|
olkien
disliked allegory. He thought it a sterile and predictable genre.
Yet, many readers of his The Lord of the Rings (LOTR)
have been unable to resist allegorical interpretations, the most
popular of which see the work as a Christian allegory or as an allegory
for the great wars of the early 20th century. Like the original
book, the film version of LOTR has inspired wildly varied
interpretations, many of them attempting to make some contemporary
connection. But all the ones offered thus far distort the peculiar
nature of the quest in LOTR and its teaching on evil.
Given that
the film contains few female characters and focuses on male relationships,
it was perhaps inevitable that some critics would "discover"
the film's "homosexual subtext." In his review of the
film in The Boston Phoenix, Peter Keough directs our attention
to the scene where "Bilbo goes nuts when Frodo opens his shirt
exposing the Ring." But Bilbo's eyes are clearly fixed on the
ring, not on Frodo's bare chest, a point reinforced moments later
when Bilbo briefly turns monstrous after coming close to the ring.
What is inconceivable to many modern viewers is an older conception
of male friendship, openly affectionate, bound by a shared appreciation
of valor in war, of the nobility of loyalty, courage, and justice,
and of beauty in poetry and music.
Many others
have drawn connections between LOTR and America in the wake
of the atrocities of September 11. In the Boston Globe, Jay
Carr called the fellowship of nine "freedom fighters."
Andrew Sullivan's website hosted a discussion about whether Bush
is closer to Frodo or Sam. (After initially leaning toward Frodo,
Sullivan opted for Sam.) There are parallels here. Both dramas feature
ordinary citizens and leaders, shaken from their commonplace lives
by an invading evil; after an initial shock, they commit themselves
to a cause, and, in so doing, discover in themselves resources they
never knew they possessed. There is also a similarity in the way
diverse peoples, while never forgetting their particular homelands,
put aside differences to fight against a common enemy.
But the comparison
obfuscates the nature of the quest in LOTR and the peculiar
evil that the ring embodies. The task in LOTR is not to hunt
down and punish an enemy but to destroy the instrument that could
give the enemy absolute power. And the dangers the ring-bearer faces
are as much internal as external. Some of the members of the fellowship
are themselves tempted by the lure of the ring, for different reasons
but all out of a desire to do good. The most tragic figure is Boromir,
one of the two human members of the fellowship, who wants to use
the power of the Ring to defend his people from the evil Sauron.
His desire for the ring occasions his own death and the splitting
of the fellowship.
The great lesson
of LOTR is that the use of certain means or instruments is
always evil, corrupting the one who deploys them, no matter what
apparent good may come from them or be intended in their use. When
the New York Times critic Elvis Mitchell describes the ring
as being so powerful that "even the towering Gandalf"
is afraid of it, he gets it exactly backward. The truth is that
it is especially Gandalf who fears the ring, because he is
acutely aware that the ring is a particularly potent corruptor of
the powerful, who might be deceived into thinking they can wield
its power without being destroyed by it. The point is driven home
in an early scene where Frodo, realizing his possession of the ring
has made him a target of the evil powers, offers Gandalf the ring.
Gandalf, who up to this point has appeared as an avuncular, playful
wizard, becomes suddenly fierce with Frodo. He commands Frodo not
tempt him with the ring. Gandalf, who won't even touch the ring,
admits that, were he to take it, he would do so out of a "desire
to do good" but through him it would wreak a "great and
terrible" evil.
LOTR's
teaching about evil runs counter to the suppositions that nothing
is truly evil in itself, that only weak and ignorant individuals
are terrified by things labeled "evil," and that clever
individuals with good intentions can put any means to a good end.
Another interpretation
the one the actors and the director, Peter Jackson, seem
to favor is ecological. It holds that the difference between
good and evil in LOTR hinges upon different relationships
to nature, with the good existing in harmony with nature while the
evil are indifferent or hostile to nature, using it as raw material
to satisfy inordinate longings for greed and power. The interpretation
finds support in the film and perhaps even more in the book. Greed
is undeniably a deadly vice in LOTR; the Dwarfs' lust for
riches in the mines of Moria awakens an ancient evil. Recall the
scene in the film where the traitorous wizard Saruman, once friend
and now nemesis of Gandalf, commands his underlings to destroy the
trees to feed the fires he needs to forge a new creature, a mixture
of human and Orc. What ensues is a panoramic shot of massive deforestation.
But the ecological
interpretation, especially if it is understood in a standard liberal
way, misses the mark. The greatest danger is not the depletion of
natural resources but the moral destruction of the human species
and other rational species. Tolkien's heroes are not autonomous
creators but those who humbly embrace their role within a natural
and even a supernatural order not of their own devising. Saruman's
cloning project, his attempt to remake life, even human life, in
his own image and likeness or at least to serve his own needs mirrors
the project of Sauron himself, who is animated by a "will to
dominate all life." Is there a contemporary analogue to this?
Certainly. It is already underway in the proclamation of a disembodied
sexual liberty, in the practice of selective abortion, and in the
push for greater freedom in genetic experimentation, including even
cloning. Of course, these practices are pursued not in the manner
of Sauron, out of a malevolent intention to dominate the world;
instead, their supporters appeal to progress, freedom, and compassion.
But the presence of the best of intentions, if we are to take seriously
the teaching of LOTR, in no way insures that we will not
wreak a great and terrible evil.
Mr. Hibbs is the author of Shows
About Nothing.
|