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Amongst Barbarians: A Gift to Radical Chic
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16377 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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5 / 1989 |
2,801 Words |
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Herb Greer Herb Greer is an American writer and playwright who lives in
Britain and on the Continent. |
"Oh, East is East and West is West, and never the twain shall meet" is a particularly nasty cliché. It is usually quoted by people who have never read the Kipling Ballad of East and West. The last two lines of that famous refrain go like this:
But there is neither
East nor West,
Border nor Breed, nor Birth,
When two strong men stand face
to face, though they come from
the ends of the earth!
Metaphysical Darkness
Playwrights, being a breed much given to cliche these days, have shown a special taste for this one--but turned upside down. The original racist point of it was that a benighted East and an enlightened West simply had nothing material, moral, or spiritual in common. But if you go to see any "concerned" play about the West and the Third World (which these days does most of the conceptual duty once done by East), you will find that it is supposed to be the West that is now most definitely inferior, morally unsanitary, sunk in metaphysical and spiritual darkness, with a great deal to learn from those other, older, lovelier cultures. This is a pity, because the theater above all other arts is well placed to flesh out the full Kipling refrain and allow strong men to face each other on terms that give the clash between them a genuinely tragic sense and meaning.
In 1986 a British writer, Michael Wall,
... (1999 of 16268 Characters)
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