With respect to Field Marshal Paulus, who had done the
"wrong" thing and surrendered to the Red Army at the close of the
siege of Stalingrad, Adolf Hitler stated "What is life? Life is the
Nation. The individual must die anyway. Beyond the life of the individual is
the Nation." (Hitler, 2007)
The question of whether an individual owes allegiance to something beyond
themselves – their country or class or family or peer or political group – is a
central question in ethics. It is also at the centre of Howard Barker's play
Judith: A Parting From The Body, which is currently getting a welcome revival at the Cock Theatre. Judith posits that there is another force pulling at the
individual, a force which may wrench them away from their allegiance to
ideological forces and compel them to rebel; that force is desire.
Barker's subject is the assassination of the Babylonian
general Holofernes by the Israelite widow Judith in his tent just before a
battle which would have seen the nation of Israel massacred or enslaved. This
is an Apocryphal subject, told in the Book of Judith, yet one which has been at
the centre of European art and
culture for centuries: Chaucer and Dante wrote of it, Caravaggio, Artemisia and Cranach painted it; Vivaldi composed
an opera on the subject. In Barker's short play, Judith (accompanied by a
servant) arrives at the tent of the general planning to kill him, only to have
her plans thrown into doubt by a mutual desire which develops between the widow
and the general. What does a person do when one's ideological commitments are
at odds with one's desiring subjectivity?
Barker does not change the tale's end. Judith beheads
Holofernes and so saves Israel. But there it also appears that in betraying her
personal bodily desires for the body politic in this way, Judith has killed
herself. She is paralysed after the act and only rises as a new being, one who
announces that "Israel Is My Body!" (Barker, 1990) She stomps
around declaring herself a god and wishing to massacre innocents. She is a
walking talking price that has been paid for committing oneself ideologically
against all personal considerations.
Barker does not indicate whether he thinks she has done the
right or wrong thing. It is made clear, as in the original, that Holofernes
death was absolutely necessary for the survival of Israel. Yet who could think
that the being Judith becomes is admirable? Perhaps the choice is impossible
and, one way or another, the only choice is between deaths.
The strength of Judith as a theatre event is that it shows,
in one intense act and through the interaction of just three characters, the
impossibility of the human situation at this extreme. Given the infinite calls
of ideological commitment that pull at us all and the many times when we are
expected to act against our own desiring agency's interest, Judith offers a
microcosmic vision of a terrible, insurmountable moment in which we could all find (and lose) ourselves any time now.
Bibliography
Barker, H. (2011, 02 08). Judith: A Parting From The Body. (R.
Winfield-Smith, Director, C. Cusack, E. Prior, & L. Smith, Performers)
Cock Tavern Theatre, London, England, United Kingdom.
Barker, H. (1990). The Europeans / Judith. London: John
Calder (Publishers) Ltd.
Hitler, A. (quoted at) (2007, 05 18). General Paulus Nazi Germany. Retrieved
02 12, 2011, from Sparticus International :
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/GERpaulus.htm