Gibert, 'Aristophanes and Women', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9505
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9505-gibert-aristophanes
@@@@95.5.7, Taafe, Aristophanes and Women
Lauren K. Taaffe, Aristophanes and Women. London and New
York: Routledge, 1994. Pp. xii, 214. $49.95. ISBN
0-415-09514-X.
Reviewed by John Gibert -- University of Colorado
gibert@ucsu.colorado.edu
Near the end of her book, Lauren Taaffe recalls the scene in
Shakespeare's As You Like It where Rosalind, disguised as
Ganymede, offers to act as Rosalind for Orlando. "In other
words," she writes, "Rosalind plays the role of a man who
imitates Rosalind herself. The audience has x-ray vision, so to
speak, at this point in the play (III.ii): they see all three
layers of Rosalind's character and hear four different voices in
her remarks: those of Rosalind, Ganymede, Ganymede as Rosalind,
and, perhaps, the poet" (142).
This brief example illustrates the potential of Taaffe's
project (broadly speaking, the study of gender and
self-referentiality in Aristophanic comedy) and hints at some of
the strengths and weaknesses in her execution of it. Few
nowadays would deny that such a passage cries out for
gender-aware analysis (which, in fact, it has been receiving in
good measure and for some time). Also, the self-conscious
theatricality of this and other passages of the play is evident
and ought to be instructive. The idea that the gender play and
the theatrical play are more than casually related is promising
and certainly deserves careful consideration. Returning to the
example itself, however, observe first that "perhaps" (in "and,
perhaps, [the voice of] the poet") is unnecessarily (and
uncharacteristically) diffident . On the one hand, the poet's
"voice" is a formal necessity at all times. On the other, the
multiplication of voices here, along with the evidence of many
similar examples, is exactly what, in this kind of analysis,
points convincingly to the poet. Yet, if this move is to be more
than a formal gesture, we want to know what this last voice is
saying. The fun is not hard to elaborate in the piling of
Rosalind upon Ganymede upon Rosalind. But Taaffe does not have
anything to say, at this point, about Shakespeare's place at the
bottom of this heap--hence "perhaps."
Taaffe also misses an opportunity here: she should have
said "five voices." She has, for once, forgotten the male actor
who plays Rosalind. This is surprising, since she constantly
reminds her readers of the convention that female roles were
played by males, and this reminder sometimes even forms the main
thrust of her argument about Aristophanes. She makes good the
omission on the next two pages (143-4) with her remarks on the
Epilogue of Shakespeare's play, in which the actor playing
Rosalind first teases the audience with a reference to dramatic
technique ("it is not the fashion to see the lady the epilogue")
and then breaks the illusion to reveal himself as male. In
addition to the actor's voice, in this example we do also get
Shakespeare's voice, for, Taaffe explains, "The poet had at least
three reasons for this." The only one of these that matters for
present purposes begins with a point no one would dispute, that
the poet "reveals the theatricality of the presentation as part
of his comic technique, just as Aristophanes did," and then
continues, "and in particular with female figures." This
addition contains the kernel of Taaffe's argument about
Aristophanes and women.
The argument has three components. First, "the feminine" is
an imaginative construct. I quote again from the concluding
chapter (139): "Aristophanes' portrayal of females, whether
abstract concepts in female form, real citizen women, young
girls, market women, or foreigners, depends on traditional
stereotypes for inspiration. In ancient Greek thought and
literature, the feminine is a theatrical phenomenon: women are
shifty, transient, insubstantial, deceptive, and imitative."
Second, "These qualities also belong to comic figures. Whenever
any element of femininity is present in an Aristophanic
production, an opportunity arises for humor based on
theatricality, costume play, or language play." And third, "the
convention of male actors playing female roles does appear to
intrude into the text, just as it may have intruded into the
performance. Femininity is represented by Aristophanes as the
site of the ultimate comic figure: completely deceptive because
'she' is not real at all. 'She' must be given shape by a man,
and everyone knows that."
Taaffe does not really argue for the first point; here and
there she refers to relevant work by Foucault, Winkler, Zeitlin,
and others. But in her individual readings of Lysistrata,
Thesmophoriazusae, and Ecclesiazusae (chapters 2-4,
the bulk of the book), she does make many fine incidental
observations, or add evidence to others' claims, about feminine
stereotypes. Indeed, she is often at her best in this dimension
of her project, though it does not seem to be the one closest to
her heart. In arguing for the second point, Taaffe acknowledges
some predecessors in classical studies, e.g. Zeitlin again,
Foley, Said, Rosellini, and Loraux. The most frequently cited
studies date from the early to mid-1980's. In addition, she
attributes important influence on her work to scholars of
Renaissance English drama (works dating mostly from the late
80's) and feminist performance criticism, including film studies
(dates in mid-80's). The argument for the third point, at least
the technical part of it (that the masculinity of actors intruded
into text and performance) is largely her own.
Vase paintings that might parallel the last point are
studied in a few pages of the Introduction (5-10). Taaffe
contends that "No male actor in female dress is pictured without
some reminder of his own sexual identity; the illusion of 'woman'
is often disrupted" (9-10). Never mind the inconsistency between
"no male actor" and "often disrupted." The evidence marshalled
to support the argument is in fact vanishingly thin. Of four
vase paintings which unambiguously show male actors portraying
female characters, two are pre-dramatic and not linked to comic
subject matter; the third dates from 520 and also may not be
comic. Only the fourth is well suited to Taaffe's theme. In
this Attic red-figure bell-krater, c. 390-80, two chorus-men
appear dressed as women, one in full costume, the other about
half-disguised. Taaffe writes, "That the painter has chosen to
portray this moment, rather than one in which both actors are in
full costume, is important. While he does commemorate the
actors' performances, he also commemorates a moment when their
illusion of gender disguise is displayed. Just so, manipulation
of costume and language constantly reveals the illusion of gender
disguise in Aristophanes' plays" (9). The point about
Aristophanes must be examined separately. As to the visual
material, I have two questions. First, how is a representation
of actors to be recognized as such if there is no slippage in the
disguise? But even if an answer can be given to this, a second
question is, In what proportion do the (presumably more numerous)
depictions of men playing men reveal awareness of the actors'
identity (including sex) beneath their disguise? Taaffe presents
half an argument, and with the evidence she has she cannot, I
think, overcome the multitude of factors that require her to
qualify her thesis. For example, the vases portraying actors
were commissioned by people connected with the performance, so
they have this simple motive for revealing the actors beneath the
costumes.
The Introduction continues with sketches and surveys of
opinion on "Women in Ancient Greek Comedy" and "Feminist
Performance Criticism." In connection with the latter, Taaffe
speaks of such things as constructions of gender, manipulation of
the male gaze, and reinforcement of cultural images and
assumptions. She then explores an analogy between theater and
film, where recent feminist work has analyzed how the positioning
of the camera, the ordering of images, editing, and so on, are
used along with script and costume to reinforce stereotypes.
This is all well and good and might have gone somewhere. The
trouble is that it doesn't: the analogy, as here presented,
breaks down exactly when Taaffe acknowledges the sharp limits on
the theatrical medium's ability to manipulate the gaze,
especially in a day-time open-air theater. To be sure, theater
has set, props, costume, blocking. But in the case of an ancient
Greek play, these must nearly always be deduced from the text.
More importantly, theater does not control either the angle or
the object of the gaze through a camera. So Taaffe falls back on
the less flashy (but doubtless true) assertion that Aristophanes'
words aim to please a male audience.[[1]]
Chapter 1 seeks support for the points enumerated earlier by
studying the representations of female figures in the plays
before 411. There are some successes. For example, it does seem
fair to associate Dikaiopolis' wife and daughter with the use of
the play-within-a-play technique in Acharnians. The
"femininity" of the Cloud chorus is also fertile for Taaffe's
approach (as it was for Charles Segal in a 1975 article). It
must be said, however, that Taaffe engages in some sloppy
argument in this chapter and rather often in the rest of the
book. In what follows, I present some examples in the hope that
they will clarify the lines along which further research ought to
proceed. As I said earlier, Taaffe's thesis deserves serious
attention, but although she has made a good start in collecting
evidence from the plays, the main case will have to be supported
by better argument than she has provided.[[2]]
First, then, Taaffe sometimes presents an argument too
narrowly focused to support her conclusions. I have mentioned
this already in connection with the vase paintings. Another,
characteristic example is the assertion that the ability to
parody is "essential to the characterization of the feminine in
Aristophanes" (39). But Taaffe herself has just written, "With
Aristophanes, although we can always expect some parody, we never
know who will deliver it." In other words, male comic characters
also produce parody, nor does she suggest that they are any the
less "masculine" for it. The particular passage in question here
provides another example, for Taaffe cites Trygaios' daughter's
exhortation to her father not to "become a tragedy" as, in
effect, metatheater characterizing her and through her "the
feminine." But without wanting to detach this remark from the
daughter (pointless, since she speaks it), I am inclined to see
Trygaios, the male character, as the focus of the metatheatrical
play early in Peace. It is he who has a significant
theatrical name, he who patterns his adventure on a Euripidean
play, he who addresses the crane operator, and so on. Such a
view of Trygaios, which hardly seems controversial, does not rule
out the possibility that at some deeper level Greek culture
associated theatricality and femininity, as Froma Zeitlin has
argued in an intriguing article. But it does not help to make
the case when Taaffe attaches whatever theatrical features she
can find to Trygaios' daughter, unnamed and present for only 35
lines, while ignoring Trygaios himself. A selection of similar
examples of one-sidedness: (1) Taaffe claims that by ridiculing
the costume of the actor who plays Iris in Birds,
"Peisetairos once again highlights the falseness of the
representation of a female figure" (42). This in a play that
will soon feature the ludicrous costume of Prometheus! But what
Taaffe says of Iris and other female figures can be said of
almost any comic character. She never looks at the male figures,
and consequently the costume argument wears thin. (2) The
"concept of femininity as changeable or unstable seems basic to
Greek thought" (159 n. 31). Read "humanity" for "femininity" and
the sentence describes something even more basic. Of course, a
case can be made that changeability and instability are conceived
as more feminine than masculine, but only by adducing examples
that contrast the two genders, at least implicitly. (3) It is
implied that Lysistrata employs a feminine skill when she
"rewrites epic," that is, adapts her husband's reported quotation
of Hector's famous line in the Iliad (64). Again, this is
a widespread and not gendered feature of comic discourse. The
chorus of Birds appropriate cosmogonic poetry, many
characters re-write oracles, and still others manipulate the
jargon of philosophy, politics, and the law-courts, to name only
a few.
Taaffe often overargues as well. For example, the adjective
"sophos" is said to be a "female term" (65). If this is at least
comprehensible (though debatable) against the background, say, of
work by Hellenists of the "Parisian School," I cannot be as
understanding when she asserts the same thing of the adjective
"philtatos" ("an extremely feminine attribute," 56). Similarly,
on 92-3 she exaggerates the metatheatrical potential of the verb
"skopein." At 187 n. 33, commenting on Eccl. 536-8, she
asserts that "the equation, for men, of female clothes and death
seems somewhat pervasive," with a single reference to Lys.
387-475. I assume she means rather 532-8 and 598-607, where in
the corresponding "chokers" of the contest the Proboulos is
dressed first as a woman and then as a corpse. A reference to
Pentheus in Bacchae, as supplied in her discussion of the
Proboulos, would have helped her case, but it is still a stretch.
A related vice is the slide from doubt to certainty in the
progression of many of the arguments. For example, Taaffe writes
on the Rural Dionysia scene of Acharnians, "The
possibilities of exploiting [Dikaiopolis' wife's] position
on stage in performance are many." This is followed by "On the
roof, as an audience for Dikaiopolis' parade, she is free to
interact with the festival audience in the theater herself."
And then, "There she becomes an intermediary between the
play proper and the play-within-the-play for the audience in the
theater" (25-6). And yet, having asserted (not argued) all she
wants from the scene, Taaffe immediately gives it back: "Our
view of the procession is not filtered through hers" (remember
film studies). Similarly at 159 n. 31 (the note about the
changeability of the feminine in Greek thought), she moves from
"Semonides does not conceive of women as simply 'being
women'" to "he cannot say 'Woman is' or 'Woman is X'."
Finally, in writing about the representation of stereotypes in
Lysistrata, Taaffe glides from "Discussion about
the outer image of women helps to create for the audience the
illusion of women played by male actors" (where "discussion"
refers misleadingly to jokes about costume and physique) to
"Because we see the women discuss theatrical illusion. .
." (55, emphasis added to all quotations in this paragraph)!
The last sentence quoted continues, "for a moment we may
recall that male actors play the parts here." We may, but need
not, and it is hard to see how the effect follows from the
alleged cause. Recall that it is an original and cherished
ambition of Taaffe's to prove that the masculinity of actors
intrudes into Aristophanic text and performance. This idea is
far from implausible, yet it often appears as no more than a
gratuitous addition. I give two examples of many:
"Clouds represents femininity as a protean, deceptive, and
ultimately false construct." So far so good; now the addition,
"There are always men underneath" (35). Or on
Ecclesiazusae, "We see the women move in and out of their
new personae [true] and we are reminded that the actors are men
underneath their costumes [gratuitous]" (116).
Despite such weaknesses of presentation, Taaffe does come up
with some insights precisely because she is always alert to "the
men underneath." Her careful examination of the re-dressing of
the Proboulos (62-6) culminates in the good observation that he
"provides a distorted reflection of the actor as Lysistrata: a
man dressed in woman's clothing, playing a woman's part."
Readers should think hard about this, for the conclusion Taaffe
is prepared to draw from it is far-reaching indeed: "This is
important for [Lysistrata's] subsequent speech: she will speak
out on public issues, something only a man may do" (65). This is
the place to mention that Taaffe is almost entirely uninterested
in the possibility that Lysistrata was modelled on Lysimache,
priestess of Athena Polias, or that this Lysimache may even have
been known to the public as a proponent of peace. Some, finding
this possibility exciting, might even say that this is as close
as we get to a real woman in Aristophanes, but Taaffe's interest
lies, as we have seen, in showing that "woman" is a construct and
that real women, who had no public voice, are not accessible
through comedy.
After sketching the situation in the second half of
Lysistrata, when all the actors who play men have
monstrous erect phalluses, Taaffe sums up pithily (52), "In the
final analysis, we might describe Lysistrata's plan as a play in
which women enact the roles of men by playing the parts of
'women' and men enact the roles of women by playing the parts of
'men'. This play is resolved when the middle, role-playing,
level of character is eliminated and the super-feminine women
reunite with their super-masculine men and recreate ideal
marriages." Again the insight (which I judge a memorable
success) is won by attention to all aspects of masculine and
feminine stereotypes. Note, however, that it would not have been
improved, and might have been spoiled, had Taaffe added a layer
of complexity by writing "men playing women" where she first
writes "women." The question is whether Aristophanes' comic
purposes are not sometimes better achieved if the illusion of
"men playing women" remains intact. To my mind this example,
with its complicated gender play within the fiction,
supports the belief that they are. I believe this is also true,
on the whole, for Ecclesiazusae. Thus Taaffe seems to me
to ruin the joke at Eccl. 165-8 by again insisting on the
convention (118), though she is generally good on the jokes in
this play that depend on grammatical gender.
Thesmophoriazusae, on the other hand, offers more and
better opportunities both for metatheatricality and for "the men
underneath." Many of these have been recognized in work by
Zeitlin, Said, and Ferris (all cited by Taaffe).
I briefly mention some missed opportunities. When Taaffe
writes (68-9) of the audience's uncertainty as to how far
Myrrhine's strip-tease may go in Lysistrata, she does not
mention the chorus, whose male and female halves removed clothing
earlier in two symmetrical stages (615, 637, 663-4, 687-8). In
general, references to their bodies are plentiful; thus 149-54,
quoted by Taaffe (60), recurs in a grotesque version at 824-8.
But as regards Myrrhine, Taaffe takes her point too far, I
believe, when she worries about whether to perceive undertones of
male homoeroticism. Again, unless I overlooked it, Taaffe missed
a chance at Eccl. 888-92 to comment on rupture of the
illusion by both actors in a scene featuring two highly
artificial women. Finally, at 105 with n. 5 Taaffe assembles the
scanty evidence for actors' use of falsetto but leaves out
perhaps the best example, Thesm. 190-2, which she cites
twice for other reasons. There Euripides includes
gynaikophonos in a list of qualities he attributes to
Agathon (cf. 131). After commenting on other items in this list,
but not the voice, Taaffe even writes (83), Agathon "is allowed a
voice in public affairs by virtue of his natural sex. His
femininity is a mask," etc. But what a voice! Similarly, Taaffe
cites Thesm. 267 only to remark on lalein, part of
a feminine stereotype that remains within the fiction (86). But
what about gynaikizein? The word could, but does not have
to, refer to the sound of the actor's voice. For this category
of humor S. Halliwell (in Owls to Athens: Essays on Classical
Subjects Presented to Sir Kenneth Dover, Oxford, 1990, p. 76)
adduces, in addition to passages already noted, only Eccl.
149 and Crates fr. 24, both known to Taaffe (see also N. Loraux
in Aristophane (Entretiens 38), Geneva, 1993, 243
n. 99, reacting to S. Said). Taaffe touches on the issue only
when considering whether falsetto was used consistently by actors
representing women, so that she can wonder how the actor playing
Praxagora may have modulated his voice in different scenes. But
one might have expected her to be at least as interested in the
possibility, often present though apparently seldom realized,
that an actor might break character for a voice joke. To me it
seems that the extreme scarcity of such jokes (call this an
"argument from falsetto") tells against Taaffe's central claim,
that there was a virtual compulsion to rupture the illusion of
gender disguise in Aristophanic comedy.
Taaffe closes with some interesting thoughts on gender and
casting in hypothetical modern productions of Aristophanes
(144-6). Everyone will agree that such choices are important, as
is the fact that only male actors appeared in Greek and
Elizabethan plays. Starting from this insight, Taaffe delivers
less, and less that is new, than one might have hoped. Still,
Aristophanes and Women can be recommended for its careful
and often rewarding chapters on Lysistrata,
Thesmophoriazusae, and Ecclesiazusae.
NOTES
[[1]] I am speaking here of the way Taaffe herself describes the
impulse her work derives from film studies. It may be that even
a more sophisticated application of these methods to Greek drama
meets with difficulties: see F. Zeitlin's review in this journal
of N. Sorkin Rabinowitz, Anxiety Veiled: Euripides and the
Traffic in Women (BMCR 94.11.3).
[[2]] I only mention here two of the book's other weaknesses.
First, some of the author's historical observations display an
unsure hand and the same tendency to overargue that will be
discussed in the text. Second, the reader will encounter many
errors in the Greek printed; in quotations longer than a line,
there is almost always at least one. Not all of them, I am
afraid, can be judged typographical. Amidst the mostly
unimportant slips of this kind, one is both glaring and used to
support a point (the pronoun "us," hemas, cited as a
feminine form, 112).