is made on the historical discussion itself. I think the essence of the insult is that the historical discussion is not real and is, in some sense, a sensationalist fraud.
DAKIN | But it's you that taught us it. |
HECTOR | I didn't teach you and Wittgenstein didn't screw it out of his very guts in order for you to turn it into a dinky formula. I thought that you of all people were bright enough to see that. |
DAKIN | I do see it, sir. Only I don't agree with it. Not . . not any more. |
Dakin, who perhaps for a time has been under Hector’s spell, is disenchanted. I don’t know if that disenchantment is with Hector’s ideals, with Hector himself, or both.
TIMMS | Sir. |
HECTOR | (head in his hands) Yes? |
TIMMS | You told us once. . . it was to do with the trenches, sir ... that one person's death tells you more than a thousand. When people are dying like flies, you said, that is what they are dying like. |
For once, Timms isn’t making a wise crack. He’s beginning to make intuitive leaps between new material and other things he’s learned. He’s beginning to think. He’s not there yet, but he’s gaining on it.
POSNER | Except that these weren't just dying. They were being processed. What is different is the process. |
There it is. The moment of insight.
IRWIN | Good. |
HECTOR | No, not good. Posner is not making a point. He is speaking from the heart. |
Irwin is praising Posner’s insight. What Hector objects to is not the praise, but the reason for the praise. Irwin is praising the technical performance, not the meaning of the statement. What offends Hector is the divorce of rationality from sacred meaning and its grafting onto a purely instrumental process in which the outcome is a simple and mundane victory or loss. He would not see sacred meaning fall into Irwin’s hands. The tools of the temple were never meant to be used for Irwin’s kind of work.
DAKIN | So? Supposing we get a question on Hitler and the Second War and we take your line, sir, that this is not a crazed lunatic but a statesman. |
HECTOR | A statesman? |
IRWIN | Not a statesman, Dakin, a politician. I wouldn't say statesman. |
DAKIN | Politician, then, and one erratically perhaps, but still discernibly operating within the framework of traditional German foreign policy ... |
IRWIN | Yes? |
DAKIN | ... and we go on to say, in accordance with this line, that the death camps have to be seen in the context of this policy. |
Pause.
IRWIN | I think that would be ... inexpedient. |
HECTOR | Inexpedient? Inexpedient? |
Dakin is exulting in new-found power and using it to make a swipe at Hector. Irwin is focused on the work and probably doesn’t notice. Hector is outraged by the fact that Irwin is completely senseless to the meaning of what Dakin has just said.
IRWIN | I don't think it's true, for a start ... |
This is Irwin’s genius. The argument isn’t tactful, so he calls it untrue. Don’t be the Devil’s Advocate unless you can win the case. The win-loss record is what makes the reputation.
SCRIPPS | But what has truth got to do with it? I thought that we'd already decided that for the purposes of this examination truth is, if not an irrelevance, then so relative as just to amount to another point of view. |
HECTOR | Why can you not simply condemn the camps outright as an unprecedented horror? |
The obvious, moral answer. Hector is upset because coming to this conclusion should not, in his view, take so much work. Notice that because of the timing of Hector's outburst, Irwin is freed from answering Scripps' very poignant question.
There is slight embarrassment.
LOCKWOOD | No point, sir. Everybody will do that. That's the stock answer, sir ... the camps an event unlike any other, the evil unprecedented, etc., etc. |
HECTOR | No. Can't you see that even to say etcetera is monstrous? Etcetera is what the Nazis would have said, the dead reduced to a mere verbal abbreviation. What have we learned about language? Orwell. Orwell. |
This is a link to Orwell’s essay, if you’re interested. Hector has lost the room. His attempt to sacrilize the method of reason and link it solely to the good has failed to win the class over. He has failed, like Plato before him. Unlike Plato, however, he was in the room to hear his students reject his teaching.
LOCKWOOD | All right, not etcetera. But given that the death camps are generally thought of as unique, wouldn't another approach be to show what precedents there were and put them ... well ... in proportion? |
SCRIPPS | Proportion! |
DAKIN | Not proportion then, but putting them in context. |
Tact. Dakin’s getting the hang of it now.
POSNER | But to put something in context is a step towards saying it can be understood and that it can be explained. And if it can be explained then it can be explained away. |
Posner sees Hector’s point more clearly than anyone else in the room. Indeed, we discover, a few lines later, the reason that he might be more inclined to. He alone in this room is living the argument. Recall that Hector’s argument is pedagogical. It is an argument about the proper values for teaching to follow, a protest of the tactical process that Irwin is teaching.
RUDGE | ‘Tout comprendre c’est tout pardonner.’ |
Hector groans.
To understand all is to forgive all. What Hector is trying to say about why the Holocaust shouldn’t be taught has just become fodder for the process Irwin is teaching. This happened because Posner has learned that point by taking part in the debate sincerely. What Hector has tried to teach as a supreme value has become one more clever position, despite the fact that Posner is utterly sincere and not trying to be clever for the sake of cleverness. Irwin’s winning the game, the game that Hector refuses to let be a game. "He shoots, he scores!" Leave it to Rudge, the class jock, to see the puck slide in most clearly.
IRWIN | That’s good, Posner. |
POSNER | It isn’t ‘good’. I mean it, sir. |
And Posner did mean it, too. The irony, however, is that without the process that Irwin is championing, Posner would never had faced the dilemma and never formulated the position. Remember that Hector would never have let the dialogue happen, had he been given a choice.
DAKIN | But when we talk about putting them in context it’s only the same as the Dissolution of the Monasteries. After all, monasteries had been dissolved before Henry VIII, dozens of them. |
Dakin is intoxicated. A world in which nothing is sacred is a world where everything is a potential object of power. What's whiskey compared to that?
POSNER | Yes, but the difference is, I didn’t lose any relatives in the Dissolution of the Monasteries. |
IRWIN | Good point. |
SCRIPPS | You keep saying, ‘Good point.’ Not good point, sir. True. To you the Holocaust is just another topic on which we may get a question. |
IRWIN | No. But this is history. Distance yourselves. Our perspective on the past alters. Looking back, immediately in front of us is dead ground. We don’t see it and because we don’t see it this means that there is no period so remote as the recent past and one of the historian’s jobs is to anticipate what our perspective of that period will be ... even on the Holocaust. |
The bell goes.
What’s sad here, is Irwin comes off really well. He comes off as a scientist should. I think the play shows us in other scenes that this isn’t what he truly believes. Yet, whatever Irwin's intentions, the awakening of Posner in the dialogue shows the power of the process.
IRWIN | I thought that went rather well. |
HECTOR | Parrots. I thought I was lining their minds with some sort of literary insulation, proof against the primacy of fact. Instead back come my words like a Speak Your Weight Machine. ‘Tout comprendre c’est tout pardonner.’ Ugh. |
IRWIN | I was rather encouraged. They’re getting the idea. |
HECTOR | Do you know what the worst thing is? I wanted them to show off, to come up with the short answer, the handy quote. I wanted them to compete. It’s time I went. |
IRWIN | Went where? |
HECTOR | Oh, home. Home. |
In a sense, Hector really isn’t alive to Irwin. Hector’s just a helpful object. Irwin scares me.
2 comments:
What the rest of the world doesn't know is that you spent close to 6 man hours getting the format for this blog entry correct. You're amazing AND the movie was pretty good. I liked it and you.
Dear Craig,
No it didn't I just waved my magic wand and the html just appeared that way! Really!!
Well, hopefully, if I ever need to use that type of formatting again, it won't take as long...
I like you--even better than the movie!!
Love,
Talal
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