Most English academics suffer from 鈥榚ntertainment deficit disorder鈥, an inability to see that show business is their real job. To overcome this - and in doing so improve teaching - they should quit writing and learn juggling or magic tricks to pass on to students, argues Jerry Herron
Take Charles Dickens, or Ethel Merman, or Eminem, Spider-Man or Papa Smurf, George Eliot, Shakespeare, Madonna or Monty Python. 罢丑补迟鈥檚 entertainment, and if it didn鈥檛 exist, neither would we, although this point is generally misunderstood.
The modern English department (which dates in the US from the later decades of the 19th century) is the product of a successful revolution that introduced vernacular 鈥減opular鈥 culture - novels and poetry, for example - into a traditional curriculum based on classical texts, rhetoric and philology. So successful was this revolution that vernacular culture is now all we study. The reason people think they need English academics still is (rightly or wrongly) attributable directly to the existence of vernacular entertainment. We, of course, have our 鈥渨ork鈥 to show for all the time and money invested in English, but if that鈥檚 all we had, we鈥檇 be done for, despite professorial delusions to the contrary. We still exist because entertainment exists in the world, and because people - some at least - still believe there鈥檚 a meaningful connection between all that entertaining stuff and the work they think we do. And that鈥檚 where the crisis in English comes from: professors鈥 bungled misunderstanding of who we are and why we鈥檙e here.
What we鈥檙e suffering from, in other words, is 鈥渆ntertainment deficit disorder鈥. It won鈥檛 be some governmental meteor that sends the dinosaurs of English into extinction. Even the craftiest politicians 诲辞苍鈥檛 know enough about the professional nonsense we produce to get at us that way. Besides, they鈥檇 have to read it first, which is unlikely. It鈥檒l be the mischief we make on our own, when nobody is watching, that will be the end of us - nobody, that is, except our students, thousands and thousands of them. And it鈥檚 those poor unfortunates who are the real subjects of the crisis at hand. They鈥檙e the ones paying for the disorder that afflicts their professors, so our crisis is really a crisis of teaching.
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For instance, think about the Big Three (by which I 诲辞苍鈥檛 mean class, race and gender) - the real big three that define our jobs: research, service and teaching. Take away research, and nobody outside the academy would know the difference. Take away service, same result. Take away teaching, and we鈥檇 be up on charges by the end of the day because that鈥檚 what we are thought to be getting paid for. And the majority of academic teaching is dreadful, and dreadfully unentertaining. Just look at the research that supports it. Or look at the level of public discourse. A mess. And where did that discourse come from? From us, because we taught the teachers. And what we鈥檝e taught is that it鈥檚 irrelevant what quality of attention we pay to the multifarious entertainments our culture is made of. Otherwise, we wouldn鈥檛 write and talk the way we do. And that鈥檚 the root of our disorder.
Here, I defer to the founder of modern entertainment studies, Alexander Pope. Specifically, his Essay on Criticism :
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鈥淭rue wit is nature to advantage dressed,
What oft was thought, but ne鈥檈r so well expressed,
Something, whose truth convinced at sight we find,
That gives us back the image of our mind...鈥
When Pope sets out to write 鈥渃riticism鈥, he recognises at once that he is part of the entertainment industry, so that鈥檚 what he does, entertain, because as a pre-professorial entrepreneur, he had no choice. And people bought it. The trick, and the basis of true 鈥渨it鈥, is to write about a matter of general concern, but in such a way that the audience recognises spontaneously, as if it it were self-evident, the aptness of what鈥檚 being proposed: something whose truth convinces on sight. 罢丑补迟鈥檚 entertainment.
That is what all great entertainment does, from Sophocles to Spielberg. That is the business we should be in: show business. In fact, it鈥檚 the business we are in, except we鈥檙e disastrously bad at it, and have been ever since English professors got institutionalised a century ago. As to how we might improve, I鈥檒l take my cue from two modern masters, Ethel Merman and Rodney Dangerfield.
Let鈥檚 start with Merman. Could she sing? No. But could she sell a song? Yes, because she had the wit to grasp her situation: 鈥淭here鈥檚 no business like show business like no business I know.鈥 The operative word here is business. Merman and Irving Berlin understood this; we 诲辞苍鈥檛. Our business is to show, not tell.
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Which brings me to Rodney Dangerfield, and his brilliant exposition of entertainment deficit disorder, Back to School (1986). Rodney plays himself, basically, a stand-up guy who goes back to college with his ego-challenged son. Rodney is entertaining, the professors aren鈥檛. Except the English professor, who conspires to turn the academy around by forcing on the faculty the truth of their inadequacy; namely, that they鈥檙e in the business of making a show of themselves and they just 诲辞苍鈥檛 know how to do it well. That truth has kept Back to School in constant circulation, on cable and network re-runs, since its first release. The same truth makes David Lodge鈥檚 academic satires great popular successes. People are ready to be entertained by the problem that professors pose, because we 诲辞苍鈥檛 know what our business is. So, we ought to make the most of our entertaining situation, except not negatively, because we fail to get it, but positively, because we do.
Most academics are incapable of writing a decent poem or short story or essay, let alone a play or novel or film script. (罢丑补迟鈥檚 not how we鈥檒l become entertainers.) But we do write great volumes of boring stuff that nobody reads; and then we afflict our students with imitative humiliation, forcing on them the same obvious failure that we confront. What we should do is stop. We should quit writing, and they should quit, too. (If anyone refuses, hire real writers to teach them, but only writers with sales figures to prove they鈥檝e the wit to entertain.) Once we start not writing, we鈥檒l have time to capitalise on a vernacular revolution that Pope could only dream of. Everybody is literate now, especially when it comes to popular entertainments. These popular forms contain the open secret of who we are by virtue of their being entertaining to us all, and the basis of a media empire that America has globalised. 罢丑补迟鈥檚 the way out of crisis, and EDD.
But it also leads right to the 鈥 Baywatch Conundrum鈥: the fact that an execrable TV series is the most-watched entertainment vehicle in human history. So we ought to start there. Not to show how much smarter than television we are, but just the reverse, to show how much smarter it is because, despite a generation鈥檚 worth of deconstructing, it鈥檚 Baywatch and not us that people are entertained by. The trick is making academics as entertaining as TV. No, more entertaining, if we鈥檙e going to do any good, and there鈥檚 plenty of good that needs doing. But there will be time, since we鈥檒l be freed from the drudgery of writing, which we鈥檝e never cared enough about to do well anyhow.
Here鈥檚 what I suggest English academics do: study acting, learn to juggle or do magic, take singing lessons. And then teach students to do the same. (I can endorse sleight-of-hand tricks.) Not that any of us will be particularly good - we won鈥檛. But until we try, we won鈥檛 have a clue what it means to entertain, unironically. And not until we know that will we have a clue how to talk to our audience and how to entertain them with things that are serious and important, particularly the entertainments that Americans are so greedy for that we鈥檙e willing to take the world to war over them. It鈥檚 a serious business, show business. But I think we鈥檙e up to it.
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Jerry Herron is director of the honours programme at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. He will speak at the 鈥淔uture of English studies: what next?鈥 at 10.15am on December 28.
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