The Trotsky: a claim to community.
Khan, Amir
A distinction between an earlier and later Charles Taylor might be
drawn between Charles Taylor the political activist versus Charles
Taylor the intellectual. (1) Certainly the nature of the writing going
on in a political tract like The Pattern of Politics (1970) (2) is at
removes from intellectual forays into the malaise of modernity or the
crisis of the self and identify. I won't attempt to square what an
earlier Taylor says with a later Taylor. But Taylor's politics were
local enough in the 1960s to make a book he wrote during that time
pertinent 1o what I want to say about The Trotsky (2009), a film shot
entirely in Montreal and engaged in its own way with "radical"
Canadian politics. I am not applying a Taylorian reading to the film
than suggesting that the film itself is a reading of this particular
political text of Taylor's--that the movie ingests and thereby
depicts some of us most pertinent lessons. Even if a later Taylor does
not square with an earlier Taylor, what The Trotsky attempts is to make
something like the politics of polarization matter once again, which is
to say it attempts to reclaim some of the lessons put forward in The
Pattern of Politics. One could also say this film attempts to reclaim
the dialectic, in particular the notion that holds conflict (between
clearly opposing viewpoints) as the lynchpin of social change. How the
film reinterprets the dialectic will be considered here.
The premise of the film that a young Montreal teenager, Leon
Bronstein (Jay Baruchel), believes himself to be the living embodiment
of Leon Trotsky reincarnated suggests it is not beyond the pale to think
about things like having another's soul occupy one's body,
and, from there, to consider whether the ontology of film facilitates a
discussion of reincarnation (another's soul trapped in a body
eerily present to us) or rather, something like the reverse (a different
body occupying another's soul). I raise these examples in
consideration of the ontological differences between what Cavell calls,
simply, the "actor" (stage actor) and the
"performer" (screen actor). What we might nowadays call 1960s
(Canadian) "counterculture," auteuring a film explicitly aimed
at the youth of Canada. Whether or not Pierre Trudeau is a galvanizing
figure for today's youth or not, those who are curious to know him
are likely to know him through Colm Fiore. I don't mean that
Fiore's persona trumps Trudeau's. Indeed, Fiore interprets
Trudeau the way a stage actor interprets a character. But Fiore, in
interpreting Trudeau, is interpreting a star, or, say, Trudeau's
star-like quality and not a character, To play the role of Trudeau, he
must get his persona to match Trudeau's. Others may come along, not
with "different" interpretations, but something like
"better" impersonations. (4) Yet for a generation at least (or
for a generation of Canadian youth interested in 1960s Canadian
counterculture now), simply by having appeared to us as Trudeau on
screen, Fiore's persona will invoke or be caught up with Trudeau
(though not vice versa). Fiore is, or has achieved, a reincarnation of
Trudeau.
The [stage] actor's role is his subject (or study, and there is no end
to it. But the screen performer is essentially not an actor at all: he
is the subject of study, and a study not his own. (That is what the
content of a photograph is--its subject.) On a screen the study is
projected; on a stage the actor
is the projector. An exemplary stage performance is one which, for a
time, most fully creates a character. After Paul Scofield's
performance in King Lear, we know who King Lear is, we have seen him
in the flesh. An exemplary screen performance is one in which, at a
time, a star is born. After The Maltese Falcon, we know a new star,
only distantly a person. "Bogart" means "the figure created in a given
set of films." His presence in those films is who he is, not merely in
the sense in which a photograph of an event is that event; but in the
sense that if those films did not exist, Bogart would not exist, the
mane "Bogart" would not mean what it does. (3)
If it's true that an actor on screen, when he plays a
character, imbues that character with something of his presence--so that
there is no Rambo, say, without Sylvester Stallone, and, subsequently,
no role for Sylvester Stallone to play without invoking a bit of Rambo
in it--then the creation of a film star means the creation of a persona,
which functions something like a sign, with its own cluster of clues and
associations. The individuality of the screen actor is either lost or
heightened, depending on how you view things. Lost in that there is no
appearance or presence the actor can (now or ever) have without calling
to mind the medium he works in. Heightened in that something of what he
is (fundamentally) more open to the senses; the screen actor is more
transparent to us, which also can be away of cloaking things. But
sometimes, once we appear on screen, just as once we utter language, we
are committed persons.
To rehash ground already travailed by Cavell, let me say that the
theatre actor, say, Ian McKellen, does not transfigure who we understand
Richard Ill to be. McKellen interprets the character. Another could
interpret differently, but we imagine the character, Richard Ill, to be
a stable entity. But. the screen actor does not interpret his role. He
inhabits it so there is no role without the actor. Conventionally
speaking, one does not "interpret" Rambo.
It is not unwise to suppose that a film director is aware of his
inheritance in the actors and actresses he has sovereignty over,
particularly Jacob Tierney, a man well versed in the histrionics of
In casting Fiore as a rather ineffective (mostly comedic) villain
in The Trotsky, I believe Jacob Tierney is offering a critique of
Trudeau in this film, so a critique of the liberal5 brand of consensus
politics that undercuts the rough and tumble world of adversarial
intellectual pursuit--known (and derided) most famously as that darling
artifice beloved (not solely) by Marxists: the dialectic. I am not
exactly saying that this movie redeems the intellectual worth of this
historical trope (which has largely gone out of favour). Perhaps it begs
the (philosophical) question of where exactly its worth (if any) lies:
in the affirmative declaration of philosophical strength or the passive
acceptance of forces (precisely) out of our control. I will come back to
this.
We can begin, in good form, by looking more closely at the
character played by Colm Fiore, who I believe acts as an inheritance for
jacob Tierney, bringing with him a cultural currency that could be put
to good use considering the type of film Tierney is making. The question
is, does Tierney, in fact, put this inheritance to good (or any) use? Is
he aware he has cast a version of Trudeau in his film?
Appealing to "vulgar" intentionality stifles aesthetic
criticism so even if you answer no, I am going to argue that Tierney, at
the very least, forces us to consider what type of leader Trudeau is and
not by presenting Colm Fiore in this film as a version of what Charles
Taylor calls Trudeau in his book (i.e., the NYL, or "New Young
Leader"), but by presenting another version of the NYL in Leon
Bronstein--say a polar opposite version to Trudeau, one who is more
genuinely what we expect an NYL to be, beyond the (mere) image. First,
here is Taylor's critique of Trudeaumania:
The vast literature of Trudeaumania is mainly concerned with the
surface changes which are easily accomplished and easily identified.
It focuses almost narcissistically on the dramatic shifts in image
which accompany the rise of a new star ...
There is another type of politician who is thought to be obsolete.
This is the wheeler-dealer the consensus-maker who operates, by means
of ambiguous statements and compromises to avoid offending the largest
number of people possible. Politicians like [the consensus-maker] are
thought to specialize in the skilled parliamentary answer, which,
while seeming to address itself to the question, really says nothing
...The young believe this way of operating is a formula
for lack of action. Against this the
NYL--the New Young Leader--is said to be attuned and responsive to the
issues which preoccupy young urban dwellers. He is said to have the
courage to dispense with the doubletalk and circumlocution of the Old
Guard ...
All this may have little relation to reality, but it is the myth
rather than the reality of the NYL that we are examining here; and
this myth firmly rests on the consensus view of politics. Those who
promote the NYL make up the highly successful new elite ... What they
look for in the NYL is the crystallization and expression of a
consensus
What is wrong with the old wheeler-dealer is not that he creates a
consensus with his careful schemes and hedgings, but rather that he is
an ineffective agent of it. He is "hung up" on the consensus-making
problems of yesteryear, so that he can neither see clearly the
problems of today nor grasp the imaginative solutions which are
needed. He suffers from taboos and inhibitions which may have been
politic in the past but which have become obstacles today. He is,
therefore, carefully soothing the susceptibilities of an aging and
declining constituency instead of appealing to a new and growing
one.
At the same time, if the NYL is courageous in eschewing the language
of equivocation, he speaks out not to break the consensus but to
present more effectively the goals that are hidden in the gobbledygook
of the traditional politician or bureaucrat. In short, the NYL is
supposed to be discovering and articulating the demands of the
exciting changes in our society." But does he?
From the standpoint of a politics of polarization, this kind of
reasoning is utter nonsense. What is totally missing in the argument
is any inkling that there are important and fundamental structural
conflicts in our society which make any claim to consensus
specious. (6)
Now obviously Colm Fiore's character (Henry Berkhoff) in The
Trotsky is not a version of the NYL, not meant to be nor to recall the
image of Pierre Trudeau (Colm Fiore's persona aside). What Henry
Berkhoff is meant to convey is certainly something of the
"old-style political figure," (7) if not exactly a
"wheeler-dealer," then certainly someone who is out of touch
with the youth, employing old style remedies to curb (what he perceives
to be) age-old problems. He unleashes his "demonic concubine"
Ms. Davis on students on day one of classes; her old school
British-marm-accent is over the top and complements the rather arbitrary
and quaint charges she levels at students. Muddy shoes and no-shirt-tuck
seem to be offenses taken from a bygone era. Harping on piercings is a
bit more fitting, if somewhat cliched. But if cliches involve a lack of
imagination, then cliched speech and acts are in order here because what
Tierney is trying to get across is precisely the blandness of
bureaucracy, the lack of confrontation. Henry Berkhoff doesn't have
a vision of what he wants his school to be. Instead, he operates (as he
sees it) in a vacuum between boredom and apathy. The reason he denies
that the problem with youth today could be one of boredom (favouring
instead the interpretation of apathy) is because if this were so, the
onus would be on him to conjure up or conceive of a vision that would
pull students out of boredom. Whereas the "fight" against
apathy is not a fight at all, not confrontational. Nothing is at stake.
Berkhoff is able to implement a supposed program of discipline and
punishment not by virtue of his (or Ms. Davis's) iron will but
because, for students, no alternative is yet available. Leon refers to
them both as "fascists," which may simply allude to the fact
that all Berkhoff does is offer up the same prescriptive dogma from a
time gone by. He is more a disciplinary relic than an adversarial man.
He does not inspire conflict, the sort required for real change to
happen. Only Leon Bronstein does this. Listen to Berkhoff's
hackneyed phrasings as he admonishes Leon for his display of solidarity
with Skip:
This has been a troubled arts school for many years now. Pot, sex,
graffiti, piercings. You see what I'm getting at? I am here to
discipline the students, usher in a new era of responsibility and
obligation to this place. Now you can certainly make that harder for
me. Heck, you already have. But you won't stop me. So the choice is
yours. You can spend your final year of high school in a war you can't
win against a man who's lived far longer and knows far more than you.
Or you can just float by and wreak havoc next year on someone's poor
unsuspecting university. What's it going to be?
To which Leon replies: "I think the choice is obvious."
If this sounds confrontational, it is because Leon has made
confrontation his prerogative. Berkhoff is happy to let things
"float by." According to Taylor, it is not by virtue of
(differing) philosophies that we distinguish the old-style wheeler
dealer from the NYL, but by virtue of effectiveness. That is, the NYL is
simply the better consensus-maker, more in tune with the
"correct" forces in society to be placated. Placation,
however, is still his prerogative. So Colm Fiore in this movie is not
Pierre Trudeau personified (i.e. "persona"-fied), but
something like Pierre Trudeau exposed. That is, both Trudeau and
Berkhoff came into power on the promise of radical change; both offer up
instead "the same old shit." (8)
So in what way is Leon Bronstein a more genuine NYL? In one sense
he isn't an NYL at all. Taylor uses the term pejoratively so part
of what makes an NYL is precisely his disingenuousness. A
"genuine" NYL would be a contradiction because all an NYL is
capable of is presenting political measures or manoeuvres designed to
maintain the status quo in the guise of supposedly radical change. No
one in this film offers radical change except Leon, and he certainly
does not couch his feelings. (Berkhoff, even if considered
"radical," wants to maintain the status quo; he does not couch
this.) As far as the political landscape depicted in the film goes, the
liberal consensus-maker (Taylor's NYL) is squeezed out. If the film
is indeed a critique of so-called "consensus politics," it is
so by virtue of omission because no character in the film embodies the
ethos of the liberal politician. The value of such omission is that is
allows polarization to happen, to have the stakes presented (clearly) as
well as the possibility of choice.
How to make the case that the film offers a critique of a character
it does not even depict? One way might be to say that the consensus
model of politics, however effective (or ineffective), is certainly not
the stuff of drama--that conflict (necessarily) is. Posing the question
this way is an indirect way of critiquing such a model, particularly if
one expects the stuff of politics to be dramatic, i.e., to involve real
stakes. So why should conflict work so well on film but not in life (or,
at least, in politics)? (9) There are obvious psychological reasons,
like the fact that when watching him, we are absent from the conflict
whereas in life, the possibility of being harmed--physically,
psychically--is prevalent. But effective consensus politics is more than
a means, merely, of papering over the treacheries of real life. The need
to believe is pertinent; yet what chance does belief stand in the
consensus model of politics? To say it is ultimately quashed means that
belief must be exploited by the liberal politician. This is what Taylor
reminds us the "cult of the NYL" taps into--the people's
"yearning to be in contact with 1something meaningful," (10)
and their desire to participate in the s structures surrounding this
so-called "significant reality," principally through the act
of voting.11 This desire in itself is not problematic. It is the liberal
manipulation of belief through consensus that troubles Taylor.
Here are two ways Leon Bronstein breaks with Taylor's model of
the NYL. First, Leon himself does not seek out, or seek to present
himself as being in connection with, a significant reality. He already
knows he is the reincarnation of Leon Trotsky. The movie does not depict
him coming to this claim (or even doubting/disinheriting this
knowledge), but merely the Consequences of his knowing. This is a
significant departure from the traditional model of the NYL who himself
does not believe in anything. He may mediate a connection to some higher
reality, but whatever that reality is always negotiable, hence founded
on a stance of unbelief; whereas Leon Bronstein's point of
departure is precisely his belief.
Nor is it true that Leon wins, or has any particular desire to win,
others to his cause. In fact, the final conversion of Leon's
schoolmates is not initiated by him, but by his chief-lieutenant, Tony.
Attempting to convince a skeptical gathering of students that it is in
their best interest to express solidarity with Leon, Tony does not
berate them with dogma; he merely forces them to face the abyss and then
to choose. If Leon and Tony eventually inspire others to believe in the
meaningfulness of another reality, it is not because they have given
them the tenets of Marxism to behold, but because the students become
convinced of the value (either banally or profoundly) of a
voice--symbolized in this film with the achievement of a union, i.e., a
political mechanism that allows students to have a say in the day-to-day
running of affairs that should concern them. So only someone clear in
his/her own convictions (Tony too is admirably clear in his desire
simply to prove Berkhoff wrong) can pave the way for conviction in
others--not conviction to take up another1s cause, but to participate
and to speak out for oneself.
Second, it is of utmost significance that the film does not portray
the act of voting and is selective in its commentary on what sorts of
rebellion are in order. The film depicts the signing of a petition,
which proves ineffective; also, a school walk-out, equivalent perhaps to
a strike, which also peters out. Is Tierney commenting on the
effectiveness of petitions and strikes by showing us their futility in
this film? Does this mean we should forgo petitions and strikes to
achieve the change we want? This film is saying that rebellion, or acts
of rebellion, can also be standardized, can become cliched, hence
rendered ineffective. Simply to take up a ready-made remedy is not an
effective means for change. What is required is the conviction behind
the remedy so that standing up in acts of defiance is not a political
act with any meaning Unless accompanied by convictions. And the best way
to prove one's convictions, to avoid the blase rebellion that comes
with staged political acts would be to take up more arresting measures,
as though there is no reason to be taken seriously otherwise, which
means we have no voice otherwise. This is dangerous territory,
particularly when one begins taking hostages (i.e., breaking the law) in
the name of one's convictions. The dramatic hostage-taking of
Berkhoff, in spur-of-the-moment fashion, accompanied by frenzied text
messaging to get students to rally in so1idarity with Bronstein's
crazy act of defiance not only says something about the value of
improvisation but also, about the types of rebellion that are, perhaps
not in order, but (now?) necessary. (12)
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
I turn now to a consideration of the dialectic, and how this film
inherits and transfigures what is meant by the term. Leon provides a
brief aside (to Alexandra) on how he views the "Great
Dialectic," or "Grand Narrative," (13) before going on to
paraphrase Eagleton's distinction between moral and moralistic thin
king.1 The dialectic must "breathe" in the new century, he
says, "by allowing for things which Karl Marx, frankly, had no
opinion on." This is Less a disinheritance of Marxism than a
reminder that Marx cannot save us, that the rational application or
understanding of his theories is not now what is lacking. Rather than
provide heavy handed pedagogic interpretation of Leon's
understanding of the dialectic, the film, marvellously, depicts it-that
is, allows us to see it, in the form cue cards pinned up on Leon's
wall.
The content of the cards is less the remarkable feature than the
fact that Leon Bronstein has the gumption, or feels required to, detail
and display his convictions if not for all to see, then, at the very
least, for himself. How are we to interpret this display? One way would
be to say that because everything is clear in the mind of Leon
Bronstein, it is merely a matter of convenience or formality for him to
make his inner thoughts and aspirations outer, that without the cue
cards Leon would be no less confident of the trajectory of his life. But
another interpretation would be that the cards act as cover for the
possibility that he is still capable of losing his way or his thread, so
despite giving himself over to the "Grand Narrative," some
type of existential dread compels him to compose reminders and to detail
checkpoints. Do these cards act as a symbol of his faith or his lack of
faith? Are we to believe, as Leon seems to, that his fate is
hermetically sealed?--or is there room, indeed, for improvisation (even
too much improvisation)? There is certainty ample evidence that Leon
feels the dialectic of his life could go awry, most notably the two
dream sequences-the first in which he is cut loose by his mother and
father; the second, by his ostensible surrogates, Frank McGovern (his
mentor/attorney) and Alexandra, his desired object of affection. That
Leon appears unchanged, as a baby, in both, suggests that he feels no
less vulnerable with his new found family than his old one. The fear is
of betrayal certainly; but more specifically what Leon fears is that he
has not the will nor ability nor voice to transform his new found
family-that they will, instead, regress to (re)occupy tired moralistic
roles and positions of a time gone by. In such a case, having failed in
his mission to convert them, Leon will most definitely feel cut loose,
as though he is the weak link in the chain of events that is supposed to
happen (which then, of course, doesn't-all thanks to him). These
dream sequences remind us that Leon is a free individual.
Yet this stance of simultaneous belief and non-belief is one source
of critical distaste with the dialectic because being certain of the
ends but wary of the means ought to put the ends in question to begin
with. The dogmatic refusal to do so is what critics of the dialectic
find frustrating. (15) This is what Alexandra feels when she levels her
brutal charge against Leon, that he feels things because he thinks
he's supposed to. But it is also true that Leon manages to seduce
her by feeling precisely the way he does and certainly not by
manipulating Alexandra, but by being about as open and honest about his
intentions as anyone possibly could be. Alexandra is not worried that
she is being taken for a ride, but that Leon is taking himself for a
ride, playing out a fantasy in which she happens to be entwined. But to
claim one's desire is necessarily to act out a sort of fantasy, and
a union of souls is a union of fantasies, hence a discovery of
fantasies-an other's and one's own. How or what mediates these
fantasies is always difficult to know beforehand. It would be far more
sinister if Leon held his beliefs close to his chest, or was simply
unaware of them, instead playing out the game of seduction in more
conventional fashion without first being honest with himself. But this
arguably describes the dialectic of most romantic pursuits. What is
exceptional about Leon is that he has already discovered his fantasy; he
is begging Alexandra to consider what hers is and whether it is
compatible with his. What he offers her is the power to choose (too
directly some might say), and in the end, in this case anyhow, it
works-not only for Leon and Alexandra, but for us.
So what (exactly) is our source of attraction to the Trotsky? Is it
because he has all the answers? Hardly. Even Leon has the temerity to
doubt his own conclusions. The most immediate reason to me is because he
dares to infuse the otherwise rational functioning of the dialectic with
romance, which may make him less authoritative in some people's
eyes, but more human in our eyes. That is, he demands that the dialectic
act first and foremost in accordance with, or in response to, his
feeling and intuition. This infusion of romance is key to this
film's interpretation of the dialectic, particularly in light of
the following commentary on Hegel by Professor Dart:
Hegel highlighted that the Enlightenment tradition was superior to the
Classical tradition, but the Enlightenment had a tendency to fragment
in three directions. There was the rationalist wing of the
Enlightenment that turned to science, reason and the empirical way as
the yellow brick road into the future. There were the romantics that
dared to differ with the rationalists, and the romantics held high the
way of poetry, the arts and intuition. Then, there were the humanists.
It was the humanists that attempted to see the best in the romantics
and rationalists yet question their limited approaches to knowing and
being. It was the humanists within the Enlightenment that attempted to
synthesize the best of the rationalist and romantic traditions and
romantic traditions and raise both to a higher level through such a
synthesis (16)
This bit of prose captures nicely the interpretive tripartite I
have been setting up, if we take Leon as stand-in for the
"romantic"; Berkhoff, the old-style politician, as stand-in
for the "rationalist" in pursuit of pragmatic, though
unimaginative, solutions; and the NYL as stand-in for what Dart/Hegel
here calls the "humanist." And because we noted earlier that
the film manages to squeeze out the liberal consensus-maker, it seems
that the film has abandoned some measure of its possible humanity, or
what Dart/Hegel take the humanist function to be--precisely the negation
or subduing of conflict in the name of facilitating the unfolding of the
dialectic, i.e., by letting forces clash (thesis vs. antithesis) and
finding a third way (synthesis).(17) Yet the obvious contradiction
here--between allowing a clash to happen (i.e., conflict) versus
negating conflict altogether--means the third way liberal humanist must
choose the manner in which the unfolding must take place, must choose
more conflict or less. But for a liberal consensus-maker armed only with
a rational understanding of how the dialectic functions, it becomes easy
to see, right off the bat, where the asymmetry lies. How to articulate,
or make the case for (say, in non-rationalist manner) the romantic
aspect of the dialectic? Romantic conviction can only be performed, the
way Leon performs his conviction. Just because of this, conviction is
beyond the pale to the rational consensus maker. Any attempt at
consensus-making (however humanistic in spirit) that acts as a denial
not of romance per se, but of conflict, is a denial of the very
dialectic championed by the liberal humanist. This sort of contradiction
is what makes consensus politics so specious.
As mentioned earlier, Leon Bronstein is something like what an NYL
is supposed to be, this because he is armed only with his convictions,
has not surrendered to the dialectic but claims it as his own, as
something that provides him with his particular voice. He isn't
taking charge of history in the sense that he is interpreting it. He is
allowing another more significant reality to work its way through him
and so is participating in that reality, not by virtue of rational
weighing of costs and benefits, but through sheer belief, the stuff that
stirs passions. The NYL is obviously supposed to do this, but under the
auspices of technocratic wisdom. Leon Bronstein has abandoned the
technocratic, rationalistic portion of the dialectic and made the
romantic side his raison d'etre.
In concluding, I'll begin with some words from Jacob
Klapwijk's careful survey of the dialectic in the twentieth
century, Dialectic of Enlightenment, first published in Dutch in 1976
but only recently appearing in English (2010). (18) Klapwijk
unapologetically defines the "dialectic as an expression of
belief" (19) and notes how Horkheimer and Adorno "claim that
'freedom in society is inseparable from enlightenment
thinking" (20) without recourse to "rational
justification" (21)--that is, as an axiomatic starting Pont.
Kapwijk deals intimately with the internal contradictions of the
rationalist approach--whereby a rational understanding of the historical
process of unfolding is supposed to liberate us, but instead, traps us,
because a world left to its own rational process of unfolding leaves
little room for its subjective interpretation. He elaborates further:
We have seen that the word 'dialectics' has many [often contradictory]
meanings. There is no reason to reject the notion of dialectic in
itself. But we are forced to conclude that within the Hegelian and
Marxist traditions the word has grown into a hidden faith regarding
the inevitable course of history. History is characterized as
developing via oppositions ... necessarily leading to an ominous
reversal of [the promise of] reason.
Some readers may perhaps feel that this is the point at which to break
off the discussion with these "dogmatic Marxists." But, for one thing,
there is the question of whether a philosophical discussion ought to
ever reach that point. And, apart from that, we should ask whether the
desire to cut the discussion off does not equally betray a dogmatic
prejudice, a belief in the so-called self-sufficiency of reason and in
the closed logical nature of scientific debate ...
Thus theoretical reason pretends to be a force all its own, and faith
in the dialectic becomes a self-evident dogma, although it is
ignored. And in fact, strange though it may sound, this hidden dogma
begins to show mythical traits ... For if myth, in the original sense
of the word, is a belief in the mysterious forces of nature that are
imbued with an immanent spirit, where does that leave the modern
belief in the hidden advance towards an automated world driven along
by "the immanent logic of history"? (22)
It is more than coincidence that Taylor labels the cult of
Trudeaumania "mythic." (23) Considered against the above, the
belief in liberal consensus-politics betrays a mythic devotion to
technocratic wisdom--taken in positive light, perhaps, by those outside
of Marxist circles, and in a negative light by those within them. Both
deny the role of faith in their respective accounts of the dialectic
however. The only "third way" that remains is a return to
belief. Indeed, Klapwijk says the Frankfurt school philosophers are not
to be reproached for beginning with Han expression of belief" but
for failing to adequately acknowledge this pre-theoretical starting
point. (24) It is not "belief" that now threatens a turn to
myth and dogma, but "hidden" belief--not in the dialectic per
se, but in its apriori rational unfolding. "Every human
being," Klapwijk says, "is obliged to face a choice--one that
impinges prior to any philosophical reflection--namely the unavoidable
need to choose between what I would like to call a mythical faith and a
personal faith.'(25) The mythical faith is the blind adherence to
the rational unfolding of history, whether Marxist or
liberal-technocratic. A personal faith requires a belief that the
betterment of human beings is possible through the dialectic, even if
the means of achieving this are beyond rational calculation or
articulation. Klapwijk notes also that "there is reason to be
fearful," but "also reason to be confident." (26)
What The Trotsky shows is that Canada is not a nation (like
America) to be discovered, but a nation to be claimed--not by looking to
a shared past to find clues to guarantee our survival, but by pursuing
common goals and interests in the present, hence to share in an imagined
future together. This is also the philosophical undercurrent of
Taylor's The Pattern of Politics, which expresses this internal
dialectical tension of Canada:
The mere belated acceptance of difference is not enough to provide the
real basis of unity in this country. It will remove some of the
sources of friction, but it will not create a strong sense of common
fate and common belonging--in other words, an identity that will
also unite Canadians. Divided as we are by language, culture,
tradition, provenance, and history, we can only be brought together by
common purposes; our unity must be a projective one, based on a
significant common future rather than a shared past ...
The seeming paradox of our situation is that really meaningful unity
can only be attained by another kind of division. But this is no real
paradox. People of different regions, backgrounds, languages, and
cultures can only come together around some common project; and if
this is meaningful, and not some magic consensus-dream in which
everyone can project what he wants, then it is bound to inconvenience
somebody and thus raise opposition. The great transcontinental
railroads were, in their day, great bones of contention. (27)
If it is our lot as Canadians to express ourselves in common
purpose, what we require is a common voice and the political apparatus
to achieve this. Furthermore, we require the faith and courage necessary
to withstand not only the myriad number of clashes and confrontations,
but the subsequent burden of choice, which means we will, sometimes,
choose incorrectly. But we cannot waver n our belief--a belief say, n
the legitimacy of competing claims to truth, in the politics of
polarization. Claiming the institutions which promote such polarization
as our own, and accepting the possible fallibility of choice, is one
sort of claim to community, the sort of claim invoked in The Trotsky.
(28)
Some will say that this film is too light to command the sort of
seriousness I am demanding of it here. But it is precisely the lightness
of the film that makes its message effective. That is, there is no
redeeming the more humane qualities of the dialectic through
seriousness, lest the author or auteur in question be labelled an
ideological firebrand by (liberal) intellectuals. One way to cut through
the sort of cynical critical hit-jobs in making a case (once again) for
the value of the dialectic, to make a claim for seriousness, is
precisely by denying a claim to seriousness, by appealing, say, to the
whims and imagination of youth. Should we be taking a film like The
Trotsky seriously? The film has its convictions to be sure; part of what
makes the film appealing is its ability to state them. How else
(nowadays) to issue the sort of clarion call left-leaning critics have
been issuing as early as the 1940s (Horkheimer and Adorno) or, in
Canada, the 1970s (Charles Taylor)? Comedy might be one way. Seriousness
is no longer given; it too has to be claimed. Part of what this film
demands is participation--a claim to community. A film like The Trotsky
is only as serious as we are willing to make it. The Trotsky is as
likely to fall by the wayside as it is to spark a revolution, If it has
(up to this point) largely fallen by the wayside, can a critical effort
such as this one add anything to the film's promise?
Notes
(1) This is the tack taken by Ronald Beiner in his critique of
Taylor. Though he does not explicitly use the terms "earlier"
or "later," he does make a useful distinction: Taylor himself
counts as a social critic only when he writes a book like The Pattern of
Politics, not one like the Sources of the Self." While Beiner goes
on to take Sources of the Self to task for posing as philosophical
thought without engaging in the "wide justification" necessary
for effective social criticism, he does not discuss whether The Pattern
of Politics should be read as serious philosophy. See Ronald Beiner,
"Hermeneutical Generosity and Social Criticism," Critical
Review (1 995): 453.
(2) This book is also of topical significance in light of the New
Democratic Party's remarkable electoral breakthrough in the most
recent Canadian Federal Election (2011). The results, representative of
precisely the type of polarized politics Charles Taylor was demanding in
1970, had mainstream liberal news magazine Maclean's acknowledge
(though somewhat begrudgingly) this prescient text See Charles Taylor,
The Pattern of Politics (Montreal: McClelland & Stewart Ltd.) and
John Geddes, "The Making of jack Layton," Maclean's, 27
June 2011, 21.
(3) See Stanley Cavell, The World Viewed (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
UP, 1971), 28.
(4) Here are some very interesting comments by Colm Fiore on
playing Trudeau: "[I did not] meet any of [Trudeau's] family
before. I didn't want their truth to interfere with my fiction.
There was no way 1 was going to be able to represent their truth in what
I had to do ... An actor's first thing is
(5.) Taylor does not. explicitly condemn the Western liberal
tradition any more than he specifically condemns the Liberal Party of
Canada. What he condemns is a "consensus view" of politics in
which choice is negated in favour
(6) Ibid., 6-8.
(7) Ibid., 6.
(8) This is obviously an interpretation--Taylor's to be
precise--for the film does not attempt to either salvage or smear the
legacy of Trudeau. Canadian Hegelian David MacGregor offers a rival
interpretation. Commenting on
(9) It would not be crazy to suppose that the trajectory of the
movie should work towards "curing" Leon, so that he
movie's climax would revolve around his conversion "back to
reality," o a world where answers are not
(10) Taylor, 112.
(11) Ibid., 112
(12) Here I am heartened by a segment of Cavell's reading of
Capra's Mr. Deeds Goes to Town. The simultaneous comic value and
horror we feel at Deeds's
(13) The 'Grand Narrative," then, as an account, simply,
of how things came to be. The idea behind studying the dialectic., of
course, is that with enough patience and endurance, one can begin to
uncover or unearth the "logic" of the times gone by (geist),
hence decode how the dialectic is set to unfold in future.
(14) Eagleton's distinction is between rigid, implacable dogma
(moralism) and the sort of morality that comes via a layered and subtle
engagement with "an intricately woven texture of nuances, qualities
and line gradations." See Terry Eagleton, After Theory (New York:
Basic Books 2003), 144. This book is featured on Leon's shelf in
the film.
(15) A prominent critic in this vein is Karl Popper whose Poverty
of Historicism (1957) takes dead aim at Marxists, in particular their
insistence that "all history is the history of class
struggle." Posed as a hypothesis, Popper notes the idea is
compelling. But ultimately, as theory, the premise is untestable. Though
in the book he opts for a political agenda of "piecemeal social
(16) See Ron Dart, "Charles Taylor and the Hegelian Eden Tree:
Canadian Philosophy and Compradorism," Vive le Canada, May 1, 2007,
accessed August. 2, 2011,
<http://www.vivelecanada.ca/article/235045487-charles-taylor-and-the-hegelian-eden-tree--canadian-philosophy-and-com.pradorism>.
(17) This terminology may be a bit purple or imprecise. I use it
figuratively
(18) See Jacob Klapwijk, Dialectic of Enlightenment: Critical
Theory and the Messianic Light (Eugene, Oregon: Wipf & Stock, 2010).
(19) Ibid,91.
(20) Ibid.
(21) Ibid.
(22) Ibid., 94-95.
(23) Taylor, 8.
(24) Klapwijk, 95.
(25) Ibid., 96.
(26) Ibid., 97.
(27) Taylor, 131, 134.
(28) The achievement, o a political mechanism representative of a
voice expresses the kernel of truth behind Leslie Armour's
definition of community: "A community shows itself in the
institutions it legitimizes--or tries to legitimize. The structure of a
community is the shape of public authority and the pattern of men's
interactions with each other." Contrast this with Cavell's
"The philosophical appeal to what we say, and the search for our
criteria on the basis of which we say what we say are claims to
community. And the claim to community is always a search for the basis
upon which it can or has been established." See Leslie Armour, The
Idea of Canada (Ottawa: Steel Rail Publishing, 1981), 15 and Stanley
Cavell, The Claim of Reason (Oxford: Oxford, UP), 20.