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To hold the world but as the world...
The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare, directed
by Michael Radford
By Joanne Laurier
17 March 2005
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The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare, directed
by Michael Radford, screenplay by Radford
The Merchant of Venice is considered one of Shakespeares
more problematic and disturbing plays. Controversy primarily surrounds
the dramatists treatment of Shylock, the money-lender who
demands his pound of flesh, and the related question
of anti-Semitism.
Literary critic Harold Bloom begins his observations on the
play by declaring The Merchant to be a profoundly
anti-Semitic work. Noted Shakespeare scholar Harold C. Goddard
writes: The anti-Semitism of the twentieth century lends
a fresh interest to The Merchant of Venice. It raises anew
the old question: How could one of the most tolerant spirits of
all time have written a play that is centered around, and seems
to many to accept, one of the degraded prejudices of the ages?
A viewing of British director Michael Radfords new film
version of The Merchant of Venice reminds one that there
are many possible approaches to the play, including interpretations
that tend to argue against the views of Bloom and Goddard, or
at least place the play in a more appropriate historical context.
Radfords film is all the more noteworthy as the first major
cinematic rendition of the play in the sound era.
The film opens with titles on the screen locating the drama
in Venice in 1596 and briefly describing the oppression and ghettoization
of the Jewish population. Living in a confined area, Jews were
forbidden to move about in the city after dark. Forced into the
trade of lending money, they were held in contempt by the Christians
whose religion officially forbade engagement in that facet of
commercial life. Underscoring this reality, the Christian merchant
(of the title) Antonio (Jeremy Irons) spits on Shylock (Al Pacino),
the Jewish money-lender, on the Rialto Bridge in the films
first sequence.
Antonio, who has invested all his wealth in overseas trading
expeditions, is asked by Bassanio (Joseph Fiennes), his friend
(with whom he is obviously in love) and kinsman, for money to
go to Belmont, where the latter hopes to end his financial woes
by marrying the heiress Portia (Lynn Collins). Shylock agrees
to lend Bassanio 3,000 ducats in Antonios name provided
that the latter signs a bond forfeiting a pound of his own flesh
if he is unable to repay the loan on time.
At Portias estate, a continual stream of suitors fails
the worthiness test devised by her father before his death. According
to the latters will, Portia can only marry the man who chooses
among three small casketsmade of gold, silver and leadthe
one that contains her portrait.
Meanwhile, Shylocks daughter Jessica runs off with Lorenzo,
a prodigal Christian, disappearing into the night with a box of
her fathers money and jewels. As news reaches Venice of
Antonios fortunes shipwrecked with his vessels, a sinned-against
and enraged Shylock declares his determination to take the allotted
portion of the bankrupt merchants flesh.
Backed by Portias vast fortune, now that he has chosen
the correct casket, Bassanio sets off for Venice to save his friend.
The courtroom scene that ensues is one of the most spectacularly
histrionic moments in all of Shakespeare, dramatically built around
the distinction between the letter and the spirit of the law.
Radford and his actors do justice to the grandeur and intricacies
of the text.
Alls well that ends well for everyone except Shylock,
who is betrayed by his daughter, stripped of his wealth, his religion
and hence his livelihood. The film leaves little doubt as to the
bottomless character of his suffering.
Radfords movie is an intelligent, artistically constructed
work. Pacinos Shylock is the congealed expression of the
physical disfigurement and psychic scars produced by a history
of oppression, an outcast who is the avenger of his people. While
Shakespeares Shylock may be villainous, as one critic pointed
out, he is also one of the first Jews allowed to speak for
himself in gentile European literature, to argue his case, to
reveal his humanity. Pacino succeeds in arguing Shylocks
case and revealing his humanity.
Shot on location and awash (perhaps overly so) in Renaissance
colors, the film is visually succulent and its feeling authentic.
All performances are noteworthy, with those of Pacino, Irons and
Collins ranking as exceptional.
There are multiple and complex themes involved in the intertwining
stories of Shakespeares play, and director Radford translates
the work to the screen with a good deal of skill.
At the heart of The Merchant of Venice is the network
of money relations that links all the major characters and subplots.
The indebted Bassanio needs to marry Portia for money as much
as for love. To attempt to win the heiress, he must borrow from
Antonio, whose capital is tied up and must in turn borrow from
Shylockthe scorned but vital figure in the economic pyramid.
Jessicas actions are mourned by Shylock as much for the
loss of his ducats (money) as for his daughter.
It is worth noting that The Merchant of Venice is the
only work by Shakespeare that has a profession in its name (only
the titles King and Prince appear in any
of the others). True to its name, the play makes constant reference
to trade, profit and credit, as well as the risk of business failure
and bankruptcy. As a brilliant observer of reality, how could
Shakespeare not have also included a money-lender in his picture
of the merchants life? How he treats the character is problematic,
and we will return to that.
The noble, Christian characters in the piece are
prepared to give up all their worldly goods for the sake of another.
Who chooseth me must give and hazard all he hath,
is the inscription inside the winning casket. This is nothing
short of what Bassanio has allowed Antonio to risk for him and,
which in the end, he is prepared to sacrifice for Antonios
life. On the other hand, critic Goddard asserts that Bassanio,
who is not averse to receiving what he had not earned, seems in
reality the living embodiment of the golden caskets inscription:
he gains what many men desirea wealthy wife.
Economic and power relations between the genders are not ignored
by Shakespeare either. Portia describes herself as the lord
of this fair mansion, master of my servants, and Queen oer
myself. In marriage, she is required to cede to Bassanio
[m]yself, and what is mine, to you and yours, and
for this, she anoints him dear[ly] bought, i.e., bought
at a high priceher freedom and fortune. In one of the plays
many inversions, Portia, as Balthazar, proves that her genders
subservience to patriarchy is an irrational rather than a natural
order of things. In Radfords film, as in the play, Portia
dominates nearly every scene in which she appears.
Shylocks relentless insistence on his right to Antonios
flesh, while grotesque, bears a certain symmetrical relationship
to the married couples claims, in the final scene, to ownership
of each others bodies.
In this vein, the ability of the rich Christians to enslave
other human beings is forcefully raised by Shylock during his
trial: What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong? You
have among you many a purchased slave, Which, like your asses
and your dogs and mules, You use in abject and in slavish parts
because you bought them: shall I say to you, Let them be free,
marry them to your heirs? This also speaks to the hypocrisy
of the supposed Christian ethics.
Radfords film emphasizes sympathy for Shylock and the
suffering caused by his Christian attackers, but this interpretation
is not entirely warranted by Shakespeares text.
It does not detract from the plays moments of immense
humanitarianismas well as its extraordinary perceptiveness
about the nature of capitalist social relationsto say that
Shakespeare was not immune to a period and culture in which prejudice
against Jews and others was pervasive and endemic. Because Shakespeare
drives his creations to their limits and beyond, however, he was
simultaneously able to be critical of anti-Semitism and indeed
provide the most stirring arguments against it.
The Bloom approach is not particularly helpful because it is
thoroughly ahistorical. If one cares to (and a parade of critics
and academics have), one can also prove that Shakespeare was anti-black
(believing that non-white peoples were savages), anti-woman (arguing
that women should be subservient; see The Taming of the Shrew,
for example), anti-popular (the masses are inevitably foul-smelling,
cruel and fickle) and so forth, but at the end of the exercise,
what has one proven except a commonplace? That the playwright
lived 400 years ago, on the cusp of the modern era, and could
not jump entirely out of his skin any more than any other artist
or human being ever has.
(Foreigners and blacks, as in the case of Portias suitors,
also do not fare well in The Merchant of Venice. Portia
dismisses the dark-skinned Prince of Morocco, after he has mistakenly
selected the golden chest, saying: Let all of his complexion
choose me so [in other words, choose the wrong casket].)
A more promising approach might be to appreciate Shakespeares
work for its astonishing insights, many of which transcend the
limits of his time and place, and treat the plays, even in production,
historically and critically. For example, it might
be possible to stage a version of The Merchant of Venice
in which the varying attitudes the playwright reveals, at one
moment, humane, at another, prejudiced and cruel, could be treated
as distinct and even opposed. In other words, one could make it
clear in production that where Shakespeare falls back on the historically
dated, stock character types and references, one is hostile to
his viewpoint.
The through-line of the conventional theater, the
smooth, uncontradictory arc of characterization, simply does not
work in such a play. Thus, in Radfords film, for example,
we are left with a Jessica (Zuleikha Robinson), Shylocks
daughter, who stands around looking sullen and unhappy because
the filmmaker would like her to be miserable over the desertion
of her Jewish father, an artistic decision not justified by the
script.
Shakespeare hints at an economic cause of the animus between
Jews and Christians when Shylock denounces Antonio because He
lends out money gratis, and brings down The rate of usance here
with us in Venice.
Given that Shylocks Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not
a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions...?
speech is one of the most famous pleas for tolerance in literary
history, it might be instructive to take a brief look at the objective,
historical background to the anti-Semitism in The Merchant
of Venice.
Abram Leon, the Belgian Trotskyist murdered in Auschwitz, in
his classic The Jewish Question: A Marxist Interpretation
[online at http://www.marxists.de/religion/leon/], argues that
changes in the nature of medieval economy helped to provoke hostility
toward the Jews. Leon notes that Jews played a critical role as
merchants in the era of pre-commodity production. However, in
time, the Jewish merchant, importing spices into Europe
and exporting slaves, is displaced by respectable Christian traders....
This native commercial class collides violently with the Jews,
occupants of an outmoded economic position, inherited from a previous
period in historical evolution.
With the development of an exchange economy, the Jews in Europe
were systematically eliminated from their previous economic position
and obliged to pursue exclusively the function of money-lender.
This eviction is accompanied by a ferocious struggle of
the native commercial class against the Jews.... It is no longer
the Jew who supplies the lord with Oriental goods but for a certain
time it is still he who lends him money for his expenses.
The word Jew becomes synonymous, Leon argues, with
usurer.
In western Europe, the twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
were the epoch of the development of Jewish money-lending. Whereas
Catholicism expresses the interests of the landed nobility and
of the feudal order, while Calvinism (or Puritanism) represents
those of the bourgeoisie or capitalism, Judaism mirrors the interests
of the precapitalist mercantile class, according to Leon.
With time, he writes, Feudalism progressively gives way
to a regime of exchange. As a consequence, the field of activity
of Jewish usury is constantly contracting. It becomes more
and more unbearable because it is less and less necessary....
The transformation of all classes of society into producers
of exchange values, into owners of money, raises them unanimously
against Jewish usury whose archaic character emphasizes its rapacity.
The definitive expulsion of the Jews in England took place
at the end of the thirteenth century; in France at the end of
the fourteenth century; and in Spain at the end of the fifteenth
century.
Now begins the era of the ghettos and all of the worst
persecutions and humiliations. The picture of these unfortunates
bearing the badge of the wheel and ridiculous costumes, paying
taxes like beasts for passing through cities and across bridges,
disgraced and rejected, has been implanted for a long time in
the memory of the populations of Western and Central Europe,
explains Leon.
From the outset of The Merchant of Venice, Shakespeare
provides powerful justification for Shylocks hatred of Antonio.
The money-lender reminds the merchant that he has called the Jew
misbeliever, cut-throat dog, among other insults.
In fact, Shakespeare further strengthens his argument by giving
the complacent Antonio an aura of obnoxious self-righteousness
and superiority that further humanizes Shylock by contrast.
Clearly, there are a variety of contradictory impulses at work
in Shakespeares The Merchant of Venice. One
could not argue that Radford has navigated successfully all of
the works most contentious issues. Regardless, his sensitively
fashioned version of Shakespeares masterpiece is a noteworthy
cinematic event.
See Also:
The element of social
tragedy in King Lear: King Lear by William Shakespeare,
at the Stratford Festival of Canada, directed by Jonathan Miller
[21 November 2002]
Hamlet
by William Shakespeare, directed by Kenneth Branagh: A note on
the necessity of Shakespeare
[24 February 1997]
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