Fair Is Foul
Essay by review • December 19, 2010 • Essay • 1,201 Words (5 Pages) • 1,403 Views
Written early in the reign of James I (16031625), Shakespeare's Macbeth is a typical "Jacobean" tragedy in many important respects. Referred to superstitiously by actors as "the Scottish play," the script commemorates James's national heritage by depicting events during the years 1040 to 1057 in his native Scotland. The play also celebrates the ruler's intense interest in witchcraft and magic, which was recorded in a book he wrote in 1597 entitled Demonology. Further topical allusions to the king include all the passages in the script mentioning sleeplessness, which are relevant since James was a well-known insomniac.
The most memorable references to Jacobean England in the play, however, are those which chronicle events of the notorious Gunpowder Plot--a conspiracy by Catholic sympathizers to blow up the Parliament building and all the heads of state on November 5, 1605, approximately one year before Shakespeare's play was written. On that date, Guy Fawkes and his band of Jesuit-sponsored papists smuggled an immense amount of gunpowder into a vault under the Parliament, which would have killed everyone in the building in a fiery cataclysm had the king not detected the explosives prior to their detonation. According to a recent book by Garry Wills, Witches and Jesuits (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), James claimed to have discovered the plan by "inspiration" from God, who wished to save England from Rome's "Popish plot." Through popular mythology following the event, Jesuits were branded as "equivocators" who had tried to attack both England and the Reformation through a perverse use not only of gunpowder ("the devil's invention"), but also of the very nature of language, which they employed in double and triple entendre to hide from the king and his court their fiendish intentions.
Not surprisingly, Shakespeare's play reflects these topical Jacobean events through its word choice, plot, and themes in an intriguing blend of Scottish history, contemporary political events, and authorial creativity. The language of the play, for example, includes a litany of references to the Gunpowder Plot that would have been familiar to all the king's loyal subjects in 1605. Such terms as "vault," "mine," "blow," "devils," "fuse," "powder," "confusion," "corpses," "spirits," and "combustion" set up a linguistic landscape through which Macbeth and the witches kill a king and take over his throne in a mirror image of the aborted Popish plot during James's reign. Similarly, the play's riddling prophesies mimic the ease with which Jesuits equivocated between truth and falsehood, good and evil. If fair is foul and foul is fair, the deaths of King James and his entire Parliament would have seemed "fair" indeed to the Romish conspirators, though "foul" to anyone in the English nation.
In this summer's Utah Shakespearean Festival production of the play, director Robert Cohen has sought to capitalize on the Jacobean origins of Macbeth by placing its action in the early seventeenth century. Scenic Designer Dan Robinson's elegant, refined set dominated by the open timbers, painted ceilings, and grotesque Tarot images of affluent Scottish castles has created a sophisticated dramatic universe in which the evil of Macbeth stands in stark contrast to its opulent, polished surroundings. By focusing their production upon the time the play was written rather than upon the chronology of its eleventh-century source material, the director and his designers have created a world not unlike our own where we are more susceptible to moral depravity because it lurks innocently behind the thin veneer of civilization. Macbeth and his lady are not barbarians living within a primitive, medieval era; instead, they are refined, successful aristocrats whose degenerate ambition seems savagely out of place in this modern Jacobean milieu.
Set within its updated seventeenth-century context, many of the play's principal themes take on fresh clarity within this sophisticated environment. The tragedy's powerful oxymorons, for example, attain renewed emphasis through the marked distinction between Macbeth's brutality and the polished, cultured society which has nurtured it. In a world which is both "fair" and "foul" at the same time, a number of other important opposites stand out in stark contrast to each other--including dark/light, sin/grace, salvation/damnation, discord/concord, desire/performance, good/evil, angel/devil, and heaven/hell--all of which help to characterize a play which was itself suspended precariously between the extremes of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
Similarly, Dean Mogle's
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