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The Subjection of Authority and Death Through Humor PDF

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BBrriigghhaamm YYoouunngg UUnniivveerrssiittyy BBYYUU SScchhoollaarrssAArrcchhiivvee Theses and Dissertations 2014-06-12 TThhee SSuubbjjeeccttiioonn ooff AAuutthhoorriittyy aanndd DDeeaatthh TThhrroouugghh HHuummoorr:: CCaarrnniivvaalleessqquuee,, IInnccoonnggrruuiittyy,, aanndd AAbbssuurrddiissmm iinn CCoorrmmaacc MMccCCaarrtthhyy''ss BBlloooodd MMeerriiddiiaann aanndd NNoo CCoouunnttrryy ffoorr OOlldd MMeenn Ruth Ellen Covington Brigham Young University - Provo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd Part of the Classics Commons, and the Comparative Literature Commons BBYYUU SScchhoollaarrssAArrcchhiivvee CCiittaattiioonn Covington, Ruth Ellen, "The Subjection of Authority and Death Through Humor: Carnivalesque, Incongruity, and Absurdism in Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men" (2014). Theses and Dissertations. 4106. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/4106 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. The Subjection of Authority and Death Through Humor: Carnivalesque, Incongruity, and Absurdism in Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men Ruth Ellen Covington A thesis submitted to the faculty of Brigham Young University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Carl Sederholm, Chair Kerry Soper Phillip Snyder Department of Humanities, Classics, and Comparative Literature Brigham Young University June 2014 Copyright © 2014 Ruth Ellen Covington All Rights Reserved ABSTRACT The Subjection of Authority and Death Through Humor: Carnivalesque, Incongruity, and Absurdism in Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men Ruth Ellen Covington Department of Humanities, Classics, and Comparative Literature, BYU Master of Arts Cormac McCarthy’s representation of the comic theories of the carnivalesque, incongruity, and absurdism by the antagonists of Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men demonstrates the unique and ostensible power of humor over (or at least, its awareness of and reconciliation to the absurdity of) death; it also emphasizes the supreme power and influence of humor as a means for destroying other institutions and philosophies which claim knowledge or authority but fail to sustain individuals in times of crisis. This makes humor a formidable factor in determining and justifying the outcome of human interactions and in defining the strengths and limitations of McCarthy’s antagonists. Keywords: Cormac McCarthy, humor, Blood Meridian, No Country for Old Men, Judge Holden, Anton Chigurh, carnivalesque, incongruity, absurdism ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I express my deepest gratitude for the support and assistance of Professor Phillip Snyder, who was the first person to read and respond to my ideas on Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men and who has always guided me in my pursuit of McCarthy scholarship. My thanks to Professor Carl Sederholm and Professor Kerry Soper, who have given me much appreciated feedback, encouragement, and advice on becoming a better writer, student, and scholar. Finally, I am grateful for the love and support of my husband, Matthew, who loves me so much he agreed to name one of our children Cormac. TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................... 1 CHAPTER 1: The Carnivalesque in Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men ..................... 6 CHAPTER 2: Incongruity in Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men ............................... 21 CHAPTER 3: Absurdism in Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men ................................ 36 CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................................. 57 WORKS CITED ........................................................................................................................... 59 iv INTRODUCTION Cormac McCarthy is not usually thought of as a humorous writer, and with good reason. His preoccupation with the graver aspects of life and the enigmatic depths of the human psyche naturally and properly leads readers to associate his writing with tragedy rather than comedy. However, McCarthy’s subtle, ironic, and often dark humor is a recurring vital element which greatly adds to the significance and appreciation of each of his novels. While a handful of scholarly articles, notably Wade Hall’s “The Human Comedy of Cormac McCarthy” and Edwin T. Arnold’s “Cormac McCarthy’s Frontier Humor,” have examined McCarthy’s use of humor, they have done so in a general sense, mostly focusing on the regional, odd, and colorful characters found in McCarthy’s Southern novels and the Border Trilogy. My research will explore in depth the use of three key theories of humor—the carnivalesque, incongruity, and absurdism—in Blood Meridian and No Country for Old Men. In directly confronting the intersection between violence and humor in McCarthy’s writing, I also will explain how and why humor is uniquely able to serve the purposes of two of the most sinister, evil, violent characters in the McCarthy canon. In many humorous literary interactions, there is a distinction between the humor used by protagonists and antagonists. Typically, with protagonists, humor sheds light on (or lightens) the situation, enabling us to endure whatever the scene may be and sympathize with the characters as they seem more self-aware and down to earth. With antagonists, humor becomes a sharp weapon used to harm, insult and expose the human folly of others, supposedly resulting in a further distancing of the villains from the sympathies of the reader. However, McCarthy’s humor is more difficult to pinpoint in such general terms. His protagonists are flawed and frequently weak; his antagonists are more complex, admirable, and sympathetic than readers might expect. 1 One might think that McCarthy’s protagonists and antagonists are on slightly more equal terms when it comes to a battle of wits than a battle of life and death—particularly when the antagonists are as equipped and merciless as Anton Chigurh or Judge Holden, and the protagonists as vulnerable and inexperienced in ruthless warfare as Llewelyn Moss or the Kid. Yet of McCarthy’s variety of characters, it is his most violent, physically intimidating, and larger than life antagonists—the Judge and Chigurh—who demonstrate the fullest capacity of humor to crush their opponents physically and psychologically while achieving power, authority, and presence over the world as they see it. Nowhere is the use of humor by a villain more intricately, profoundly, and thoroughly illustrated than in Judge Holden, ostensibly McCarthy’s most formidable antagonist, in the staggeringly violent, epic masterpiece that is Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West. The Judge is perhaps the most humorous villain set within the most humorless of McCarthy’s novels. He dominates the text of Blood Meridian in lengthy descriptions of his striking and singular appearance and in his prolonged, esoteric discourses. He is the last character to speak and exist, and the impact of his character continues to haunt and perplex long after the book has ended. Many scholarly articles have analyzed the Judge in various archetypal roles, yet there remains to be seen any significant discussion on the humor which defines and sets apart the Judge as such a monumental, overwhelming presence in McCarthy’s writing. The pattern established in Blood Meridian of an overwhelmingly outmatched protagonist struggling against a powerful antagonist who appropriates humor in confronting and triumphing over authority and causes of fear is revisited in No Country for Old Men. The antagonist of this novel is Anton Chigurh, a fearsome and enigmatic villain and the only character who comes close to resembling the cruelty, eccentricity, and indestructibility of the Judge. While much has 2 been written on Chigurh’s peculiar philosophical code and assumption of societal roles, a deeper study of his use of humor is essential in attaining a comprehensive and intimate view of the exceptional and objectionable actions, statements, and attributes that make up his personality and character. In narrowing the discussion of McCarthy’s employment of humor through the Judge and Chigurh, this analysis will focus on three comic theories which are featured prominently in the philosophies and behavior of both characters and are useful starting points for examining McCarthy’s macabre sense of humor on a deeper level. The first of these is Mikhail Bakhtin’s concept of the carnivalesque, a predominantly medieval type of comedy which acquires power in its subversion of social norms, values, and systems and in its ability to free the masses from dogmatism and a stagnant social order. The result may be either purifying or appalling; as Bakhtin states, “The carnivalesque celebrates the act of degradation, that is, the lowering of all that is high, spiritual, ideal, abstract; it is a transfer to the material level, to the sphere of earth and body in their indissoluble unity” (18–20). The second comic theory is incongruity, the groundwork of which is found in Immanuel Kant’s explanation that “laughter is an affection arising from the sudden transformation of a strained expectation into nothing” (qtd. in Raskin 31). As linguist Victor Raskin explains, the essential humor of incongruity is found in the “inappropriateness, paradox, dissimilarity,” and “the element of surprise” resulting from the negation or sudden altering of one’s expectations; it also includes irony—wherein the opposite of what is expected occurs—and the juxtaposition of opposite scripts to create a surprising, contradictory connection (31; 33). The third comic theory is absurdism, which “strives to express its sense of the senselessness of the human condition and the inadequacy of the rational approach by the open abandonment of rational devices and discursive thought” (Esslin 24). Essential 3 hallmarks of absurdism which Martin Esslin identifies and explores in his examination of various absurdist playwrights and theorists include “the abandonment of the concepts of character and motivation; the concentration on states of mind and basic human situations, rather than on the development of a narrative plot from exposition to solution; the devaluation of language as a means of communication and understanding; the rejection of didactic purpose; and the confrontation of the spectator with the harsh facts of a cruel world and his own isolation” (233). As the Judge and Chigurh’s confrontational encounters and verbal disputes decrease their grounding in humor (as demonstrated through these three comic theories), the characters’ power and influence over their own fate and over the fate of individuals, ideologies, and institutions meant to provide order, reason, and meaning is lessened or weakened. When comparing the two characters, Chigurh’s failure to fully embrace the chaotic, incongruous, and absurd nature of humor demonstrated by the Judge leads us to a deeper realization of the comparative strengths and limitations of Chigurh and his adversaries—both mortal (Bell, Moss, Wells) and immortal (death, fate, chance)—when considering the ability to survive, thrive, and exercise control in the world. Humor is a formidable factor in determining and justifying the outcome of human interactions and in defining the essential strengths and limitations of McCarthy’s protagonists and antagonists. Through the outlandishly invincible figure of the Judge and the somewhat more realistic figure of Chigurh, McCarthy demonstrates the ability of humor to exert power and influence over the world by overthrowing institutions or philosophies of authority and ultimately by confronting the stark reality of death itself. In examining these novels together, I argue that McCarthy’s representation of the carnivalesque, incongruity, and absurdism by the characters of Judge Holden and Anton Chigurh has two significant outcomes: first, it demonstrates the unique 4 and ostensible power of humor over (or at least, its awareness and reconciliation to the absurdity of) death. Secondly, it emphasizes the supremacy and influence of humor as a means for destroying other institutions and philosophies which claim knowledge or authority but fail to sustain individuals in times of crisis. 5

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reconciliation to the absurdity of) death; it also emphasizes the supreme power and influence of dictator over the terms of his own fate (198). by underdog, sardonic, trickster characters such as Wells and Moss, demonstrating
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