{"id":17747,"date":"2015-12-03T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2015-12-03T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/leithart.level2d.com\/?p=2573"},"modified":"2015-12-03T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2015-12-03T00:00:00","slug":"hamlet-among-protestants-and-catholics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.patheos.com\/blogs\/leithart\/2015\/12\/hamlet-among-protestants-and-catholics\/","title":{"rendered":"Hamlet Among Protestants and Catholics"},"content":{"rendered":"<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-\/\/W3C\/\/DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional\/\/EN\" \"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/REC-html40\/loose.dtd\">\n<html><head><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\"><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text\/html; charset=utf-8\">\n<\/head><body><p>Most readers and viewers of <em style=\"color: inherit; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; letter-spacing: 0.01em; background-color: initial;\">Hamlet<\/em> take Hamlet\u2019s most famous soliloquy as a meditation on suicide. \u00a0In\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Hamlet-Protestantism-Mourning-Contingency-Not\/dp\/0754654362\/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1449103357&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=curran+hamlet+mourning%20tag=leithartcom-20\" class=\" decorated-link\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\">Hamlet, Protestantism, and the Mourning of Contingency<\/a>, John E. Curran, Associate Professor of English at Marquette University, argues there are bigger things at work.  Hamlet is opposing two ontologies, religious universes, moralities.<\/p>\n<p>  The first Curran labels \u201cthe Be.\u201d  The Be is the realm of predetermined fixity, without freedom, choice or contingency.  It is an either\/or, zero-sum world where every divine initiative must be at the expense of human merit, where signs and things stand in antagonistic opposition rather than seeking reconciliation.  The Be is static, atemporal, a world within which human action is meaningless.  In the Be, things stay what they are.  The Be is cold, logical, technical, empty.  The Be is a Protestant world.<\/p>\n<p>  On the other side of the great ugly ditch is \u201cthe Not to be,\u201d which is everything the Be is not.  It is a world of both-and, a world of real contingency and freedom, a world where grace and merit, sign and thing, live together in merry fellowship.  Human action makes sense, and makes a difference, in the Not to be, because the Not to be is dynamic and temporal.  In the Not to be, anything can happen, even bread becoming flesh.  The Not to be is warm, moist, organic, teeming.  The Not to be is Catholic.<\/p>\n<p>  Hamlet\u2019s dilemma, according to Curran\u2019s interpretation, is that of a man of Catholic sensibilities and aspirations who finds himself stuck in a Protestant world.  In his heart, he is a man of the Not to be who wants to breathe free of the stifling stagnant air of Geneva or Wittenberg; but he learns, with growing frustration, that he lives in the Be.  By the beginning of Act 5, he is resigned to the fact that the Not to be is not to be.  After that, there is nothing more to say.  Submitting to the Be leaves us speechless and dehumanized. The rest is silence.<\/p>\n<p>  In this context, Curran suggests, we can see what Hamlet is actually saying about suicide.  To endure the slings and arrows is to submit to the Be, a course that Hamlet considers the least noble option.  The nobler option is to insist on the dignity of human choice, perhaps through self-slaughter: \u201cTo commit suicide would be to alter all the conditions of Hamlet\u2019s life, hateful conditions that have been imposed on him . . . He wants to be in what is now not in existence; musing on the availability of suicide lets him feel that he can have access to that world of real possibility\u201d (p. 29).  But the dagger falls.  Sicklied o\u2019er by thoughts of the Be, we are cowards all.  Later, Hamlet wants to enact a unique revenge that does not fall into the typical pattern of bloodshed, but in the Protestant world of determined fixities, he can only be Hamlet. The Be is a world of the Same, where every revenge is like every other.<\/p>\n<p>  Curran\u2019s book is filled with footnotes to both secondary literature on Hamlet and an abundance of primary and secondary literature on Elizabethan theology. He has read a lot, but despite the genuine erudition, Curran is no theologian.  His portrayals of Catholic and Protestant \u201contologies\u201d amount to caricatures.  He knows a few things about Protestant and Catholic theology, and extrapolates from those ideas to conclusions about what Protestants and Catholics \u2013 especially Protestants \u2013 must have believed.  But the things he knows are not entirely accurate, and his extrapolations even less so.  In characterizing Protestantism as steady-state determinism, for instance, he ignores the significant continuities between medieval Catholic and Protestant theologies, the prominent role of sanctification in Calvin\u2019s and Puritan theology, the notion of regeneration.  He ignores the cross as an epoch-making event.  In fact, a plausible \u2013 I think convincing \u2013 argument can be made that one of  Protestantism\u2019s great contributions to the church was a rediscovery the <em>historical<\/em> dimension of Christianity. <\/p>\n<p>  Anyone who suggests, as Curran does, that Protestant determinism undermined casuistry has never cracked a volume of Richard Baxter.  While Protestants did deny that humans can control God (113), the central Calvinist doctrine of the covenant was all about God\u2019s voluntary <em>self<\/em>-binding.  When Curran characterizes Hamlet\u2019s \u201cThere is a special providence in the fall of a sparrow\u201d as capturing \u201cthe hard logic of predestinarian Christianity\u201d (205), the prejudice is obvious. Hamlet wants to talk about birdies, but Curran takes it as logic, and <em>hard<\/em> logic at that.  For a sect that believed humans \u201cmake no contribution to history,\u201d Puritans sure contributed more than their share.<\/p>\n<p>  Let me illustrate Curran\u2019s theological simplifications with a couple of specific examples.  He rightly notes that Calvin interpreted the <em>est<\/em> of the words of institution figuratively and that he repudiated \u201cthe idea of our physical eating of Christ.\u201d  From this, he concludes that \u201cCalvin admitted that the Protestant Eucharist removed the immediacy of our connection to God and made the divine more distant to us\u201d (22-23).  This is flat wrong.  In the very passage where Calvin argues that there is no presence \u201cin the bread,\u201d he insists that believers are jointed to Christ by the Supper, though the Spirit \u201cwhich unites Christ himself to us\u201d (<em>Institutes<\/em> 4.17.31).  The Supper is for Calvin a \u201cvehicle\u201d by which the Spirit overcomes all \u201cdistance\u201d between the church and the heavenly Christ.  Calvin is only too happy to speak of \u201cfeeding on Christ\u201d and being knit \u201cbone to his bone, flesh to his flesh.\u201d Check the liturgy: Who is closer to the bread that is Christ\u2019s body \u2013 medieval Catholics who watch from the nave or Calvinists who take and eat?<\/p>\n<p>  Curran also misconstrues Calvinist treatments of freewill and predestination.  He thinks that the Calvinist emphasis on predestination must preclude meaningful human action and render the warnings of Scripture nugatory.  But Calvinists regularly sought to explain how predestination was different from determinism, and how predestination could coexist with genuine, though qualified, human freedom.  High supralapsarian Puritan William Perkins explains that the decree of predestination \u201cdoth altogether order every euent, partly by inclining and gently bending the will in all things that are good, and partly by forsaking it in things that are euill: yet the will of the creature left vnto itselfe, is carried headlong of [its] owne accord, not of necessitie in itselfe, but contingently that way which the decree of God determined from eternitie\u201d (<em>Golden Chaine<\/em>, <em>Works<\/em> 2.621).  This may not convince Curran, but it is certainly evidence that Protestants did not \u201cignore\u201d (77) the difficulties of their theology.  <\/p>\n<p>  If some Protestants (not Calvin) admittedly broke the bond of sign and thing from one direction, Catholicism arguably did from the other.  Hamlet\u2019s musings on the contrast between his inky cloak and the sorrows that pass show display his desire for \u201cgenuineness and sincerity,\u201d which in Curran\u2019s terms is a \u201cCatholic\u201d yearning: \u201cNo gap should lie between inner and outer; we should instead find an absolute correspondence between them, of the type we get with the Catholic Eucharist\u201d (p. 36).  It\u2019s fairly obvious, though, that transubstantiation creates a chasm between inner and outer, appearance and reality, since transubstantiation is a theory about how the inner reality can be utterly changed while the outer appearances remain.  In transubstantiation, the bread-accidents veil rather than display the supernatural miracle taking place behind the curtain.  Inky cloaks, on the premises of transubstantiation, might well conceal hearts of pure white, and vice versa.  Smiles might be masks of a villain. <\/p>\n<p>  Curran doesn\u2019t find it possible to remain consistent with his own paradigm.  In the Not to be, anything is possible; contingency is absolute.  Yet, Curran is critical of Claudius for trying to combine \u201can auspicious and a dropping eye,\u201d charging that if so \u201cone eye is lying.\u201d  But what happened to both-and?  Why, other than the fact that Claudius is the villain and Protestantism is the villain, should Curran conclude that Claudius is expressing a \u201cProtestant\u201d viewpoint?  Curran also is ambiguous about whether the play mourns the \u201closs of contingency\u201d \u2013 as if contingency were a somehow real prior to the Reformation \u2013 or whether Shakespeare is bemoaning a world that objectively is the Be.  Hamlet\u2019s cloak can depict his bottomless grief, he realizes, only in its inability to denote those depths (\u201ccalled bottom because it has no bottom\u201d): \u201cHe wants an extravagant display to register an all-consuming grief, but the display is not extravagant enough and the grief is not all-consuming\u201d (p. 49).  Is the display <em>ever<\/em> extravagant enough?  Is there not always that within which passes show?  If so, are we not all Protestants?  Is the Be simply what there is?<\/p>\n<p>  My point is not to engage in Protestant-Catholic polemics.  I am fully aware that Catholicism has its answers to the objections I posed above.  My point is only to show that things are far more complex than Curran\u2019s simple binarism allows.  But this criticism, substantial as it is, doesn\u2019t get to the heart of Curran\u2019s thesis.  After all,  Shakespeare might have been as unsubtle a theologian as Curran.  Perhaps the Protestantism Shakespeare knew was what theologian James Jordan has called \u201cIslamo-Calvinism.\u201d  The critical question for Curran\u2019s book is not whether he got Protestantism right; he didn\u2019t.  The question is what Shakespeare might have believed about Protestantism.  Or, better, the question is whether or not Curran provides a coherent reading of <em>Hamlet<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>  On this score, the book is a more impressive achievement, though not an unmixed one.  He has a tendency to ignore the drama in favor of a morality play of disembodied ideas.  <em>Hamlet<\/em> becomes an intellectual puzzle.  When Curran does keep the text of the play in view, however, his insights are often fruitful.  Drawing on Barbara Everett, he points to patterns of circularity and doubling that keep the characters and action turning back on itself.  The king in the play scene provides the most dramatic example: He dies in the dumb show, lies on his death bed in the play, is killed by Lucianus, and then is \u201csymbolically re-re-re-killed when his queen marries his murderer\u201d (p. 97).  And this of course foreshadows the strange climactic double-death of Claudius, who is both stung by his own venom and made to drink his own poisoned chalice.  <\/p>\n<p>  Even his usually clumsy Protestant\/Catholic paradigm can work at times.  Claudius at prayer is a true Protestant, who knows that shows of piety merit no response from heaven, without a change of heart.  Observing him, Hamlet draws a \u201cCatholic\u201d conclusion \u2013 if he went through the motions of penance, he is forgiven, and killing him at that point is poor revenge (140-141).  The \u201cnunnery\u201d to which Hamlet wants to consign Ophelia is a whorehouse, but it is only so on the Protestant assumption that human beings lack the power for sexual restraint (186-187). <\/p>\n<p>  Curran is most fruitful in examining the ending of Hamlet, and at this point he throws open some perspectives on the play as a whole.  The clever opening to Arnold Schwartzenegger\u2019s <em>Last Action Hero<\/em> got the play right: Hamlet <em>v<\/em>. the action hero.  Hamlet has all the trappings of an action film: \u201cyou killed my father \u2013 big mistake,\u201d the handsome sensitive intelligent prince, the love interest, the cloak-and-daggerish maneuvering that leads to the final confrontation between the hero and the villain.  Shakespeare knew how to write such stuff, keeping Prince Hal and Hotspur, Macbeth and Macduff apart until the final climactic duel.  In <em>Hamlet<\/em>, though, the expected end never comes.  Everything is chugging toward the climax, but Hamlet and Claudius never square off.  In the last scene, Claudius is still acting through a surrogate.  Worse, Hamlet\u2019s hope for \u201ca distinctive and proportional revenge\u201d collapses into a scene that \u201cfails to contain any nobility whatever.\u201d: \u201cEveryone dies, along with his father\u2019s ambitions and endeavors, and that is that.  Anti-climactic, spur-of-the-moment, clumsy, and cruel without some potentially compensating dash or flair to it, the deed itself has no dignity\u201d (214). Hamlet speaks of providence while recounting his clever cruel dispatch of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern.  Surely Curran is right that all this casts a dark question mark across Hamlet\u2019s faith in heaven\u2019s providence: \u201cHeaven has ordained <em>this<\/em>?\u201d (p. 216). <\/p>\n<p>  This gives us something to work with, at two levels.  Most obviously, <em>Hamlet<\/em> is a revenge tragedy, and like most plays in this genre it depicts the uncontrollable potency of revenge.  Where does the blood stop once we open a wound?  Blood flows and flows as long as there is another blood, and bloody, relative to take up the cause \u2013 which is as long as forever \u2013 or until every relevant person lies in his own personal pool of blood.  Shakespeare numbs us with the catastrophe of revenge.  He finishes not merely with blood but with an apocalypse of blood.  In the end, it\u2019s not \u201cKill,\u201d but \u201cKill, kill, kill, kill, kill.\u201d<\/p>\n<p> <em>Hamlet<\/em> is far more than a revenge tragedy, else Schwartzenegger would be as likely to play a parody Hieronimo as a parody Hamlet. The \u201cmore\u201d is partly the more of a mysterious universality that hovers about Hamlet\u2019s predicament, a point underscored by the play\u2019s repeated hints of a fallen Eden (unweeded garden, the serpent who kills the king and takes his crown, the primal eldest\u2019s curse).  But one does not have to be an over-theorized new historicist to recognize the strength of Curran\u2019s claim that <em>Hamlet<\/em> also resonates with contemporary cultural and, especially, religious issues.  This too has textual support: Wittenberg, diet of worms, providence and conscience.<\/p>\n<p>  Curran\u2019s distribution of roles, however, is easily reversible.  Hamlet, after all, has come from Wittenberg, cradle of Protestantism, and encounters a ghost fresh from Purgatory.  That suggests Hamlet is a Protestant in Catholic world, rather than the opposite.  Shakespeare invents a Roman name for Claudius (Fengon in the original story), and, as David Kaula has argued, Shakespeare uses ancient Rome as proxy for Papal Rome.  Kaula spots apocalyptic allusions throughout the play, from Horatio\u2019s learned discourse on the harbingers of Caesar\u2019s death to the last scene, where Claudius raises, and drinks, a poisoned chalice, like the Whore of Revelation, which English Protestants often interpreted as a symbol of the doomed Catholic Church.<\/p>\n<p>  I don\u2019t think this alternative morality play works any better than Curran\u2019s.  Rather, the variety of plausible connections shows that the religious interests of the play work at a more abstract level than Curran believes.  The play depicts a clash between an old world and a new, a clash that has religious, cultural and political dimensions.  Hamlet <em>pere<\/em> is a medieval knight, dressed in armor complete with beaver and operating by the standards of chivalric single combat.  Claudius, who must be roughly his contemporary, is every inch a Renaissance prince. Ring out the old, ring in the new.  Paul Cantor very plausibly interprets the play as a battle between classical heroism, rejuvenated by the Renaissance, and Christian ethical demands, a war carried out not only in Elsinore\u2019s hallways but in the soul of Elsinore\u2019s Prince.<\/p>\n<p>  Hamlet does not find his Catholic (and prophetic) soul stymied by the Protestant universe around him.  Rather, the play suggests that Protestant and Catholic bloodlust can only end with same stupid slaughter.  Hamlet might be a Catholic avenger who wants to restore the traditional world of his father\u2019s Denmark.  Claudius might be the usurping Protestant, with blood on his hands that won\u2019t wash clean.  The resolution of the play warns that every effort to avenge the father is going to end in blood, and in the shadows waits Norway\u2019s (Machiavellian?) Fortinbras, ready to step in to reverse the results of his father\u2019s defeat in single combat.  If there is a contemporary \u201cmessage\u201d in <em>Hamlet<\/em>, it seems to me the same message of Shakespeare\u2019s other plays: It is a Christian humanist\u2019s prescient warning that fanaticism will lead to civil war, the killing of a king, and the triumph of amoral <em>Realpolitik<\/em>.  This is the apocalypse whose outlines Shakespeare could already see at the beginning of England\u2019s century of revolution, the tragic slather of blood he hoped English might become wise enough to avoid.<\/p>\n<\/body><\/html>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Most readers and viewers of Hamlet take Hamlet\u2019s most famous soliloquy as a meditation on suicide. \u00a0In\u00a0Hamlet, Protestantism, and the Mourning of Contingency, John E. Curran, Associate Professor of English at Marquette University, argues there are bigger things at work. Hamlet is opposing two ontologies, religious universes, moralities. The first Curran labels \u201cthe Be.\u201d The [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3021,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1414,578],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-17747","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-hamlet","category-shakespeare"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Hamlet Among Protestants and Catholics<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Most readers and viewers of Hamlet take Hamlet\u2019s most famous soliloquy as a meditation on suicide. &nbsp;In&nbsp;Hamlet, Protestantism, and the Mourning\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" 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