第二次新政和第四次法庭墙

L. Weinrib
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章探讨了马克·布利茨斯坦1937年的劳动歌剧《摇篮将摇》,作为对法律合法性的攻击。自从它著名的第一部作品——一场删减了的表演,演员们在家里表演他们的角色,当WPA取消了这个有争议的项目的原定开幕时,评论家们强调了摇篮对德国剧作家贝托尔特·布莱希特的感激之情,布莱希特是布利茨斯坦献给他的作品。与布莱希特(Brecht)的Verfremdungseffekt一致,Blitzstein将观众与《摇篮》中的人物拉开了距离,用理性的理解取代了不经思考的同理心。像布莱希特一样,他运用这种戏剧手法来揭露人们所熟悉的社会实践的文化和经济基础,包括资本主义。在美国的背景下,布莱希特式对戏剧惯例的重新构想与对正式法律正义的相应攻击产生了共鸣。在罗斯福新政合法性危机最严重的时候,摇篮描绘了一个赤裸裸地依附于财富和财产的司法体系。在节目中心,反工会的钢铁巨头贿赂和操纵记者、专业人士和公职人员,以宣传他的“自由”概念,即不受工会组织的影响。通过放大经济利益对法律结果的影响,同时削弱对那些促进和合法镇压的角色的同情,《摇篮》邀请观众考虑自己在法律不公正中的同谋。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Second New Deal and the Fourth Courtroom Wall
This essay explores Marc Blitzstein’s 1937 labor opera, The Cradle Will Rock, as an assault on legal legitimacy. Since its famous first production—a pared-down performance in which actors delivered their parts from the house, improvised when the WPA canceled the scheduled opening of the controversial project—critics have emphasized Cradle’s indebtedness to the German playwright Bertolt Brecht, to whom Blitzstein dedicated the work. Consistent with Brecht’s Verfremdungseffekt, Blitzstein distances the audience from Cradle’s characters, substituting rational understanding for unreflective empathy. Like Brecht, he employs this theatrical device to expose the cultural and economic underpinnings of familiar social practices, including capitalism. Imported to the US context, the Brechtian reimagining of theatrical conventions resonated with a corresponding attack on formal legal justice. At the height of the New Deal’s crisis of legal legitimacy, Cradle depicts a judicial system baldly beholden to wealth and property. The anti-union steel magnate at the show’s center bribes and manipulates journalists, professionals, and public officials to promote his concept of “liberty,” namely, freedom from organized labor. By amplifying the effects of economic interests on legal outcomes while undermining empathy with the characters who facilitate and legitimate repression, Cradle invites the audience to consider its own complicity in law’s injustice.
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