Better Dead than Red: Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” and the Cold War against Catholicism in Elizabethan England

                                                        Better Dead than Red:

Shakespeare’s Hamlet and the Cold War against Catholicism in Elizabethan England

Burton Weltman

The Devil Made Me Do It: The Ghost from Hell.

“Who is there?”  These are the first words of Hamlet, and they pose the key question of the play.  The question is asked by a soldier nervously standing guard on a dark night, worried by ominous reports of a ghost on the prowl.  Understandably upset by the nightly appearance and disappearance of the ghost, the soldier poses the underlying problem of Hamlet, and then himself disappears from the play.  The problem he poses is that of who and what is a person’s self.   How can one distinguish a real self from one that is false, a good self from one that is evil?  How can one know who and what is Hamlet?  How can one know who and what are the other living characters in the play?  Most important, who and what is the ghost?  Who really is there?[1]

The ghost is the key to Hamlet. The action in the play all stems from his demand that Hamlet kill Claudius, the king of Denmark.  The ghost claims to be Hamlet’s father, the previous king.  He says he was murdered by Claudius, and he has come from Purgatory to demand that Hamlet avenge his murder.  Hamlet’s friend Horatio doubts the identity and intentions of the ghost, and battles the influence of the ghost on Hamlet throughout the play.  Hamlet himself swings back and forth from believing in the bone fides of the ghost to doubting them, repeatedly asking himself whether the ghost might be from Hell.  “The spirit that I have seen may be a devil,” he worries, “and the devil hath power t’ assume a pleasing shape, yea, and perhaps out of my weakness and my melancholy, as he is very potent with such spirits, abuses me to damn me.”[2]

So, who and what is the ghost?  The thesis of this essay is that Shakespeare intended his audience to see the ghost as an agent of the Devil, an evil spirit whose mission was to use the truth about the murder of Hamlet’s father as a means of promoting unholy havoc in Denmark.   The evidence for this interpretation is the ghost’s reference to Purgatory and to other elements of Catholicism that were rejected as perverse doctrines by Protestants in the sixteenth century.  The ghost represents Catholicism.  Hamlet’s Denmark, like Shakespeare’s England, was a Protestant country.  Within the Protestant ideology of those countries, the Catholic Church was an agency of the Devil.  The ghost’s espousal of Catholic doctrines would make him an agent of the Devil.  This is a conclusion that Shakespeare would have expected his Elizabethan audience to reach.

There is a perverse influence that pervades Hamlet and overcomes most of the characters in the play.  It is the influence of the ghost.  The tragedy of Hamlet is that Hamlet does not follow his better judgment that the ghost is an agent of the Devil.  Instead, he makes the fateful and fatal error of keeping the ghost’s story secret and promising to undertake an act of murderous revenge at the ghost’s behest.  This is a conclusion that Shakespeare would also have expected his audience to reach based on the anti-Catholic prejudice that they shared.

The underlying anti-Catholicism is an aspect of the play that most interpreters either miss or slur over.  In a production of Hamlet that I recently saw at the Stratford Theatre Festival in Canada, the actors and the stage were festooned with Catholic symbols, as though Hamlet and the other Danes were Catholics.  The point is not to highlight or promote the anti-Catholicism in the play.  But if one does not take it into consideration, one can miss other key points in the play.

This was the case, for example, in the performance of Hamlet at Stratford that I recently saw which was played essentially as melodrama, with Hamlet as a romantic hero, rather than tragedy as Shakespeare intended.  My conclusion is that an understanding of what Shakespeare intended in his plays requires an appreciation of the cold war against Catholicism in Elizabethan England, and the anti-Catholicism embedded within Shakespeare’s plays and the roles that his characters play.

Hamlet is a play about role playing, about the question of “Who is there?”  The main characters self-consciously play different roles at different times, and display different selves depending on their audiences.  This theme is accentuated by the play within the play that is staged by Hamlet, a fictional representation of the sort of murder that Claudius committed against Hamlet’s father.  Hamlet hopes that by showing Claudius a fictional version of his misdeeds, Claudius might be provoked into publicly revealing his evil self and his guilt.

Claudius does react in a way that confirms his guilt to Hamlet and Horatio who already suspect him, but Claudius is able to put on an act that convinces others at the performance that he is only unwell.  This scene highlights the problem that is posed in Hamlet.  The characters in the play, and this includes the ghost, are playing a form of “prisoners game” in which they have to continually decide what truths of themselves to reveal or hide, and whether and to what extent they can believe in the others.  Deception and hypocrisy abound in this game.

“To thine own self be true,” intones Polonius, Claudius’ chief advisor.  It is his penultimate advice in a series of platitudinous admonitions with which he has been regaling his son Laertes and his daughter Ophelia in an early scene of Hamlet.  This last exhortation is generally treated by interpreters of the play as a serious piece of advice, unlike the platitudes Polonius has previously been spouting.  In the performance of Hamlet that I recently saw, the actor playing Polonius paused and took on a portentously solemn tone when he came to this line.

But this last admonition is, in fact, as inane as the bromides that preceded it because it begs the question of “Which self?”  Everyone in this play has many selves.  To which self should one be true?  The hypocrisy of Polonius’ advice is also immediately revealed when a few moments later he orders Ophelia to pretend indifference to Hamlet, whom she clearly and dearly loves.  That is, Polonius insists that Ophelia play true to herself in her role as a dutiful daughter, but be untrue to herself and play false in her role as a lover.  Hamlet also loses himself in the multiple roles he is trying to play, and ends up playing the fool to the ghost, the Devil and the hated Catholic Church.

Catholicism, Protestantism and Shakespeare: Situating Hamlet in his place and time.

Most modern day admirers of Shakespeare, of which I am one, would like to acquit the Bard of the conventional prejudices of his era.  England in the late 1500’s and early 1600’s was rife with sexism, anti-Semitism, racism and anti-Catholicism.  Since Shakespeare’s plays, like those of any writer, inevitably reflect the society in which he lived, his plays are full of examples of these prejudices.  They include sexism in The Taming of the Shrew, anti-Semitism in The Merchant of Venice, racism in Othello, and anti-Catholicism in King John.  Shakespeare’s plays have historically been usually performed in ways that accept and even promote these prejudices.

In most productions of Taming, for example, Kate’s last speech, in which she professes abject obedience to her husband, has been played as the moral of the story.[3]  In productions of Merchant, Shylock has often been “played by a comedian as a repulsive clown or, alternatively, as a monster of unrelieved evil.”[4]  The play has often also been retitled as “The Jew of Venice,” thereby focusing on Shylock and his religion.[5]  Othello has often been portrayed in the past as a lascivious African, which played into racist stereotypes of blacks.  The play has frequently been retitled “The Moor of Venice,” thereby focusing on Othello’s supposed racial difference.[6]

Since sexism, anti-Semitism and racism are offensive to most present-day sensibilities, modern interpreters have tried to re-imagine what Shakespeare might have meant so as to remove the sting of prejudice from lines and scenes that have previously been performed in invidious ways.  One of the great things about Shakespeare’s plays is that the same words can be spoken and enacted in different ways.  He gives interpreters an opportunity to stay true to the scripts yet perform the plays with a variety of different characterizations and actions.  Given this latitude, I think one can reasonably interpret the instances of sexism, anti-Semitism and racism in plays such as Taming, Merchant, and Othello as ironic rather than prescriptive.  One can, thereby, place Shakespeare in the position of obliquely critiquing rather than promoting those biases.

One could, for example, play Kate in Taming as retreating at the end of the play in the face of overwhelming pressure, but ready to resume the battle against sexism at a later date.  One could portray Antonio, the merchant in Merchant, and his colleagues as hypocrites who condemn Shylock for holding to a materialistic ethos and engaging in sharp practices of which they are themselves more guilty.  One could cast Othello as a swarthy North African no darker than the Italians with whom he lives and who taunt him as black merely because of his immigrant origins, as Irish were similarly taunted in the United States during the nineteenth century.

I do not, however, think that the same ironical approach can be taken with the anti-Catholicism in Shakespeare’s plays.  It is too pervasive in the plays and in Elizabethan society.  There are limits to what one can legitimately do with Shakespeare’s plays without rewriting or deleting the offensive parts, as some interpreters do, so that the plays are no longer Shakespeare’s.  Nor can one just ignore the anti-Catholicism, as many do, and interpret the plays as though it was not there.  Shakespeare had ideas about things and a legitimate interpretation of his work must stay within the range of his ideas.  A different strategy must be employed with Shakespeare’s anti-Catholicism to save the integrity of the scripts without promoting the prejudice.

 

Papism, Communism, and Paranoia: Cold Wars and their Cultural Consequences.

The Protestant Reformation of the early sixteenth century triggered violent religious conflicts between Catholics and Protestants in England and most of Europe, some of which continue to the present day in places such as Ireland.  These conflicts were very similar to the Cold War between Communism and capitalism that occurred during the last half of the twentieth century.  This Cold War is in the living memory of those of us in the older generation.  It is also, hopefully, within the historical memory of younger people who have studied it in school.  A comparison of the recent Cold War against Communism and the Elizabethan cold war against Catholicism will help elucidate the circumstances in which Shakespeare composed his plays.

In the capitalist United States during the Cold War, and especially at the height of tensions during the 1950’s and early 1960’s, Communist countries were widely portrayed by the government and mass media as totalitarian dictatorships in which people were brainwashed into zombies.  People in these countries supposedly suffered through gray lives in slavish subjugation to an all-powerful government.  American Communists were, in turn, portrayed as traitorous agents of a monolithic movement that was steadily and stealthily taking over the world, forcefully conquering countries that were weakly defended militarily, and subversively undermining countries that were weakly defended morally.[7]

Communism was condemned as an absolute evil, with Communists acting essentially as agents of the Devil, and identified with the Devil’s color as Reds.  Since Communists generally eschewed religion, they were condemned as godless by political and religious conservatives, many of whom took this identification with the Devil literally.[1]  It was widely believed that once Communists took over a country, they created an all embracing godless tyranny from which people could never escape.  From this portrait of Communism emerged the war cry of many conservatives during this period of “Better dead than Red,” that is, better to have a nuclear war that kills all life on earth than let Communism take over America.  Any cooperation with a Communist or tolerance of Communism anywhere was deemed an act of treason to the United States, to American ideals of freedom and democracy, and to God.[2]

Political conservatives during this period used anti-Communism as a club against liberals.  Any criticism of American society — whether it be racism, sexism, inequality, or poverty –was condemned as a form of aiding and abetting the Communist enemy, even if, and especially if, the criticism was accurate.  Communists, the conservatives claimed, would seize on any fault or flaw in American society to create discontent and disorder, to discredit the legitimate authorities, and in this way seduce people into supporting Communism.[3]

Congressional Committees and vigilante organizations worked to eliminate alleged Communists (Commies), radicals (Commie symps) and liberals (Commie dupes) from working in the government, the schools, the professions, and the entertainment industry.  Almost every industry was affected.  If a person was named as a Commie, Commie symp or Commie dupe, the person’s name would generally appear on a blacklist and employers would be warned not to hire the person upon penalty of being boycotted or possibly even prosecuted.[4]  As a result of this red-baiting, as it was called, many progressive social movements that had been active during the 1930’s and 1940’s died out.[5]

In the wake of the Cold War, we can see today that the fears of Communism and measures taken against it were clearly excessive.  Although Communist regimes were invariably oppressive, they were also frequently incompetent.  Even if the Soviet Union posed some threat to the United States during this period, the Soviets were never in any position to invade Western Europe, let alone the United States.  Communism was, in turn, not a monolithic movement.  It took different forms in the various countries in which Communists held power and among the Communist parties that operated within capitalist countries.  Communist countries were, in fact, in almost constant conflict with each other, as were Communist parties.   Nor were Communist regimes totalitarian, whatever might have been the aspirations of their rulers.  This is shown by the fact that Communism in the Soviet Union and almost all of Eastern Europe fell peacefully and as a result of internal revolts by people who had just had enough of it.  These people were clearly not brainwashed zombies.

It is also the case that very few American Communists were spies or traitors.  The Soviet Union actually preferred to use mercenary spies who worked for money rather than American Communists who might be motivated by idealism.  Mercenaries were more reliable than idealists who might object to doing something that harmed the United States.  Most American Communists were motivated primarily by patriotism, whether or not misguided.[6]  Nonetheless, many people’s lives were ruined in this country by misdirected anti-Communist attacks, and social progress was stalled.  Abroad, unnecessary wars were fought, cruel dictators were supported, and money was wasted on unnecessary armaments.

Anti-Communism also had a constricting effect on American culture, especially during the 1950’s and early 1960’s.  Controversial issues and social problems were generally avoided, and anti-Communist themes were awkwardly interjected, as writers, producers and directors of plays, movies and television shows bowed to Cold War priorities.  Their works were distorted and diminished in ways that were sometimes blatant but often subtle.  Playing into the common understandings of people at that time, anti-Communist themes were inserted in their works in ways that would have been recognized by people then, even though they might not be understood by audiences today.  The result has been widely considered a gray era in American culture.[7]

The work of Elia Kazan, one of the greatest movie directors of all time, exemplifies this effect.  Because of Kazan’s membership in the Communist Party during the 1930’s, he was summoned to appear before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in 1953.  He had two choices at that point.  He could either testify against friends and colleagues who had been Communists or had been otherwise politically active in progressive causes, or be black-listed from working as a director.  He chose to testify against his friends –“Naming names” this sort of testimony was called — and he thereby saved his career.  But he was thereafter roundly criticized and ostracized by many of his former associates, both Communist and non-Communist alike.

Stung by this criticism, Kazan made the movie On the Waterfront (1954) which glorifies snitching on one’s friends and colleagues to a government committee.  Although Communists do not appear in the film, which is about gangsters, the movie was clearly a defense of Kazan’s finking on his friends and a testament to anti-Communism.  It is a great movie because of the performances of the actors and Kazan’s filming, but the plot is overblown and overly melodramatic as a result of Kazan’s desire to justify himself and pay homage to HUAC.  The movie was essentially a testimonial in support of the damage done to American culture by HUAC and other anti-Communist organizations.[8]

Kazan bowed even lower to the anti-Communist crusaders in the film Viva Zapata (1952), which was made just prior to his HUAC testimony.  It is a portrayal of the early twentieth century Mexican revolutionary Emilio Zapata.  The movie is a cautionary tale about how a revolution can become corrupt and dictatorial and, as such, was a clear reference to the Soviet Union.  Kazan also insisted that the script include a fictional character named Fernando Aguirre.  Aguirre is a vicious revolutionary who turns on Zapata when he thinks Zapata is getting too soft, and who is clearly modeled after the 1950’s anti-Communist stereotype of a Communist agent.  Aguirre is an anachronism and out of place in the film.  The purpose of his character was not, however, aesthetic.  It was specifically to enable Kazan to tell HUAC that “This is an anti-Communist picture.”   That is, even though Communism had nothing to do with the Mexican Revolution and is not mentioned in the film, Kazan felt the necessity to distort and diminish his movie in order to placate the anti-Communist sentiment in the country.[9]

A similar Cold War of Protestants against Catholics occurred in England during Shakespeare’s time with similar effects.  If one substitutes the words Catholicism and Catholics for the words Communism and Communists, one can use essentially the same language and descriptions of the Capitalist-Communist Cold War to describe the conflict between Protestants and Catholics.  Each side portrayed the other as the Devil’s disciples.  Savage wars were waged between Protestant and Catholic countries, and cruel tortures were inflicted, in the name of God and the true religion.  Ordinary people could not avoid the conflict.  Everyone was forced to own up to being either Protestant or Catholic and, thereby, forced to take sides and take the consequences.[10]

England went back and forth several times during the sixteenth century between being controlled by Catholic regimes and Protestant regimes, each of which savaged adherents of the opposing religion.  The changes were abrupt and left many people in limbo, unsure which way to turn because turning the wrong way could be fatal.  As during the Cold War in America, families were split over the issue.  Friends turned against friends.  Neighbors spied on neighbors and reported them to the authorities.  Paranoia and hysteria were always just around the corner.

Catholics were disparaged by Protestants as Papists.  Just as American Communists were considered to be loyal to the Communist government in the Soviet Union rather than to the United States, English Catholics were considered to be loyal to the Pope and the Church in Rome instead of their Queen and country.  Hence the term Papist, someone who supposedly worships the Pope.  Similar to the Communists, Catholics were believed to be part of a monolithic international conspiracy that aimed to control the world through force or subversion.  Powered by a vanguard of Jesuit priests whose supposed stock-in-trade was using tricks of logic to seduce people into converting to Catholicism (hence the pejorative term “Jesuitical”), Jesuits were accused of trying to worm their way into English society in order to subvert and pervert it.

As with Communists during the Cold War, Catholics were portrayed by Protestant leaders as traitors who could not be trusted, subversives who had to be rooted out of public life, and spies who had to be caught and even killed.  In 1559, a year after Elizabeth’s ascension to the throne and abrupt reconversion of England from Catholicism to Protestantism, being a practicing Catholic was made illegal and saying Mass was made a capital offense.  Although these laws were honored more in the breach, they were designed to keep Catholics on edge and in line.  As a result, Catholics were forced to hold Mass in secret, which only reinforced Protestant fears of a subversive Catholic conspiracy.

The trials, tribulations and murder of Shakespeare’s fellow playwright Christopher Marlowe, who was charged with heresy and was a Catholic-Protestant double agent, attest to the dangers of stepping out of line.  Shakespeare was, thus, writing at a time when Protestants and Catholics were at each others’ throats, and in a place where being caught practicing Catholicism could get you killed.  These circumstances are reflected in Shakespeare’s plays.[11]

As with the Cold War against Communism, Elizabethan anti-Catholicism appears in retrospect to have been both excessive and irrational.  Catholics and Catholic countries did not constitute a monolithic movement manipulated by the Pope.  To the contrary, Catholic countries often disobeyed and even attacked the Pope, and were almost as likely to go to war against each other as against Protestant countries.  Likewise, different orders within the Catholic Church — Jesuits, Dominicans, Franciscans, et al.– were almost as opposed to each other as to Protestants.  Anti-Catholicism had, nonetheless, a significant effect on Elizabethan culture and society.

There has been speculation that Shakespeare’s father, who was born Catholic, remained  a closet Catholic after the English Reformation and that Shakespeare had Catholic sympathies.[12] Although there were Catholics in Shakespeare’s extended family, there is no evidence that he was a Catholic.[13]  In any case, whatever Shakespeare’s sympathies, the key fact is that he was writing for an overwhelmingly Protestant audience and for theaters that were being closely monitored by a fiercely Protestant government.  This was a government that, according to historian Michael Wood, “employed a network of informers, spies and bounty hunters, who pried into every aspect of people’s business affairs, their religion, and even their sex life.”[14]  Shakespeare’s family’s connections to the Catholic Church might have made him even more careful to be seen on the Protestant side of things.  If he had not adhered to the Protestant line, the Bard would likely have been debarred from public life.

Shakespeare set many of his plays in England and Italy during times when those places were under the religious hegemony of the Catholic Church, and in each of these plays he portrays Catholic priests, officials and doctrines in negative ways.  While Shakespeare never uses the terms Catholic or Protestant and never attacks the Catholic Church by name, he plays into the understanding that his audiences would have had of the differences and disputes between the religions, and he invariably comes down against the Catholics.  Obvious examples of this include the reprehensible representative of the Pope in King John, the warmongering Cardinals in Henry V, and the foolish priest in Romeo and Juliet. 

The merchant Antonio and the other Catholics in The Merchant of Venice are less obvious examples of Shakespeare’s anti-Catholicism until you recognize that money lending was prohibited by the Catholic Church but allowed by Protestant churches, and that Shakespeare’s father was a moneylender who had been arrested at least twice for usury by Catholic authorities.  Given these facts, Shakespeare was not likely to intend Shylock as a villain based on his being a moneylender nor intend Antonio as a hero based on his opposition to moneylending .  Since Antonio engages in business practices that are portrayed in the play as comparable to usury, it is even less likely that Shakespeare intended him to be viewed as a hero.  Although they are rarely played in this way, Antonio and his Catholic colleagues seem intended by Shakespeare to be played as bigoted hypocrites.

The conflict between Protestants and Catholics is a theme that I think is not sufficiently acknowledged in most interpretations and performances of Shakespeare’s plays.  Since the anti-Catholicism in the plays is pervasive and not easy to delete or dissolve, it is often just ignored and the plays are then performed in ways that I believe do not reflect the light in which Shakespeare intended audiences to see his characters.  Thus, the merchant Antonio is generally played as a good guy in Merchant and, as a result, no matter how sympathetically the actor playing Shylock says his lines — even weeping when he asks “If you prick us, do we not bleed?” — the play comes off as anti-Semitic.  This is, I think, a mistake.  The historian Christopher Hill has warned that “We should always take seriously the religious professions of sixteenth century men and women, for many of whom eternity might seem much more real than this brief and uncertain life on earth.”[15]  This would likely be true of many in Shakespeare’s audience and might even be true of Shakespeare himself.

At the same time, acknowledging the anti-Catholicism in Shakespeare’s plays does not require one to promote it.  His decision not to explicitly denote people and things in his plays as Catholic and Protestant is significant.  In this way, Shakespeare stands in sharp contrast with Marlowe who openly promoted the prejudices of his age.  Marlowe’s The Jew of Malta features a Jew who “becomes a greedy murderer.”  The play is explicitly anti-Semitic and presents a very different picture of Jews than Shakespeare’s Merchant.  Marlowe’s Massacre of Paris features a group of Catholics who want to slaughter Protestants.  “The basic message is that Catholics are murderous beasts.”[16]  This vicious portrait of Catholics is very different from Shakespeare’s oblique obeisance to the anti-Catholicism of his society.  Although Marlowe has his devotees, some of whom even claim that he wrote Shakespeare’s plays, his plays are rarely performed.  Their overt and overwhelming anti-Semitism and anti-Catholicism are a big part of the reason.

Shakespeare used code words and cues to express anti-Catholicism.  In so doing, he gave interpreters an opportunity to recognize the light in which he wanted characters and ideas to be portrayed without their having explicitly to engage in anti-Catholicism.  He may have done this deliberately.  In staging Merchant, for example, one does not have to attire Antonio with a cross or have him fingering Rosary beads, which would explicitly denote him as a Catholic.  One merely has to understand that Shakespeare did not intend to portray Antonio as a model citizen or damn Shylock for his being a moneylender.  This understanding sheds a whole new light on the play as compared with the way it is usually performed.[17]

Hamlet is set in a country, Denmark, that had abruptly converted from Catholicism to Protestantism during the 1530’s.  This setting provided Shakespeare with an opportunity to portray some of the confusion and controversies that had been experienced in England as a result of Henry VIII’s similarly abrupt conversion of England to Protestantism during the 1530’s and Elizabeth’s abrupt reconversion of the country during the 1550’s.

Medievalism Run Rampant: Better Dead than Dread.

“Something is rotten in the state of Denmark” concludes one of the soldiers who has seen the ghost in an early scene of Hamlet, and who then disappears from the playThis line is usually interpreted as meaning that the appearance of the ghost indicates something is wrong with the country.  In this interpretation, the ghost is a sign of existing corruption in the state, which we soon understand as the murder of Hamlet’s father by Claudius.[18]  But the line could also mean that something bad is beginning and that the ghost is both a cause and an effect of it.  This latter interpretation is, I think, the better of the two.  The murder of Hamlet’s father may have begun the rot, but rot spreads.  The whole edifice can come tumbling down unless the spread is checked.  The soldier’s statement is, in this light, an ominous prediction of how murder can lead to murder, and a premonition about the effect that the ghost is going to have on the country.

The ghost dominates the play and essentially ruins the country.  The name of the play is Hamlet and Hamlet is the name of the young prince who runs riot through the play, but it is also the name of the prince’s dead father whom the ghost ostensibly represents.  It is that elder Hamlet who is the center of the action in the play.  Almost everything bad that happens is a result of the ghost’s insistence that young Hamlet avenge the death of his father.  And even though the ghost directly participates in only three scenes, he is a pervading evil influence throughout the play.

The effect of the ghost is often underplayed in performances of Hamlet.  To dramatize his effect on the action, I would arrange the stage lighting to indicate day versus night, and have the ghost lurking in the background unseen by the other characters during the nighttime scenes.  Hamlet’s most violent scenes would be played at night with the ghost lurking about.  At the very end of the final murderous scene, I would have the ghost leave the stage appearing to be satisfied at the outcome.  Elizabethans believed that the Devil could manipulate the truth in the service of evil.  The ghost should be seen as a demon from Hell who has been sent to undermine Protestant Denmark with the truth about the death of Hamlet’s father, and succeeds in this mission.

Hamlet is one of Shakespeare’s most pliant plays.  Hamlet, for example, can be characterized and played in a wide variety of ways.  Samuel Taylor Coleridge saw him as a dithering intellectual who knows that he must kill Claudius but gets caught up in “endless reasoning and hesitating.”  Coleridge viewed Hamlet as unmanly and a weakling. [19]  Mark Van Dorn agreed that Hamlet is an intellectual but claimed that “Hamlet is an actor,” and a chronic dissembler.  “We cannot assume, indeed, that he believes what he says.”  Van Doren sees Hamlet as essentially a schizoid with multiple personalities. [20]  Fintan O’Toole sees Hamlet as a sociopath who is caught between medieval and modern ways of thinking, and does not know which way to turn.[21]  Harold Goddard saw Hamlet as a pacifist who tries everything he can to avoid killing Claudius.[22]  Each of these is a plausible and playable interpretation of the character.

Hamlet has been condemned as “a slob, a shirker, or a mother-fixated neurotic” with an Oedipus Complex.[23]  He has been “pronounced both a hero and a dreamer, hard and soft, cruel and gentle, brutal and angelic, like a lion and like a dove.”[24]  He has been seen as an existentialist (“To be or not to be…”), a moral relativist (“There is nothing good or bad but thinking makes it so.”), a skeptic (What a piece of work is a man…what is this quintessence of dust?”), a determinist (“There’s a predestinate providence in the fall of a sparrow.”), or some combination of the above.  The vast possibilities contribute to making Hamlet such an interesting play.

Whatever else Hamlet is, however, he is also a religiously perplexed person.  When we first meet him, he is arguing with Claudius about his desire to go back to school in Wittenberg, which is also the alma mater of Hamlet’s good friend Horatio.  Later, when the ghost first talks to Hamlet, the ghost says that he resides by day in Purgatory and walks abroad by night.  These two references, the one to Luther’s Protestant university in Wittenberg, and the other to the Catholic doctrine of Purgatory which Protestants rejected, would delineate for Shakespeare’s audience a conflict between Catholicism and Protestantism that confounds Hamlet and permeates the play.

Hamlet is clearly religious or he would not be attending Wittenberg University.  There were plenty of other less religious schools that a Danish prince could have attended.  So, how can a religiously Protestant Hamlet believe a ghost that says it resides in Purgatory, a place whose existence Protestants deny?  Belief in ghosts was common among Protestants and Renaissance philosophers, but not a ghost from Purgatory.  It stands to reason that Hamlet would be perplexed.  So that when he tells a skeptical Horatio that “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy,” i.e. in Horatio’s and Hamlet’s Protestant philosophy, these lines should probably be articulated in a tentative, quizzical way.  In most performances of Hamlet, the lines are said in an emphatic, declaratory manner, as though Hamlet is completely convinced of the reliability of the ghost.  But that reading of the lines does not fit the situation of a young man who has just had his whole universe turned upside down.

Hamlet’s reluctance to kill Claudius is generally interpreted in a negative way.  He is portrayed as overly intellectual or cowardly or depressive or passive.  But given the religious and intellectual shock Hamlet has just been given — Could Catholicism be the true religion? — his caution would seem well-founded.  Hamlet’s hemming and hawing back and forth during the play correspond to an internal battle between his Reformation/Renaissance self and the Medieval/Catholic memes that he inherited from his ancestors.  This conflict within Hamlet, between old and new ways of being and believing, was analogous to the contemporary social and religious conflict in Elizabethan England.

Hamlet’s father must have been sympathetic to the Renaissance or he would not have sent his son to a university, and he must have been a dedicated Protestant or he would not have sent Hamlet to Wittenberg.  Hamlet’s father was, however, likely born a Catholic and was a transitional figure between Medieval ways and Renaissance society.  The ghost’s claim that he resides in Purgatory reflects the father’s likely childhood Catholic beliefs.  The ghost’s appearance in Medieval armor,[25] which had been rendered virtually useless by the development of armor-penetrating guns during the Renaissance, represents the Medieval side of Hamlet’s father.  And his insistence on Hamlet’s revenging the murder of Hamlet’s father also reflects a Medieval perspective.[26]

Revenge was a Medieval form of justice that the Catholic Church had criticized but ultimately tolerated.  European countries did not have well-developed criminal justice systems during the Middle Ages and did not have prison systems.  As a result, private justice and corporal punishment were the norms.  “Vengeance and feud were an essential part” of Medieval culture, and revenge was “both a right and a duty, and was legislated and regulated by social norms.”[27]  Renaissance reformers promoted a more rational system of justice in which the rule of law rather than the rule of the strongest would prevail.  Renaissance monarchs embraced these reforms as a means of centralizing the power of the justice system in their own hands.  Prisons were, likewise, a recent Renaissance development in Europe, as places where convicted wrongdoers could be punished through being incarcerated instead of being physically harmed.[28]

These were reforms that the fictional Hamlet and the author Shakespeare would likely have endorsed.  The ghost’s insistence on murderous revenge indicates that he is out of step with the times and not to be trusted by Hamlet.  The ghost represents a side of Hamlet’s father that Hamlet had seemingly wished to leave behind in going to Wittenberg, and a barbarous Medieval past that England was trying to get beyond.

So, how is it that the ghost succeeds in entrapping Hamlet with his wiles?  He is a cunningly manipulative ghost.  He arrives in Denmark at a time when people are seeming to begin to have doubts about King Claudius.  The “Something is rotten” statement by a common soldier, who knows nothing of what the ghost is going to tell Hamlet about the death of his father, indicates that common people were uneasy about the state of affairs.  The ghost also arrives at a time when Hamlet is feeling renewed disgust about his mother’s marriage to Claudius, and when Hamlet is in turmoil about whether or not to abandon a rotting Denmark for school in Wittenberg.

The ghost describes the death of his father in terms most likely to inflame Hamlet.  He also disingenuously tells Hamlet not to “Taint thy mind” against his mother but then describes Hamlet’s mother as only “seeming virtuous” and says that she has made “the royal bed of Denmark…a couch for luxury and damned incest.”  Having just had those same thoughts about his mother earlier before meeting the ghost, Hamlet exclaims “O my prophetic soul” in response to the ghost’s tale.  He very much wants at that point to believe the ghost.

Horatio is skeptical, as would Shakespeare’s audience.  People of that time would find it hard to believe that God “unleashed  [the dead] back on earth to stir up revenge.”[29]  That was the Devil’s business.  Horatio had also noticed at the ghost’s previous appearance that when the cock crowed at the break of dawn, “it started, like a guilty thing upon a fearful summons,” which would seem to be a call from Hell.  Hamlet tries to assure Horatio that “It is an honest ghost, that let me tell you.”  But, he is seemingly not so assured himself because he concocts on the spot a method of testing the ghost’s honesty by feigning madness.  In this way, he can ask questions of people in the castle that might otherwise seem suspicious and thereby, he hopes, provoke responses that might be telling.[30]

It is a plan, however, that plays right into the hands of the ghost.  Encouraged by the ghost, Hamlet swears to secrecy his friends who have seen the ghost.  Hamlet then goes off to conduct his researches on his own, taking it upon himself to right the wrongs that have been done to the state of Denmark, as though the only wrong was to himself as the son of a murdered King and an ostensibly incestuous Queen.  Within the context of Elizabethan times and the play itself, this is wrong and a mistake.

The rottenness of the state is a matter of concern for everyone in Denmark, as indicated by the soldier’s comment.  The problem is not merely the murder of a father and the incest of a mother.  It is having a king who has murdered his way to the throne and who seems more interested in drinking and partying than in protecting Denmark from a potential invasion from Norway.  In turn, when Laertes is able to rouse public concern about his father’s death and, thereby, force an inquiry into the circumstances, Laertes demonstrates that it is possible to take political concerns to the people and get action that way.  Hamlet could seemingly have done something similar.  His anger and his arrogance, encouraged by the ghost, lead him to go off on his own, and wreak the havoc on Denmark that the ghost seemingly intended.

Although Hamlet’s enthusiasm for killing Claudius ebbs and flows in the course of the play, the ghost gradually extends his evil influence over Hamlet, and Hamlet loses his better self.  Hamlet, in turn, descends from feigning madness into actual madness as he goes from murder to murder: killing Polonius, driving Ophelia to suicide, arranging the murders of Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern, and finally participating in the slaughter at the end of the play.

As a means of dramatizing the growing control of the ghost over Hamlet , one might have the ghost appear with a long mustache, beard and hair, groomed but in a style that would have been seen by Shakespeare’s audience as Medieval.  Hamlet would appear initially in the short-haired, highly groomed style of a Renaissance courtier.  As the play proceeds, Hamlet would gradually grow a long mustache, beard and hair in an unkempt manner befitting his madness, feigned and/or real.  In the next to last scene of the play with Horatio, Hamlet would groom himself into the Medieval likeness of his father as represented by the ghost, and then go off to the fatal duel.

In most modern productions, the character of Hamlet is played as being surprised by the murderous turn at the end of the play.  But this reaction does not seem plausible.  Hamlet knows at that point that Claudius is trying to kill him and that Laertes is outraged over Hamlet’s murder of Laertes’ father Polonius.  Hamlet must surmise that the supposedly harmless duel Claudius has arranged between Hamlet and Laertes is actually a setup for mortal combat between them.  Hamlet’s bantering with Horatio, Laertes and the others before the duel is just another bit of posing.  Hamlet would likely be on guard and might even be shown to have secreted a weapon on his person.  As he and Laertes duel, Hamlet would almost certainly see that Laertes’ sword is unabated, albeit he does not know its tip is poisoned.  When Hamlet exchanges swords with Laertes in the midst of their duel, he would know that he is grabbing a murderous weapon.  We cannot know what Hamlet has in mind or plans then to do, because events take an unexpected turn as a result of the various poisons taking effect at that point.

When Hamlet dies, the ghost is satisfied but I think that we in the audience also feel relief.  Hamlet has morally descended under the influence of the ghost, and we feel it despite our sympathy for him and his predicament.  He has directly or indirectly been the cause of the deaths of seven people, not including himself.  And he has admitted that he has no qualms about having killed the innocent Polonius and caused the deaths of the hapless Rosenkrantz and Guildenstern.  Having become a Papist dupe of the ghost, Hamlet has become a symbol of the Medieval violence that Elizabethans hoped to leave behind.  He has also essentially become as much of a villain as the man he had sworn to eliminate.  For this reason, Mark Van Doren concluded that “The world could not let so destructive a man live longer.”[31]

At the same time, members of Shakespeare’s contemporary audience would recognize that the ghost had just done to sixteenth century Protestant Denmark what they believed the Pope was trying to do to turn-of-the-seventeenth century Protestant England, which was to bring down the state and leave the country vulnerable to invasion by its enemies.  The play served as a warning to them.

Cold Wars and their Cultural Consequences: Playing Down Paranoia.

Shakespeare incorporated anti-Catholic elements into his plays that probably were necessary and seemingly were sufficient to satisfy the prejudice and paranoia of his audiences and the authorities.  But one of the great things about Shakespeare is that he was able to do this without significantly diminishing or distorting his work.  The anti-Catholic intimations and implications in his plays were clear to people of his time.  But his indirection also allows us today to recognize the anti-Catholicism in his plays, and incorporate it into our analysis of them, without promoting the prejudice and paranoia of Elizabethan England that prompted it.

Shakespeare made it possible for us to perform his scripts without showing overt anti-Catholicism in our performances of them.  We don’t have to make the ghost wear a Catholic cross.  We don’t have to think of Hamlet as a Papist dupe, as Elizabethans might have.  But honoring Shakespeare’s scripts does require us to accept the evaluation of characters and events as he indicated them through his anti-Catholic references.  Those references are often keys to understanding the plays as he meant them.  As to Hamlet, those references means the ghost is evil and Hamlet is a dupe.  We can avoid displaying the prejudice but not its implications for the meaning of the play.

[1]  “Cold War.” American History. ABC-CLIO, 2011.

[2]   Goldwater, Barry. Conscience of a Conservative. New York: Victor Pub. Co., 1960. pp.25, 71.

[3]  Foner, Eric. The Story of American Freedom. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1998. pp.256-258.

Lens, Sidney. Radicalism in America. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., 1969. p.343.

[4]  Caute, David. The Great Fear: The Anti-Communist Purge under Truman and Eisenhower.  New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979.

[5]  “Cold War.” American History. ABC-CLIO, 2011.

[6]  Lyons, Paul. Philadelphia Communists, 1936-1956. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1982.

[7]  Navasky, Victor.  “The Social Costs of McCarthyism.” from  Naming Names..New York: Viking Press, 1980.   at english.illinois.edu/MAPS/McCarthy/navasky.

[8]  Ebert, Roger. rogerebert.com/review/great-movie-on-the-waterfront-1954. March 21, 1999.

[9]  Crowther, Bosley. “Viva Zapata.” New York Times Movie Review. 2/ 8/52.

Rothman. Lily. “Art Imitates Life: 10 Movies Altered Due to Real-Life Events.” Time Magazine.                             at entertainment.time.com/2012/07/27- art-imitates-life.

Susman, Gary. “Viva Zapata’s 60th Anniversary.” news.moviefone.com/2012/02/06/                           viva-zapata-anniversary.

[10]  Kermode, Frank. The Age of Shakespeare. Modern Library: New York, 2005. pp.14-16.

[11]  Wills, Garry. Making Make-Believe Real: Politics as Theater in Shakespeare’s Time. Yale University Press: New Haven, 2014. pp.157-168.

[12]  Wood, Michael. Shakespeare. Basic Books: New York, 2003. pp.270-271.

[13]  Kermode, Frank. The Age of Shakespeare. Modern Library: New York, 2005. p.39.

[14]  Wood, Michael. Shakespeare. Basic Books: New York, 2003. p.39.

[15]  Hill, Christopher. The Pelican Economic History of Britain: Reformation to Industrial Revolution. Penguin Books: Baltimore, 1969. p.110.

[16]  Scott, Jeffrey. “The Influences of Elizabethan Society on the Writings of Christopher Marlowe.”  The Marlowe Society Research Journal. Vol.05-2008. p.3.   at http://www.marlowe-society.org.

[17] I have written elsewhere an essay on Merchant outlining this view of the play.  The essay is entitled “Shakespeare, Shylock and History as Choice: A Protestant versus Catholic view of the Merchant of Venice.”

[18]  Hamlet. 1.4.90

[19]  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. Selected Poetry and Prose. Elizabeth Schneider, Ed. “Lecture Series on Hamlet.” San Francisco: Rinehart Press, 1971, 461-462.

[20]  Van Doren, Mark. Shakespeare. New York: New York Review of Books, 2005, 167-168.

[21]  O’Toole, Fintan. Shakespeare is Hard, but so is Life. London: Granta Books, 2002, 45-54.

[22]  Goddard, Harold. The Meaning of Shakespeare. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951, 341.

[23]  O’Toole, Fintan. Shakespeare is Hard, but so is Life. London: Granta Books, 2002, 40.

[24]  Goddard, Harold. The Meaning of Shakespeare. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951, 333.

[25]  Hamlet.1.2.200.  “Armed at point exactly, cap-a-pie.”

[26]  Matheson, Mark. “Hamlet and a Matter Tender and Dangerous.” 1995. at enotes.com/topics/hamlet/critical-        essays/hamlet-and-matter-tender-and-dangerous

[27]  Lampher, Ann. The Problem of Revenge in Medieval Literature. PhD Thesis. University of Toronto, 2010. p.ii.

[28]  Prisons. mapoflondon.UVIC.ca/PRIS1

Elizabethan Crime and Punishment. william-shakespeare.info/elizabethan -crime-punishment

[29]  Wills, Garry. Making Make-Believe Real: Politics as Theater in Shakespeare’s Time.                    New Haven, CN: Yale University Press, 2014. p.173.

[30]  Hamlet.  1.1.48, 1.5.40, 1.5.46, 1.5.81-86, 1.5.138.

[31]  Van Doren, Mark. Shakespeare. New York: New York Review of Books, 2005, 172.

]  Schwartz, Richard A. “Red Scare, 1950’s.” Cold War Culture: Media and the Arts, 1945-1990. New York: Facts    on File Inc, 2000. American History Online. Facts on File, Inc., 2011.

Gardner, Lloyd. “Origins of the Cold War” in The Origins of the Cold War, J.J. Huttmacher & Warren Susman, eds. Waltham, MA: Ginn & Blaisdell, 1970. pp.3-40.

[8]  “Cold War.” American History. ABC-CLIO, 2011.

[9]   Goldwater, Barry. Conscience of a Conservative. New York: Victor Pub. Co., 1960. pp.25, 71.

[10]  Foner, Eric. The Story of American Freedom. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1998. pp.256-258.

Lens, Sidney. Radicalism in America. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., 1969. p.343.

[11]  Caute, David. The Great Fear: The Anti-Communist Purge under Truman and Eisenhower.  New York:  Simon & Schuster, 1979.

[12]  “Cold War.” American History. ABC-CLIO, 2011.

[13]  Lyons, Paul. Philadelphia Communists, 1936-1956. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1982.

[14]  Navasky, Victor.  “The Social Costs of McCarthyism.” from  Naming Names..New York: Viking Press, 1980.   at english.illinois.edu/MAPS/McCarthy/navasky.

[15]  Ebert, Roger. rogerebert.com/review/great-movie-on-the-waterfront-1954. March 21, 1999.

[16]  Crowther, Bosley. “Viva Zapata.” New York Times Movie Review. 2/ 8/52.

Rothman. Lily. “Art Imitates Life: 10 Movies Altered Due to Real-Life Events.” Time Magazine.                            at entertainment.time.com/2012/07/27- art-imitates-life.

Susman, Gary. “Viva Zapata’s 60th Anniversary.” news.moviefone.com/2012/02/06/viva-zapata-anniversary.

[17]  Kermode, Frank. The Age of Shakespeare. Modern Library: New York, 2005. pp.14-16.

[18]  Wills, Garry. Making Make-Believe Real: Politics as Theater in Shakespeare’s Time. Yale University Press: New Haven, 2014. pp.157-168.

[19]  Wood, Michael. Shakespeare. Basic Books: New York, 2003. pp.270-271.

[20]  Kermode, Frank. The Age of Shakespeare. Modern Library: New York, 2005. p.39.

[21]  Wood, Michael. Shakespeare. Basic Books: New York, 2003. p.39.

[22]  Hill, Christopher. The Pelican Economic History of Britain: Reformation to Industrial Revolution. Penguin Books: Baltimore, 1969. p.110.

[23]  Scott, Jeffrey. “The Influences of Elizabethan Society on the Writings of Christopher Marlowe.”

The Marlowe Society Research Journal. Vol.05-2008. p.3.   at http://www.marlowe-society.org.

[24] I have written elsewhere an essay on Merchant outlining this view of the play.  The essay is entitled “Shakespeare, Shylock and History as Choice: A Protestant versus Catholic view of the Merchant of Venice.”

[25]  Hamlet. 1.4.90

[26]  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. Selected Poetry and Prose. Elizabeth Schneider, Ed. “Lecture Series on Hamlet.” San Francisco: Rinehart Press, 1971, 461-462.

[27]  Van Doren, Mark. Shakespeare. New York: New York Review of Books, 2005, 167-168.

[28]  O’Toole, Fintan. Shakespeare is Hard, but so is Life. London: Granta Books, 2002, 45-54.

[29]  Goddard, Harold. The Meaning of Shakespeare. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951, 341.

[30]  O’Toole, Fintan. Shakespeare is Hard, but so is Life. London: Granta Books, 2002, 40.

[31]  Goddard, Harold. The Meaning of Shakespeare. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951, 333.

[32]  Hamlet.1.2.200.  “Armed at point exactly, cap-a-pie.”

[33]  Matheson, Mark. “Hamlet and a Matter Tender and Dangerous.” 1995. at enotes.com/topics/hamlet/critical-essays/hamlet-and-matter-tender-and-dangerous

[34]  Lampher, Ann. The Problem of Revenge in Medieval Literature. PhD Thesis. University of Toronto, 2010. p.ii.

[35]  Prisons. mapoflondon.UVIC.ca/PRIS1

Elizabethan Crime and Punishment. william-shakespeare.info/elizabethan -crime-punishment

[36]  Wills, Garry. Making Make-Believe Real: Politics as Theater in Shakespeare’s Time. New Haven, CN: Yale University Press, 2014. p.173.

[37]  Hamlet.  1.1.48, 1.5.40, 1.5.46, 1.5.81-86, 1.5.138.

[38]  Van Doren, Mark. Shakespeare. New York: New York Review of Books, 2005, 172.

What to do about the Big Bad Wolf: Narrative Choices and the Moral of a Story

What to do about the Big Bad Wolf: Narrative Choices and the Moral of a Story

Burton Weltman

Once upon a time, there were three little pigs.  The pigs, having apparently reached adolescence, were forced by their mother to leave home and make their own way in the world.  So, each of them went off by himself to build a house.  Two of the pigs were foolish and lazy, and they built houses of straw and sticks respectively.  The third pig was wise and hardworking so he built a house of bricks.  A big, bad wolf came along and easily destroyed the houses of the two foolish pigs.  They barely escaped with their lives before he could eat them.  The wolf could not destroy the brick house, however, so he tried to trick the third pig into coming outside.  But the wise pig was not fooled.  Instead, he tricked the wolf into coming down the chimney of the house, at which point the wolf fell into a pot of boiling water and ran away with a scorched rear end.

This is the gist of Walt Disney’s version of the story of The Three Little Pigs, a traditional European folktale that Disney adapted and made popular in America during the 1930’s.  Appearing originally as a cartoon movie, the Disney story has since been continuously in publication as a very popular illustrated children’s book (Disney 1933; Disney 2001, 69-84).  Later variations of the story, such as those by Paul Galdone and Gavin Bishop, follow the gist of the Disney version but have the wolf eat the first two pigs and have the third pig then eat the wolf at the end (Galdone 1970; Bishop 1989).

Like all Disney stories, The Three Little Pigs is full of lessons.  The first lesson is that in this world it’s every pig for himself.  Significantly, the pig brothers did not work together to build a house but went off individually.  It is an eat-or-be-eaten world, according to Walt Disney, and you’ve got to take care of yourself first and foremost.  This lesson is even clearer in Galdone’s and Bishop’s versions.  A second lesson of the story is that difference is dangerous.  The sympathetic characters are all pinkish pigs.  The evil character is a black wolf.  In the context of the story, the pigs are right to be afraid of an animal that is not like them.

The racial implications of the Disney story, which are followed by Galdone and Bishop, are seemingly no accident, especially when you consider that most adolescent pigs are not pinkish and most wolves are not black.  The implicit racism reflects, among other things, the dramatic imagery of America in the 1930’s.  During the 1930’s, if you wanted to make something scary for mainstream, pinkish American audiences, you made it big and black.  The overall moral of Disney’s story is that we live in a world in which good is continually being confronted by evil, and the good characters must fight to the death against the bad ones.  These are significant lessons for children to learn from a story.

1. Coming to Terms with “The Three Little Pigs”: What to do about the Big Bad Wolf?

At the end of Into the Woods, a wonderful musical about children’s stories by Steven Sondheim and James Lapine, the witch intones one of the play’s main themes: “Careful the things you say, children will listen…Careful the spell you cast…Sometimes the spell may last past what you can see…Careful the tale you tell. That is the spell.  Children will listen.”   Storytellers have long known of the influence their tales can have on children and many, like Disney, have deliberately tried to use this power for purposes of moral, social and political education.  “Writing for children is usually purposeful,” James Stephens has noted, “its intention to foster in the child reader a positive apperception of some socio-cultural values.”  In turn, Stephens says, “Every book has an implicit ideology” (Stephens 1992, 3, 9).  Children’s stories are, thus, a contested terrain over which storytellers of different political persuasions have fought for many years.

Disney’s version of The Three Little Pigs conveys a view of the world that most politically progressive people would not accept.  The selfish individualism, the genetic determinism, the tinge of racism, the Social Darwinism, and the inevitable violence in the story are contrary to views that most progressives would like to impart to children.  So, some have recently tried re-writing the popular story to better fit with their progressive ideals.

As one alternative to the Disney story, Jon Scieska, a well-known author of children’s books, has written The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs (Scieska 1989) in which the wolf tells his side of the story.  Scieska picks up on the underlying racism of the Disney version and tries to counter it.  In Scieska’s book, the wolf is portrayed as a member of a persecuted minority in a predominantly pig society, paralleling the racial story of blacks in predominantly white American society.  The wolf has been jailed for the murder of the first two little pigs and, in his defense, claims the two pigs died by accident and that he then ate them only because he did not want to let good meat go to waste.

Scieska seems to hope we will come to sympathize with the good-natured, humorous wolf, and we do.  But there is an underlying moral to the story that Scieska seems to have missed.  Even if you believe the wolf’s story, you still have to come to the conclusion that pigs and wolves cannot live together in the same society because wolves eat pigs, as the wolf admittedly did.  The only solution to the problem posed in this story is to segregate the wolves from the pigs.  Despite his liberal intentions, Scieska has unwittingly written a story that seems to justify racial segregation.

Another alternative to Disney’s story is The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig (Trivias 1993) by Eugene Trivias, another highly regarded author of children’s books.  Trivias seemingly tries to deal with the problem that Scieska ran into by making the wolves weak and vulnerable and making the pig big and scary.  Trivias has three little wolves – one black, one white and one grey – being chased by a big pink pig.  The pig claims to want to be friends with the wolves but they are afraid of him and they work together to try to protect themselves from the pig.  The wolves build increasingly stronger houses that are successively knocked down by the pig.

In the end, the wolves decide to try being friendly to the pig and it works.  The wolves and the pig have a party and, according to Trivias, “they all lived happily together ever after.”  But that is not plausible.  They cannot have “lived happily together ever after” because eventually the wolves will grow up and wolves eat pigs.  So when the three little wolves become three big wolves, the pig is likely to become lunch.  Again, despite the author’s multi-racial, multi-cultural, all-inclusive intentions, the story implicitly leads the reader to the conclusion that some sort of racial or species segregation is necessary.

The moral of the story of these three versions of “The Three Little Pigs” is that if you want to write a story about the virtues of diversity and the peaceful reconciliation of differences, you should not choose wolves and pigs as your main characters.  The biological imperatives of pigs and wolves will defeat your intentions.  The underlying lesson is that the narrative choices an author makes in setting up a story can predetermine the moral outcome, regardless of the author’s overt intentions.  Walt Disney seemingly had a message he was trying to convey with his story and he made narrative choices on that basis. If you follow his narrative choices, as Scieska and Trivias did in accepting Disney’s cast of characters, you are likely to end up supporting his conclusions.

By contrast, in Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type (Cronin 2000), Doreen Cronin tells a story of farm animals – mainly dairy cows and egg-producing chickens – who successfully organize a strike against the farmer who owns them.  This is a story about strength through cooperation and diversity, as each type of animal is able to contribute to the group effort based on its particular characteristics.  It is also a story about the advantages of a peaceful resolution of differences, both among the animals and between the animals and the farmer.  A key to the success of this story is that none of the animals is a predator, and none of the animals is being used by the farmer for meat, so there are no biologically determined irreconcilable differences among them.  Cronin starts with different narrative choices than Disney and, as a result, is able to convey different moral conclusions.

The purpose of this essay is to discuss some of the narrative choices that storytellers make and the effect that these choices can have on the moral of their stories and the messages their audiences are likely to get.  Most scholarly analyses of the meaning and messages in children’s literature focus on the subject matter of the books and the political orientations of the authors (Bacon 1988; Clark 2003; Ellis 1968; Gillespie 1970; Hines 2004; Lehr 2001; Lucas 2003; Lurie 1990; MacLeod 1994; Moynihan 1988; Taxel 1988; Thaler 2003).  But, as Peter Hunt has noted, “What may be more important than what the story is about is the way in which it is shaped” and the way in which stories are shaped has been “the most important and neglected of literary features” (Hunt 1991, 73, 119).

The main thesis of this essay is that the narrative structure of a story can determine the moral of the story, irrespective of its subject matter and its author’s intentions, and that teachers must be particularly attuned to this fact in choosing both what things they have their students read and how they discuss things with their students.  The moral of a story is often determined by its structural medium and cannot be characterized solely through its subject matter and its author’s political orientation (Witherell et al 1995, 40; also Egan 1988; Egan 1992).

Whether an author or teacher is telling factual or fictional stories, discussing the news or fairytales, relating anecdotes of daily life or theories of society, writing history books or novels, teaching social studies or literature – that is, dealing with anything that has explicitly or implicitly a narrative form – the narrative structure can determine the meaning and effect of the story irrespective of the storyteller’s intent or the subject matter of his/her narrative.  Depending on their narrative structures, stories with essentially the same subject matter and political intentions can have very different moral, cultural, social and political messages (Stephens 1999, 74, 78).

The primary conclusion of the article is that when teachers choose things for their students to read or to discuss, it is important for them to know what messages are being conveyed through the narrative structure of the reading and/or discussion.  What a teacher thinks is being conveyed through the content of a book or a discussion may be contradicted by the underlying structural message of the book or discussion (Sarland 1999, 37, 39).  As such, in analyzing a book, it is important to focus on the relationship between the book’s content and structure so as to explore fully the meaning of the book and its impact on its readers.  Likewise, in preparing a class discussion, it is important for a teacher to match his/her subject matter content with his/her narrative structure so as to convey a consistent and coherent message.  There is a message in the medium of our expression that we and our students need to understand.

2. Defining Narrative Terms: The Message in the Medium

This article focuses on four aspects of narrative structure that have significant impact on the moral of a story: (1) the characterizations in the story and, in particular, where the story stands in the debate between “nature versus nurture” and whether or not the main characters in the story are able to learn and change; (2) the dramatic form of the story and, in particular, whether it can be characterized as primarily a melodrama, comedy or tragedy; (3) the agency of the story and whether the story moves primarily as a result of chance, causation or choice; and, (4) the perspective of the story and whether the perspective is primarily top-down or bottom-up.

Although most stories incorporate a mixture of different factors, almost all are structured primarily around a particular type of characterization, form, agency and perspective.  In turn, although these four elements interrelate, so that storytellers’ choices with respect to one will likely influence their choices as to the others, storytellers are not always consistent in their narrative choices, which can lead them unwittingly to send mixed moral messages.  In sum, an author’s or teacher’s narrative choices with respect to these factors will have a significant impact on the moral of the story being told.

(a) Nature/Nurture.  The moral of a story will depend in large part on the characterizations of the people in the story and whether people are seen as able or unable to change.  This has been the gist of the argument over whether nature or nurture, genetics or environment, inherited social class and culture or acquired social skills and character, are most important in the development of individuals and society.  It has also been a crucial element in the political debate between traditionalists and progressives.

Traditionalists have generally taken the “nature over nurture” side of this debate.  One of the elements of conservative social theory from ancient times to the present has been the idea that a person is born with a certain essence which forms his/her nature and that a person cannot significantly change his/her character.  This is essentially a classist or hierarchal theory of society that justifies the rule of the well-born few – well-born in character and culture as well as wealth and power – over the disadvantaged many, and the passing of wealth and power, and poverty and powerlessness, from parents to children.

In this theory, nature controls character and justice requires that “we must leave each class to have the share of happiness which their nature gives to each” (Plato 1956, 219; Banfield 1990).  The moral imperative for people is to discover their true natures and follow the predetermined course of their lives.  For most people, this will mean staying in the social class in which they were born and doing the things that their parents did, which is consistent with the goal of most traditionalists of a society in which children can and will grow up to follow in their parents’ footsteps.

This view of character and society tends to promote individual self-discovery and self-development and to discourage social activism and social change.  In this model, problems most arise when characters attempt to step outside their predestined social roles or are unfairly evicted from their proper social roles, or when people stupidly misconceive the nature and character of themselves or others.  Some people are naturally good, smart and otherwise qualified to occupy positions in the upper level of the social hierarchy and others are naturally bad or stupid and need to be controlled by their betters.

Social reform in this model consists of the good/smart people defeating the bad/stupid people and either eliminating or subjugating them, as is the case in Disney’s The Three Little Pigs. Many traditional children’s fairy tales – especially those told by the Grimm brothers – take this “nature over nurture” side of the argument.  The dire consequences of denying biological imperatives and/or defying inherited social roles – for example, children disobeying their parents (Rapunzel), commoners pretending to powers they don’t naturally have (Rumpelstiltskin); workers trying assume the roles of their bosses (The Sorcerer’s Apprentice), people welcoming monsters in disguise (Little Red Riding Hood) – are emphasized.

In contrast, progressives have generally taken the “nurture over nature” side of the argument.  One of the elements of progressive social theory has been the idea that a person will develop and change depending on his/her environment – on the nurturing and education that he/she receives – and that a person can, in turn, help change the world around him/her (Barber 1998).  In this model, the moral imperative is to figure out how best to develop oneself and help develop others so that the development of each person will encourage the development of all.  In many cases, this will mean leaving the place and the social class in which a person was born and doing different things than his/her parents.

This model tends to promote self-development through cooperative social activism with education as a primary means of self and social change.  In this model, problems arise when people are blocked from individual and social growth and when society is prevented from changing with changing circumstances.  The genre of bildungsroman in which, typically, an adolescent learns and grows and then changes himself and his social surroundings exemplifies the “nurture over nature” side of the argument.  The Harry Potter series is an example of this genre.

The “Three Little Pigs” stories of Disney, Scieska and Trivias demonstrate the effect that choices about characterization can have on the message conveyed by a story.  Disney’s The Three Little Pigs is an example of a “nature over nurture” characterization.  The main characters are biologically determined.  Wolves are by nature predators.  They inevitably attack pigs.  There is nothing anyone can do to change that and any pig who underestimates the biological imperative of wolves is likely to be eaten.  In turn, there is nothing anyone can do to change the brutally competitive, zero-sum society made up of wolves and pigs.

Scieska in The True Story of the Three Little Pigs tries to humanize the wolf by telling us the wolf’s side of the story, and it works to some extent.  The wolf seems to be an amiable character.  But the wolf is still a meat eater and his genetic characteristics override his pleasant personality.  Similarly, Trivias tries to resolve the conflict in The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig by reversing the roles of pig and wolf and by having the wolves learn that if they “make love, not war,” they can be friends and not enemies with the pig.  But this can only be a temporary peace because of the zoological imperative that wolves eat pigs.  Both Scieska and Trivias get caught in the “nature over nurture” side of the debate implied in Disney’s choice of wolves and pigs as the story’s main characters.

By contrast, in Click, Clack, Moo: Cows that Type, Cronin is able to tell a story of characters who plausibly achieve a cooperative and peaceable solution because she has chosen characters whose biological imperatives do not get in the way of that solution.  In her story, the animals and the farmer change themselves through education and cooperation and, in turn, change their society for the better.  As an educator who believes in the power of education as a means of self and social development and who tries to convince students to engage in self and social development, I prefer the “nurture over nature” side of this argument and try wherever possible to convey that message in the stories I tell and the discussions I lead.

(b) Melodrama/Comedy/Tragedy.  The dramatic form in which we couch a story and/or an explanation will also have a major effect on how we react to a given situation.  For purposes of this article, I have roughly categorized stories as melodramas, comedies or tragedies, or some combination of the three, because each of these dramatic forms conveys a different social message.

In defining melodrama, comedy and tragedy, I have relied on literary definitions of these terms that are largely derived from Aristotle.  Following the lead of Paul Goodman, I have, however, extended the terms to focus on the moral implications of narrative forms and their effect on the moral of a story (Goodman 1954).  Goodman was a poet, playwright and novelist as well as a social and educational reformer and he often framed his social and educational analyses within the narrative categories of melodrama, comedy and tragedy.

I define melodrama as a story of Good versus Evil, Good Guys versus Bad Guys.  It is a narrative form that like the traditional epic deals in extremes of emotion and action, and is based on an absolutist view of morality (Goodman 1954, 127-149).  Soap operas and crime shows are classic examples of melodrama.  In a melodrama, the problem in the story is created by the evil actions of evil people.  These are people who cannot be trusted and have to be eliminated.  Since there can be no compromise with Evil or evil people, melodrama portrays a world in which problems almost always must be settled by war or conflict of some sort (Burke 1961, 34).  A melodrama may have a happy or unhappy ending depending on whether the good or the evil prevails.  In a typical episode of the melodramatic television show “Law and Order,” for example, the murderer is usually convicted but sometimes goes free.

Melodrama is the predominant story form in our society and the form in which most people seem instinctively to react to adversity.  “Who is doing this to me and how can I defeat them” is the first reaction of most people to a problem.  Arguably, this melodramatic reaction has been programmed into us by evolutionary processes, “an aggression drive inherited [by man] from his anthropoid ancestors” (Lorenz 1966, 49), leaving us “hardwired to distinguish between ‘us’ and ‘them’ and to behave inhumanely toward ‘them’ at the slightest provocation” (Wilson 2007, 285).  It is essentially the story form of the “fright, then fight or flight” reaction of our piglet-like precursors who had to make their way in a world of giant carnivores.

The melodramatic reaction also seems to be a function of the brain stem, the earliest and least sophisticated portion of the human brain, which we inherited from those puny ancestors.  Comedy and tragedy are more complex reactions that apparently derive from the more developed areas of the cerebral cortex which evolved later in humanoids.  Melodrama was seemingly a successful survival strategy for helpless mini-mammals, but it may not be as useful, and may often be counterproductive, in the world of modern humans in which shooting first and asking questions later can lead to unnecessary wars and suffering (Diamond 1993, 220-221, 276-310; also Wilson 2007, 51-57).

I define comedy as a story of wisdom versus folly, wise people versus foolish people (Aristotle 1961, 59).  In comedy, the problem is created by someone acting out of stupidity or ignorance, “the intervention of fools” (Burke 1961, 41).  It is a narrative form that promotes education and experimentation as the solution to problems, as the wise try to teach the fools or at least restrain them from further foolishness (Goodman 1954, 82-100).  When we think someone is acting foolishly, our reactions typically are either to correct the person, compete with the person to see who is correct, constrain and control the person so that he/she can do no further harm, or some combination of these three.

Comedy usually promotes a hierarchical world in which the knowledgeable people are empowered to control the stupid and ignorant people, educating them in proper behavior and belief when that is possible, and tricking, controlling or excluding them when that is not.  Comedy involves conflicts and struggles but the action generally stays peaceful or, at least, not fatal.  If, however, a fool refuses instruction, disdains competition, and rejects containment, comedy can descend into violent struggle and metamorphose into melodrama.  A comedy may have a happy or unhappy ending depending on whether the fools learn their lesson.  In a typical episode of the comedic television show “Seinfeld,” for example, the main characters are usually still enmeshed at the end of show in some mess of their own foolish making.

I define tragedy as a story of too much of a good thing becoming bad.  Tragedy in this definition describes a character that pursues a too narrowly prescribed good too far until it turns on itself, becomes bad and precipitates a potential disaster.  The character’s “tragic flaw” is a lack of perspective, the failure to see things in a broader context, for example failing to recognize that one person’s good may be someone else’s bad, the world may contain competing goods, and an individual’s good ultimately depends on the good of all (Goodman 1954, 35, 172).

Tragedy is a story of hubris versus humility, the failure of the tragic character to recognize his/her “personal limits” and reconcile contradictions within him/herself, within his/her society and/or between him/herself and society (Burke 1961, 37).  While the tragic character’s actions demonstrate his/her “moral purpose,” they also demonstrate “the necessary or probable outcome of his character,” which is a downfall as a result of his/her pride (Aristotle 1961, 81-83).  Tragedy “deals sympathetically with crime,” with the good intentions that can pave the way to hell (Burke, 1961, p.39), and, thereby, arouses pity and fear in the audience (Aristotle 1961, 61) – pity that a good person has tried to do a good deed and gone wrong, fear that but the grace of the gods this could be any of us.

Although there is more to a great tragedy than a simple story-line, in the medieval society portrayed in Shakespeare’s tragedy Macbeth, for example, ambition is considered a good thing but Macbeth takes it too far and this excess of ambition brings his downfall (Van Doren 2005, 216).  Macbeth, a would-be self-made man living in a highly structured, hierarchical society, is fatally caught in “a struggle between [his] desire to make his own destiny … and the rule-bound order in which he lives,” and tries to bully his way through these contradictions (O’Toole 2002, 138).  In the Renaissance society of Hamlet, deliberation is a good thing but excessive deliberation produces a paralysis of the will and Hamlet’s downfall (Van Doren 2005, 161).  Hamlet is a “humanist” intellectual caught between medieval Gothic and modern rational social mores and modes of thought, and he fatally vacillates between the one and the other (O’Toole 2002, 46, 48).  Neither character is able to transcend his narrow focus and reconcile his contradictions until it is too late.

Tragedy, as I am using the term, is based on a relativistic view of morality and promotes negotiation and inclusion as the way to avoid the conflict and calamity that befall tragic figures such as Macbeth and Hamlet.  The goal of tragedy is for the tragic hero and the audience to recognize the narrowness of the hero’s perspective – “recognition” of the character’s flaw at the end of the story by the character and the audience is a key to this narrative form (Aristotle 1961, 84-86) – and reconcile his/her views with the views of others, thereby promoting compromise so that all can cooperate or, at least, peacefully co-exist.

The moral of a tragedy is to avoid the narrow-mindedness of the fallen characters and thereby avoid their fates.  When, however, people fail to recognize the tragic nature of a situation, they may act as though it is melodrama, pursue their own narrow ends to the bitter end, and fight, flee or fall to a fatal conclusion.  Although fictional tragedies, such as Macbeth and Hamlet, generally have unhappy endings, a tragedy, as I define the term, may have either a happy or unhappy ending depending on whether the main characters have recognized and then successfully reformed their narrow and short-sighted views of things.  While in the original version of Shakespeare’s King Lear, for example, Lear and his daughter Cordelia die at the end, in some later productions of the play, they live happily thereafter (Harbage 1970, 17).

The differences in the moral messages conveyed by melodrama, comedy and tragedy are significant.  If a person sees the world primarily in melodramatic terms, he/she will tend to see social problems as the result of the evil actions of evil people, to see enemies all around, and to see war or coercion of some sort as the solution to most social problems.  If a person sees the world in comic terms, he/she will tend to see social problems as the result of foolish people and to see education and/or containment as the solution to social problems.  If a person sees the world in tragic terms, he/she will tend to see social problems as the result of competing goods and competing good intentions, and to see negotiation as the solution.  In sum, the dramatic form in which a person tells the story of any particular social problem will largely determine his/her moral reaction and the nature of his/her ethical engagement.

In deciding which dramatic form to use for telling a story, my preference is to choose the tragic form whenever and to the greatest extent possible because it is the most peaceful approach to solving social problems and the one in which ordinary people can most actively engage.  The tragic mode asks you to put yourself in the shoes of the other person, broaden your perspective to include his/hers, and negotiate a compromise solution to your differences.  The tragic mode also encourages ordinary people such as our students to engage in the discussion and solution of social problems.

To the extent the facts of my story do not fit into the tragic mold, my preference is to choose the comic form as a potentially peaceful way of resolving a problem.  In comedy, you see your side as wise and the other as foolish, and you set your side up to help instruct or contain the fools.  This tactic has the potential for generating antagonism if the other side does not see itself as foolish, and resents and resists your efforts.  But it is the educational mode and it encourages students to think critically about social problems and try to develop rational solutions to them.  Properly done, the comic mode has the potential for a peaceful and mutually satisfactory resolution of differences.

Finally, to the extent the facts do not fit into either the tragic or comic modes, I describe the situation in melodramatic terms.  Melodrama is for me the form of last resort because it portrays a world in which differences can be settled only by fighting and or war.  The more you use the melodramatic mode, the more you are telling your students that conflicts must be resolved through fighting and war.  The more you use the tragic and comic modes, the more likely your students may come to see the world in terms of peaceful resolutions and to act on that basis.

Disney’s Three Little Pigs is a melodrama, with the good pigs pitted against the evil wolf in a life-and-death struggle, and this is the moral world his story conveys to children.  In The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs, Scieska tries to turn the story of the pigs and the wolf into a comedy.  The story is comic, not only because it is funny, but also because Scieska is trying to wise the readers up to the possibility that things may not be as they seem at first glance and that the wolf is not really a villain.  But his efforts are ultimately not successful because in accepting Disney’s choice of animals as characters, Scieska is trapped into the logical consequences of that choice: wolves kill pigs and, therefore, his story has an underlying melodramatic message of Social Darwinian struggle.

In The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig, Trivias tries to turn the story into a tragedy.  In his story, the wolves are merely trying to protect themselves from a perceived danger and the pig is merely trying to be treated with respect.  Their mutual pig-headedness leads them all to misunderstand each other, which, in turn, leads to conflict.  Eventually they broaden their perspectives to include each other and the tragic consequences are abated, at least for the short run.  Because a fatal conflict between the wolves and the pigs is inherent and inevitable in the choice of wolves and pigs as main characters in the story, and Trivias cannot keep these are melodramatic consequences out of the moral of his story.

By contrast in Click, Clack, Moo: Cows that Type, Cronin is successfully able to combine tragedy and comedy, and avoid the underlying conflicts that fatally undermine the stories by Scieska and Trivias.  In her story, the animals initially misunderstand each other and the farmer initially misunderstands the animals, each promoting his/her perspective as the only one, which leads to conflict among the animals and a strike by the animals against the farmer.  But all parties have some right on their side and eventually they are able to negotiate their differences and resolve the problem in a plausible way.

(c) Chance/Causation/Choice. The agency of a story, and whether events happen primarily as a result of chance, causation or choice, also has a major effect on the story’s moral message.  Chance is pure luck, unpredictable and uncontrollable.  Causation is a chain of causes and effects or a series of forces that are inevitable and unavoidable.  Choice is people operating within a set of circumstances, evaluating the range of options permitted by the circumstances, and then making decisions and acting on those decisions, with consequences that become the circumstances within which they must make their next decision.  The explanation of events – chance, causation or choice – that a storyteller uses will largely determine the moral of his/her story.

If a story moves primarily either by chance or by causation, then the moral of the story is that the world is beyond our influence and we might as well sit back and do nothing.  If the story moves as a result of the characters’ choices, then the moral is that we can affect the world through our thoughts and actions.  The moral of portraying events as the result of chance and/or causation is that trying to change things and make the world better is useless because what will be, will be, regardless of our actions.  And the curricular message of portraying the world as chance and/or causation is that education is useless because what will be, will be, regardless of whether or not we know about it (Berlin 1954, 3, 20-21, 68).

If, instead, a story is told as a complex of circumstances, choices and consequences, students are empowered and education becomes worthwhile.  Education, thereby, becomes largely a process of putting oneself into the shoes of other people, understanding the problems that they faced and the circumstances that circumscribed their actions, evaluating the options they had, the choices they made and the consequences of their decisions, and relating them to our choices here and now.  In this way, things can be discussed in a way that helps students learn to use a story’s lessons to make their own decisions and encourage their social engagement.

Although most stories necessarily include elements of chance and causation, to the extent that a story allows a choice of explanations – the factual situation will determine “how wide the realm of possibility and alternatives freely choosable (sic)” is available to the characters (Berlin 1954, 29) – my preference is to focus on choice rather than chance or causation because it is the narrative form that best empowers people and encourages students to think in terms of social engagement.  By rephrasing and reframing what is often portrayed as causation (Carr 1967, 113-115) into the language of circumstances, choices and consequences, we can retain the explanatory power of our story while adding a clearer moral dimension.  Both storyteller and audience are thereby rewarded with “a broader awareness of the alternatives open to us and armed with a sharper perceptiveness with which to make our choices” in the world in which we live (Williams 1974, 8, 10).

In Disney’s The Three Little Pigs, causation in the form of biological determinism is the primary agency of the story.  Wolves are predators.  They eat pigs and there is nothing we can do to change that.  Scieska in The True Story of the Three Little Pigs tries to absolve the wolf of the deaths of the pig brothers by introducing an element of chance into the story, with the wolf’s claim that the pigs were killed by accident.  But his attempt does not work because we really don’t believe the wolf’s story – the succession of coincidences he relates is very funny but not plausible – and because the biological determinism that underlies the relationship of wolves and pigs overrides any explanation that the wolf could give.

Trivias tries to make choice the primary agency of The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig by having the wolves and the pig choose to be friends in the end.  But this ultimately does not work because of the zoological imperative that wolves eat pigs.  Both Scieska and Trivias get caught in the chain of causation wrought by Disney’s choice of wolves and pigs as the story’s main characters.  By contrast, in Click, Clack, Moo: Cows that Type, Cronin is able to tell a plausible story of characters making choices because she has not chosen characters whose biological imperatives get in the way of the choices she wants them to make.

(d) Top-Down/Bottom-Up.  Finally, it makes a big moral difference whether stories portray the world as being controlled by the few at the top or the many at the bottom.  The top-down perspective focuses on great people, extraordinary individuals, heroes and charismatic leaders.  Events are explained primarily in terms of the actions of these few top people.  The top-down perspective portrays social progress as the result of great leaders reaching down and pulling the masses of people up to a higher level.  Since most students do not see themselves as great or heroic or charismatic, top-down stories tend to demean and demoralize the majority of students and convey a message that they need do nothing but wait for their leaders to act.  The top-down approach tends to portray leaders as miraculous saviors who appear by chance and/or as heroic individualists whose choices are portrayed out of the context of the circumstances that made them possible (Lemish 1969, 5-6).

The bottom-up approach portrays events as the result of actions and movements of ordinary people (Levine et al 1989, XI; Freeman et al 1992, .X).  Bottom-up stories explain leadership as a consequence of the masses of people pushing representative leaders to the fore, great individuals standing on the shoulders of their predecessors and colleagues.  The moral of a bottom-up story is for ordinary people to join together to effectuate necessary social changes so that “The people, then, can make their own history” (Lemish 1967, 5).  Top-down stories can demoralize children who do not see themselves as great or may inspire students toward self-centered social climbing toward personal greatness.  Bottom-up stories can help empower children from ordinary backgrounds and inspire them to work with their peers rather than away from them.  Although some stories may require some top-down orientation (Lemish 1967, 4), my preference is to emphasize a bottom-up approach whenever possible.

Disney’s The Three Little Pigs is a top-down story in which the superior pig gets the better of both his brothers and the wolf.  While it adjures children to be smart like the wise pig, it also tells them not to get bogged down in acting as their inferior brothers’ keeper or trying to deal peacefully with those who threaten them.  Scieska tries to reverse the moral direction of the story by having it told from the wolf’s point of view, the bottom-up view of a disadvantaged member of a minority group.  But we don’t believe the wolf, which only makes the situation worse because now we have additional reasons to distrust wolves and the minority groups he represents in the story.

In his story, Trivias tries to reverse the natural hierarchy by making the wolves little and the pig big – putting the wolves at the bottom and the pig at the top of the hierarchy – but this ultimately does not work because we know that the wolves will soon grow up to be predators of pigs.  Again, having accepted Disney’s main structural choices in setting up the story, Scieska and Trivias are condemned to Disney’s main conclusions.  By contrast, Cronin is able to tell a genuinely bottom-up story of ordinary characters rising together to great deeds because she has wisely chosen animals that are on essentially the same rank of the food chain hierarchy and are at least theoretically compatible with each other.

3. Diversity as Dangerous, Dispensable or Desirable: Out of the Fire and into the Pot

One of the main themes running through the various versions of “The Three Little Pigs,” and through children’s literature as a whole, is the question of how to think about and deal with diversity.  Do, for example, differences make a difference?  If so, is it for better or worse?  The narrative choices a storyteller makes – how he/she deals with characterization, dramatic form, agency, and perspective – can largely determine the message his/her story conveys about diversity.

The United States has from its inception been primarily a nation of immigrants, and what to do about diversity in our population has been an ongoing theme in American history.  One of the main concerns has been how to avoid the racial and ethnic conflicts and conflagrations that have periodically erupted.  Ever since Hector St. John de Crevecoeur referred to America as a “melting pot” in 1782, Americans have tended to frame the issue of diversity in terms of chemistry, as though cultural differences are chemical additives that people compound onto their otherwise common human nature.  Americans have, in turn, tended to respond to cultural differences in three main ways, portraying America as either what could be called a “smelting pot,” a “melting pot,” or a “stew pot,” depending on whether they see cultural diversity as dangerous, dispensable or desirable.

For most of the period from the founding of the first European colonies in the 1600’s until the early 1900’s, the predominant approach to cultural diversity in this country was the “smelting pot” view.  In this view, differences make a difference and they are deleterious.  Harkening back to the English origins of the colonies, White Anglo-Saxon Protestants, or WASPs, are generally seen in this view as the ideal Americans, and those who are different are seen to need to have those differences smelted away so that they can become like WASPs.  This view is still widely held by people who consider themselves politically and socially conservative.  The smelting pot view is based on a melodramatic and top-down history of America in which the ethnically and ethically pure are pitted against the degraded and degenerate who would pull America down if they weren’t defeated.

The “melting pot” view of America was popularized during the 1910’s in a play of that name by Israel Zangweel, a Russian Jewish immigrant.  In this view, differences don’t make a real difference and they should be either ignored in favor of our commonality or blended into the existing common mix to make a slightly new and better commonality.  This view is based on a comic narrative of the world in which people need to be taught either to ignore or relinquish unimportant differences.  The melting pot gradually became the predominant view of self-styled liberals during the course of the twentieth century.

What could be called the “stew pot” view was promoted in the early twentieth century by Horace Kallen, another Russian Jewish immigrant, and Randolph Bourne.  In this view, differences make a difference and they are generally desirable.  Cultural diversity provides a plethora of resources and perspectives with which to help solve the social problems we face.  In this view, diversity among people should be preserved even as they interact in a common democratic broth in which they solve common problems.  This view derives from a tragic and bottom-up perspective on the world in which people are able to recognize and negotiate their differences.  This has become the view of the multicultural movement among liberals in recent decades.

Depending on how a story deals with differences, the moral can be that differences are dangerous, dispensable or desirable, a lesson that can make a big difference in the way children approach the world.  These responses are illustrated in the three versions of “The Three Little Pigs” discussed herein.  Disney’s The Three Little Pigs portrays a world in which difference is dangerous.  His is a smelting pot view.  Scieska tries to counter that view by portraying the wolf as good-natured and as essentially a pig in wolf’s clothing – a melting pot view that differences don’t make a difference – but it does not work.  The zoological differences between wolves and pigs make a big difference and it is potentially a fatal one for the pigs.

Trivias tries to portray the differences between wolves and pigs as desirable, so long as they are able to recognize and negotiate their differences – a stew pot view – because then they are able to use their differences to have more fun together.  But, again, in the long run this view cannot hold given the biological imperatives that control wolves and pigs.  In choosing to promote and popularize a story about pigs and wolves, Disney has effectively controlled the message about diversity in the subsequent versions of “The Three Little Pigs” despite the liberal and multicultural intentions of Scieska and Trivias.  By contrast, Cronin is able to tell a story that demonstrates the stew pot view of diversity because she has chosen characters who are compatible and who make valuable contributions to the whole based on their differences.

4. Narrative Choices in Early Childhood Storytelling: Walt Disney versus Dr. Seuss.

Probably the two most popular and influential storytellers of the last half of the twentieth century were Walt Disney and Theodor Geisel, alias Dr. Seuss.  Both used their stories to educate children in the morals and manners they believed in.  Disney was politically and culturally conservative, and his stories are filled with conservative lessons that he hoped would influence children for the rest of their lives.  Dr. Seuss, was politically and culturally liberal, and his stories are filled with liberal lessons that he hoped children would absorb.

Both authors conveyed their views through their subject matter and their narrative structures.  The coalescence of subject matter and narrative structure is one of the things that made their books so powerful, with their messages reflecting the narrative choices they made and, in turn, their narrative choices reflecting their political and cultural inclinations.  Disney’s stories were mostly melodramas with top-down perspectives, genetically generated characters, and crucial events occurring primarily through chance or causation.  Most of his most famous stories were adaptations of traditional folktales, including several from the Grimm brothers (Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty).  Dr. Seuss’ stories were of his own invention, and were mainly comedies and tragedies with bottom-up perspectives, characters that learn and change themselves and their societies, and events that result from characters’ choices.  Comparing some of their stories can help illustrate my thesis.

Disney portrays life as primarily a competition among individuals and a melodramatic battle of good individuals against the evil.  Disney, in turn, portrays cultural, economic, social and biological differences among characters as crucial causes of the characters’ good and evil behavior.  Such differences, and especially genetic differences, almost invariably determine the outcome of the story.  The wolf in The Three Little Pigs, for example, is by nature – by genetics – a big, bad, black character.  By contrast, Mickey Mouse, the star of many Disney cartoons, is by nature a happy-go-lucky, harmless, little black character.  In his original guise during the late 1920’s, Mickey looks and acts much like one of the minstrel performers – blackened-faced white men who mocked and caricatured black men – that were very popular at the time.  Both the wolf and Mickey reflect and perpetuate the racist stereotypes of black men as either ghouls or fools that were widespread in the period in which Disney was working.

Disney stories are almost always top-down in their perspective and generally with a genetic twist.  In Disney, class difference is generally biological difference and biology will triumph irrespective of the environment.  Born a princess, end up with a prince.  Born a worker, end up a worker.  A typical Disney story is about a princess or prince who yearns for recognition as what she/he really is by birth and for her/his rightful place in the world.  In Cinderella (1999), for example, the heroine’s noble birth is evidenced by her petite feet, and her natural superiority is duly recognized in the end.  In Bambi (1942), a prince finds his rightful place.

Disney stories tend to disparage ordinary people as mere facilitators for the nobility.  In Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1999), Princess Snow White comes upon a bunch of diminutive miners who, despite producing prodigious quantities of precious jewels in their work, live poorly and like pigs.  She promptly cleans them up and civilizes them.  Then, although the dwarves generously take her in and protect her, she leaves them in the end in their hovel to continue slaving in the mines while she goes off to live with a prince in a castle.  The dwarves seemingly get what they deserve as mere workers and Snow White gets what she deserves as a princess.  Disney’s is essentially a “creationist’s” universe – as you were created so should you live.

The plot-lines of Disney stories typically move as a result of chance or causation.  Disney’s heroines, such as Cinderella, Snow White and Sleeping Beauty, are passive, waiting for a prince to discover them by chance or circumstance.  Independent and intelligent women in Disney’s stories are almost invariably evil witches and/or evil stepmothers.  In the face of twentieth-century feminism, Disney seems to be trying to put the genie back in the bottle.  His treatment of Cinderella exemplifies this.  There have been scores of Cinderella-type stories throughout history in cultures all over the world.  While these stories are inherently sexist and classist – a poor young woman seeking to marry a wealthy man – the Disney version is distinguished by the helplessness and passivity of his heroine.  In stories from other times and places, the heroine is active and intelligent in making her way in the world (Climo, 1989; Louie, 1982; Huck, 1989).  Not so in the Disney version.

Even the wise pig in The Three Little Pigs does nothing pro-active about the evils of the world but merely waits for the wolf to come to him, at which point he reacts.  In Disney stories, ordinary people are expected to do what they are told by their superiors, or else.  In Pinocchio (1948), the would-be boy is given a cricket to act as his conscience.  The cricket regularly counsels Pinocchio to follow the conventional straight and narrow path, from which Pinocchio deviates to his detriment in search of illicit fun.  The overall moral of Disney stories for children is to defer uncritically to established authority and accept uncritically the social status quo.

Dr. Seuss is the anti-Disney, and his liberalism is reflected in the narrative choices he makes.  In The Cat in the Hat (1957), for example, the children have a fish who, like the cricket in Pinocchio, acts as their conscience and counsels them to follow the conventional path.  But, unlike Pinocchio, when they deviate from that path to have illicit fun, they suffer no consequences.  And at the end of the story, when the issue is raised as to whether the kids should tell their mother about what they have done, the book merely closes with a question to the reader: “Well…What would you do if your mother asked you?”  This is a patently subversive question that raises the possibility of children rejecting parental authority.  In raising open-ended questions about right and wrong, and trying to portray things from a child’s point of view, Dr. Seuss has rejected the moralistic, melodramatic mode of Disney and adopted a comic-tragic narrative mode.

Dr. Seuss’s stories are invariably bottom-up in their perspective, emphasizing the ability of ordinary folks, the little people – children included – to change the world and make it a better place.  In Dr. Seuss’s world, class difference is usually environment difference and if the environment changes, people change, sometimes for the better and sometimes for the worse depending on whether the new environment calls forth people’s better or worse selves.  Dr. Seuss is essentially an evolutionist.

In The Lorax (1971), a child is given the last Truffula seed and the job of saving the environment.  In Yertle the Turtle (1950), a “plain little turtle whose name was just Mack,” and who finds himself at the bottom of the social pile, is able to bring down the king and help establish freedom and democracy in his society.  In Green Eggs and Ham (1960), the childlike Sam-I-Am turns the tables on the adult character and harasses him into trying something that he does not want to try, a reversal of traditional roles in which adults try to teach children new things and force children to do things they do not want to do.

In Horton Hears a Who (1954), the main character is an elephant who, with his giant-sized ears, can hear the pleas for help of tiny people that live on a speck of dust.  Horton tries to help them save their tiny world from destruction but is mocked by other creatures in the forest that have smaller ears and cannot hear the “Who’s.”  Although Horton is by far the largest creature in the forest, he is eventually overpowered by his neighbors who think he is deranged and who want to get rid of the speck of dust.  Horton pleads with the “Who’s” to make enough noise so that the other animals will be able to hear them and, in the end, it is the added voice of the smallest “Who” child that makes the difference so that Horton is vindicated and the “Who’s” world is saved.

The lessons of the story include: that those like Horton with special strengths and abilities must help those without; that not even the mightiest individual, such as Horton, can prevail against the collective efforts of ordinary people; that only through the collective efforts of ordinary people, such as the “Who’s,” can good things get done; and, that even the smallest person, such as that last Who child, can make the difference.  These are empowering lessons for children that follow from Dr. Seuss’ decision to tell his story as a comedy-tragedy, from the bottom-up and as a function of characters’ choices.

Dr. Seuss insists in his stories that ordinary people can change the world for the better and that a changed world can make people happier.  Toward this end, he emphasizes the importance of nurture over nature and man-made environment over biology, to the point of sometimes even denying the scientific facts of genetics.  In Horton Hatches an Egg (1940), a lazy bird tricks the elephant Horton into sitting on her egg while she goes partying.  When, after many trials and tribulations which test Horton’s devotion to his task, the egg is finally hatched, the new born creature is half bird and half elephant.  In Dr. Seuss’s moral world, Horton deserves some tangible credit for parenting the egg even though he is not a biological parent, and the new born creature deserves some of Horton’s benevolent, beneficent characteristics rather than merely those of his/her absent father and selfish mother.  This is a very different moral universe than Disney’s genetically determined world.

Dr. Seuss generally focuses in his stories on differences among people that don’t make a difference and takes a “melting pot” view of cultural differences.  In The Sneetches (1961) and in The Butter Battle Book (1984), he comically satirizes the foolishness and potentially deadly consequences of fighting over superficial differences, such as having stars on your belly and buttering your bread on the upside or downside.  This assimilationist approach to cultural differences was characteristic of liberals in the period of the 1950’s to 1970’s in which Dr. Seuss did most of his work, a time when liberals were promoting integration through the civil rights movement.

While Disney’s “smelting pot” and Dr. Seuss’ “melting pot” views of diversity largely dominated the discussion of diversity during most of the twentieth century, some authors of children’s literature have presented a “stew pot” view.  The Araboolies of Liberty Street (1989), by Sam Swope, is an attempt to portray differences in a multicultural “stew pot” way.  In this story, a large extended family of colorful but quirky and noisy people move onto a bourgeois, suburban street, much to the glee of the children and the consternation of an uptight couple who are the conservative culture-cops of the neighborhood.

The story is sympathetic to the gentle and kind countercultural Araboolies and hostile to the nasty culture-cops, but it also raises the question of whether the reader would like to live on the same block with people as noisy, sloppy and erratic as the Araboolies.  In adopting what could be considered a tragic or relativistic view of cultural differences, the book forces the reader to consider which differences among people actually make a difference and how one can deal amicably with those differences.  In this regard, Swope’s view is essentially an extension of Dr. Seuss’ and a rejection of Disney’s.

In sum, Disney typically made narrative choices in favor of melodramatic form, top-down perspective, genetic determinism, and plot-lines based on chance and causation.  Because of these narrative choices, his stories are generally disabling and disempowering to children.  Dr. Seuss made narrative choices in favor of comedy or tragedy, a bottom-up perspective, nurture over nature, and plot-lines based on choice.  Because of these narrative choices, his stories are generally enabling and empowering for children.

The nature and effect of an author’s narrative choices is easy to see in early childhood stories such as those by Disney and Dr. Seuss but they are no less evident and important in literature for adolescents and adults.  Compare, for example, Madeline L’Engel’s A Wrinkle in Time (1962) with J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone (1997), both stories about magic and magical children  The conservative tone and lessons of L’Engel’s book are based on the melodramatic, top-down, genetic determinism of her narrative.

Rowling’s more liberal tone and lessons reflect the comedic mixture of top-down-bottom-up perspectives and nature-nurture influences in her narrative.  The lessons with which readers of any form of literature are left depend in large part on the narrative choices I have described.  In deciding which stories to use and how to use them, educators routinely look at the messages that the stories convey.  In looking for the message of a story, teachers should look at the narrative medium of the story and the narrative choices the author has made in setting up the story.  The message is often in the medium.

5. Making Narrative Choices in Historical Fiction: What to do about Hitler?

The same principles of storytelling that apply to fiction also apply to real world stories about history, current events and personal experiences – the way an author or a teacher tells the story will largely determine the message he/she conveys.  Real world stories, including historical fiction, must of course be firmly based on the best available evidence and conform to all the available facts.  While the author of a historical fiction may invent characters and events that are characteristic of the times, he/she cannot change the known facts of the times.

Unlike the author of a purely fictional story, the author of a historical fiction may not choose to talk about cows when the facts point to wolves.  Nonetheless, an author of historical fiction or historical non-fiction and any other factual story for that matter, and a teacher when discussing a historical or any other factual situation, has considerable leeway in presenting the facts, and the meaning and effect of those facts can vary considerably depending on the narrative choices he/she makes.

While some factual stories fit naturally into one narrative form or another, other stories can be told as melodramas, comedies or tragedies, and you have your choice of story forms.  The history of Adolf Hitler and the Holocaust, for example, naturally fits into melodrama.  Hitler was an evil man and the Holocaust was an evil event.  The history of the American Revolution, on the other hand, can legitimately be told in various forms.  It can be told as a melodrama in which the Good revolutionaries fought against the Bad British or, from the British point of view, the Good British against the Bad Americans.  It can also be told as a comedy in which the British foolishly thought they could keep the American colonies forever as dependencies, or as a comedy in which the Americans foolishly rebelled because they mistakenly thought the King intended to repress the colonies.  And it can be told as a tragedy in which the British government and the American revolutionaries each sought narrow goals that were good in and of themselves, and that could have and should have been peacefully reconciled, but were not to the detriment of both sides.

The history of the American Revolution can, in turn, be told from a top-down perspective as the result of actions by an elite group of American revolutionaries and/or British officials, or as a bottom-up movement of ordinary people, or some combination of the two.  It can be told as the chance result of a series of fortunate or unfortunate accidents, the inevitable result of a chain of causation, or the result of a series of choices that could have been otherwise.  The best available evidence on the American Revolution will support any of these versions, and the best historians differ in their approaches, so teachers are left with important choices as to the narrative forms for this story and, in turn, as to the moral of the story.

Choosing the narrative approach appropriate to a real world issue is sometimes simple and other times quite complex.  When the facts clearly dictate a particular narrative approach that approach is the one you simply must take.  When the facts leave you with a choice, I think the choice should, and almost invariably will, be based on your educational goals.  Most authors of books for young people and most teachers primarily rely on melodrama and top-down perspectives.  This seems in part because they think that presenting battles between good and evil, and focusing on larger-than-life heroes and villains, are the liveliest and most interesting ways to tell a story.  This is, I think, a mistake in at least two respects.

Authors and teachers who rely on top-down melodrama underestimate their audience, their materials, their message and themselves.  Their books and lessons are composed as though young people cannot understand and accept that heroes can have flaws and villains can have virtues.  As a result, the books and lessons are demoralizing to students because if heroes are perfectly good and villains are purely evil, then there is no useful explanation of why the good often fail and the bad often succeed.  How can students understand the rise of Hitler, for example, without reference to qualities that were appealing to ordinary people?  How can students understand the greatness of Lincoln without reference to his struggles with his own racism?

These books and lessons are also debilitating because if students do not understand that the good may not be perfectly good and the bad may not be entirely bad, they are not equipped to recognize good and bad people or good and bad ideas.  Without such understanding, how can they learn to recognize and respect the most important qualities in a person or idea, and avoid being unduly swayed by superficial flaws and superficial appeals?  And, perhaps most important, how can they learn to deal with their own internal contradictions and struggles between their better selves and worse selves?  Rather than portraying heroes in purely melodramatic terms, it would be better to present them in more comic and tragic terms.   Heroes could be seen as worth admiring for the ideals they represent and tried to fulfill, and worth studying for the ways they did not measure up to those ideals and, thereby, started a job that we should try to finish.

Real world stories, including historical fiction, can be successfully written in comic and tragic terms, from the bottom-up as well as the top-down, and with an emphasis on choice rather than chance or causation.  This is demonstrated by the popularity of historical fiction for young people by such award-winning authors as Kathryn Lasky (True North, 1996; A Journey to the New World, 1996; Dreams of a Golden Country, 1998), Katherine Paterson (Lyddie, 1991; Bread and Roses, Too, 2006), James and Christopher Collier (My Brother Sam is Dead, 1974), and Gary Paulsen (NightJohn, 1993; The Rifle, 1995), whose books are written for the most part in what I have defined as the tragic mode, with a bottom-up perspective and an emphasis on characters’ choices as the moving agency of their stories.  Teachers can do likewise in their lessons.

Authors and teachers who depend on melodrama, top-down narratives and causal explanations also frequently undercut their own intended message.  This point is exemplified in the similarities and differences between two historical novels about adolescent girls working in the Lowell textile mills during the 1840’s, So Far From Home: The Diary of Mary Driscoll, an Irish Mill Girl (1997) by Barry Denenberg and Lyddie (1991) by Katherine Paterson.  Both stories are written from a liberal political and social perspective.  Both are harshly critical of child labor and working conditions in the factories and express sympathy for immigrants and for the labor movement.  Both stories follow essentially the same factual pattern, as follows:

Family breakdown forces a young girl to leave home (Ireland for Mary; western Massachusetts for Lyddie) to seek work.  The girl endures a hard passage from home to Lowell but makes friends along the way.  The girl is at first excited about factory work, enjoying the independence and money, but the work soon becomes grueling and the life tedious.  The girl makes friends with some co-workers and struggles with others.  One friend is a union leader who involves the girl with a nascent union.  The girl’s original goal is to make enough money to reunite her family but this goal is foiled by deaths and dispersion of the family, which leaves the girl with new choices to make at the end.

Despite similarities in the stories’ subject matter and their authors’ political orientation, the stories leave very different impressions on the reader.  So Far From Home is a melodrama of good against evil.  The bad guys are the English landowners in Ireland, the English sailors on the boat Mary takes to America, and the mill owners and supervisors in Lowell.  These people are prejudiced against the Irish and have no qualms about exploiting poor people.  The good guys are Mary, her friends and several good-hearted adults.  The book is full of sensational events – heroic rescues and heartbreaking deaths – representing them as normal everyday life, similar to a soap opera.

The book is also highly sentimental, starting with an idealized version of rural family life in the good old days, and contrasting industrialization and urbanization in the nineteenth century with a romanticized past.  Mary has almost no choices to make in the book, and she and the story are driven by economic and social forces over which neither she nor the other characters have any control.  The story ends with no hope of collective social action against the bad guys, and the moral of the story is that a combination of self-help, mutual aid and family solidarity is the only way for an individual to survive.  This is a moral very similar to Disney’s in his Three Little Pigs.

Lyddie is a tragedy with characters straining against their personal limitations and situations that are full of internal contradictions.  Lyddie and other characters repeatedly act with narrow-minded good intentions that lead to bad ends, followed by negotiations among the characters that lead to new solutions.  The plot proceeds dialectically as Lyddie tries something, goes too far, then recovers and reconfigures her position to try something else.  The book highlights the importance of the choices that Lyddie and her colleagues make, for their own lives and for society.  The book projects a stoic view of life – hope for the best while expecting the worst – but also offers its characters and readers a utopian ideal of a cooperative society.

Lyddie has three main historical themes, each of which is connected to a social issue of today.  The first theme is family and the book essentially asks “What is a family?”  Lyddie begins with the goal of sustaining her biological nuclear family, a laudable goal.  But, unlike Mary’s family in So Far From Home, Lyddie’s biological family is almost totally dysfunctional – her father abandons the family, her mother becomes psychotic, her other relatives are uncaring, and her siblings scatter to foster homes.  Lyddie’s parents are wrong about almost everything.

Lyddie’s initial focus on reuniting her nuclear family leads her to frustration and isolation.  So, Lyddie has to create alternative families out of co-workers and friends, as do most of the main characters in the book.  Ultimately, the book’s answer to this question seems to be that any group of people that works together and supports its members is a family – a definition of family that eschews any sentimentalism about the supposedly ideal biologically-based nuclear family of olden days and is very relevant to current discussions about marriage and family life.

The book’s second theme is work and the purpose of work.  Lyddie initially wants to make money to help her nuclear family, a laudable goal, but then falls for the myth of the self-made person and the lure of money.  She becomes greedy and selfish, and harsh toward Irish immigrants similar to Mary in So Far From Home who threaten the jobs and wage-levels of native workers.  But, in the end, Lyddie learns that work should be a satisfactory way of life, not merely a means to make money for oneself, and that cooperation is the key to this.

The book’s third theme is the role of women in society.  Lyddie begins with traditional aspirations of getting married and becoming a housewife.  But her observation and experience leads her to abandon this notion.  The traditional role of the dependent wife is portrayed negatively – Lyddie’s dad leaves his then helpless wife, Lyddie’s best friend in the mills is impregnated by a married man who abandons her, and Lyddie eventually decides not get married until she can support herself intellectually as well as economically.  In the end, Lyddie goes off to Oberlin College to learn how to make a better contribution to society.

Although the Lowell labor union in Lyddie fails to achieve its goals, the message of the book is that collective social action is the best way to make your way in the world.  This is a moral very similar to Cronin’s in Click, Clack, Moo: Cows that Type.  Paterson’s recent book Bread and Roses, Too (2006) deals with the same themes as Lyddie in the context of the 1912 Lawrence textile strike, a situation in which Eastern European immigrants threatened the wage levels and jobs of the now-established Irish workers and bosses.  In this book, the union wins and the civic messages of feminism and cooperative social action are even clearer.

So Far From Home and Lyddie have the same basic subject matter and their authors have the same basic liberal intentions.  But the moral of their stories is, nonetheless, very different.  So Far From Home conveys a message of individual self-help and civic disengagement.  Lyddie conveys a message of collective action and civic engagement, and of using past decisions to help understand present-day choices.  It is primarily the respective structures of the two books – melodramatic versus tragic and causation versus choice – that makes the difference.

At the end of the musical Into the Woods, the witch warns that “Children may not obey, but children will listen.  Children will look to you for which way to turn, to learn what to be,” so be careful of the stories you tell them.  And the chorus responds that “You just can’t act, you have to listen.  You just can’t act, you have to think.”  In choosing books for students to read, in discussing books and events with them, and in preparing lessons, we need to think about the narrative structure of the stories we are presenting to them.  We need to listen carefully to the messages being conveyed by the way we are saying things, and think not only about the substance of what we want to say but also about the form.  The narrative choices we make can determine the moral of our story.

References

Bacon, Betty. 1988. “Introduction.” Pp.1-14 in How Much Truth Do We Tell The Children: The Politics of Children’s Literature.  Edited by B. Bacon. Minneapolis, MN: Marxist Educational Press.

Banfield, Edward. 1990. The Unheavenly City Revisited. Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press..

Barber, Benjamin. 1998. A Passion for Democracy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Berlin, Isaiah. 1954. Historical Inevitability. London: Oxford University Press.

Bishop, Gavin. 1989.  The Three Little Pigs. New York: Scholastic, Inc.

Burke, Kenneth. 1961. Attitudes Toward History. Boston: Beacon Press.

Carr, Edward Hallett. 1967. What is History?  New York: Vintage Books.

Clark, Beverly. 2003. Kiddie Lit: The Cultural Construction of Children’s Literature in America. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Climo, Shirley. 1989.  The Egyptian Cinderella. New York: HarperCollins.

Collier, James & Christopher Collier. 1974. My Brother Sam is Dead. New York: Scholastic, Inc.

Cronin, Doreen. 2000.  Click, Clack, Moo: Cows that Type.  New York: Simon & Schuster.

Denenberg, Barry. 1997. So Far from Home: The Diary of Mary Driscoll, an Irish Mill  Girl, Lowell, Massachusetts, 1847. New York, Scholastic, Inc.

Diamond, Jared. 1993. The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution and Future of the Human Animal.  New York: Harper Perennial.

Disney, Walt. 1933. The Three Little Pigs. Hollywood, CA: Walt Disney Pictures.

Disney, Walt. 1942. Bambi. New York: Walt Disney Productions.

Disney, Walt. 1948. Pinocchio. New York: Golden Book.

Disney, Walt. 1999. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. New York: Disney Enterprises.

Disney, Walt. 1999. Cinderella. New York: Disney Enterprises.

Disney, Walt. 2001. “The Three Little Pigs” Pp. 69-84. in Walt Disney’s Classic  Storybook. New York: Disney Press.

Dorfman, Ariel & Armand Mattelart. 1988. Pp. 22-31. “How to read Donald Duck andother innocent literature for children.” in How Much Truth Do We Tell The Children: The Politics of Children’s Literature.  Edited by B. Bacon. Minneapolis, MN: Marxist Educational Press.

Dr. Seuss. 1940. Horton Hatches the Egg. New York: Random House.

Dr. Seuss. 1950. Yertle the Turtle. New York: Random House.

Dr. Seuss. 1954. Horton Hears a Who. New York: Random House.

Dr. Seuss. 1957. The Cat in the Hat. New York: Random House.

Dr. Seuss. 1960. Green Eggs and Ham. New York: Random House.

Dr. Seuss. 1961. The Sneetches. New York: Random House.

Dr. Seuss. 1971. The Lorax. New York: Random House.

Dr. Seuss. 1984.  The Butter Battle Book. New York: Random House.

Egan, Kieran. 1988. Teaching as Storytelling. London: Routledge.

Egan, Kieran. 1992. Imagination in Teaching and Learning. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Ellis, Alec. 1968. A History of Children’s Reading and Literature. Oxford: Pergamon Press.

Freeman, Joshua et al. 1992. Who Built America: Working People & the Nation’s Economy, Politics, Culture & Society, Vol. Two: From the Gilded Age to the Present.  New York: Pantheon Books.

Galdone, Paul. 1970. The Three Little Pigs. New York: Clarion Books.

Gillespie, Margaret. 1970. Literature for Children: History and Trends. Dubuque, IA: Wm. C. Brown Company.

Goodman, Paul. 1954..The Structure of Literature. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Harbage, Alfred. 1970. “Introduction.” Pp.14-27 in King Lear by William Shakespeare. Baltimore, Md: Penguin Books.

Hines, Maude. 2004. “He Made Us Very Much Like the Flowers.”  Pp. 16-30 in Wild Things: Children’s Culture and Ecocriticism. Edited by S. Dobrin & K. Kidd. Detroit, MI: Wayne State Press.

Huck, Charlotte. 1989.  Princess Furball. New York: Greenwillow Books.

Hunt, Peter. 1991. Criticism, Theory and Children’s Literature. Cambridge, MA: Basil Blackwell.

Jurich, Marilyn. 1988. “What is left out of biography for children.” Pp.206-216 in How Much Truth Do We Tell The Children :The Politics of Children’s Literature. Edited by B. Bacon.  Minneapolis, MN: Marxist Educational Press.

Lasky, Kathryn. 1996. A Journey to the New World: The Diary of Remember Patience Whipple.  New York: Scholastic, Inc.

Lasky, Kathryn. 1996. True North. New York: Scholastic, Inc.

Lasky, Kathryn. 1998. Dreams in the Golden Country: The Diary of Zipporah  Feldman, a Jewish Immigrant Girl.  New York: Scholastic, Inc.

Lehr, Susan. 2001. “The Hidden Curriculum: Are We Teaching Young Girls to Wait for a Prince?” Pp.1-20 in Beauty, Brains and Brawn: The Construction of Gender in Children’s Literature. Edited by S. Lehr. Portsmith, NH: Heinemann.

L’Engle, Madeleine. 1962. A Wrinkle in Time.  New York: Dell Publishing.

Lemisch, Jesse. 1967. Towards a Democratic History, A Radical Education Project             Occasional Paper.  Madison, WI: Radical Education Project.

Lemisch, Jesse. 1969. “The American Revolution seen from the Bottom Up.” Pp.3-45 inToward a New Past: Dissenting Essays in American History. Edited by Bernstein. New York: Vintage Books.

Levine, Bruce et al. 1989. Who Built America? Working People & the Nation’s Economy, Politics, Culture & Society, Vol. One: From Conquest & Colonization through Reconstruction & the Great Uprising of 1877. New York: Pantheon Books.

Louie, Ai-Ling. 1982. Yeh Shen: A Cinderella Story from China. New York: Philomel Books.

Lorenz, Konrad. 1966. On Aggression. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World.

Lucas, Ann. 2003. “The Past in the Present of Children’s Literature.” Pp.XIII-XXI in The Presence of the Past in Children’s Literature  Edited by A. Lucas. Westport, CN: Praeger.

Lurie, Alison. 1990. Don’t Tell the Grownups: Subversive Children’s Literature.  Boston: Little Brown & Co.

MacLeod, Ann. 1994. American Childhood: Essays on Children’s Literature of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press.

McEwan, Hunter & Kieren Egan. 1995. “Introduction.” Pp.VII-XV in Narrative in Teaching, Learning and Research. Edited by H. McEwan & K. Egan.  New York: Teachers College Press.

Moynihan, Ruth. 1988. “Ideologies in Children’s Literature: Some Preliminary Notes.” Pp.93-100 in How Much Truth Do We Tell The Children: The Politics of Children’s Literature.  Edited by B. Bacon.  Minneapolis, MN: Marxist Educational Press.

O’Toole, Fintan. 2002. Shakespeare is Hard, but so is Life: A Radical Guide to            Shakespearian Tragedy. London: Granta Books.

Paterson, Katherine. 1991. Lyddie. New York: Puffin Books.

Paterson, Katherine. 2006.  Bread and Roses, Too.  New York: Clarion Books.

Paulsen, Gary. 1993.  NightJohn.  New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell.

Paulsen, Gary. 1995.  The Rifle.   New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell.

Plato. 1956. Great Dialogues of Plato. New York: Mentor Books.

Rowling, J.K. 1997. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. New York: Scholastic, Inc.

Sarland, Charles. 1999. “Critical Tradition and Ideological Positioning.” Pp.30-49 in Understanding Children’s Literature. Edited by P. Hunt. London: Routledge.

Scieszka, Jon. 1989. The True Story of the Three Little Pigs. New York: Scholastic, Inc.

Stephens, John. 1992. Language and Ideology in Children’s Fiction. London: Longman.

Stephens, John. 1999. “Linguistics and Stylistics.” Pp.73-85 in Understanding Children’s Literature. Edited by P. Hunt. London: Routledge.

Swope, Sam. 1989. The Araboolies of Liberty Street. New York: Farrar, Strauss & Giroux.

Taxel, Joel. 1988. “The American Revolution in Children’s Books: Issues of Race and Class.” Pp.157-172 in How Much Truth Do We Tell The Children: The Politics of Children’s Literature. Edited by B. Bacon.  Minneapolis, MN: Marxist Educational Press.

Thaler, Danielle. 2003. “Fiction vs. History: History’s Ghosts.” Pp.3-11. in The Presence of the Past in Children’s Literature. Edited by A. Lucas. Westport, CN: Praeger.

Trivias, Eugene. 1993.  The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig.  New York: Scholastic, Inc.

Van Doren, Mark. 2005. Shakespeare. New York: New York Review Books.

Williams, William Appleman. 1974. History as a Way of Learning. New York: New Viewpoints.

Wilson, David Sloane. 2007. Evolution of Everyone. New York: Delacorte Press.

Witherell, Carol et al. 1995. “Narrative Landscapes and the Moral Imagination.” Pp.VII-XV in Narrative in Teaching, Learning and Research. Edited by McEwan & K. Egan. New York: Teachers College Press.