Fascinating article about how Hollywood treats marriage   -effectively
"deglamorizing" it over the years, making it less popular among the  young.
 
This leads to the question: Is there some way to portray  an "interesting" 
marriage
for the silver screen?  Of course there is, but not via tradition in  which
the wife spends all of her time in the home and is exclusively a mother  & 
wife.
In terms of drama, except maybe psycho-drama, there isn't any. Not the  kind
of drama that people actually go to movies to see, anyway.
 
Sorry, but a kid who skins his knee or a little girl who is upset  because
she has broken her favorite Barbie Doll, doesn't make the cut.
 
And wife-in-supporting-role doesn't resonate these days. 
What is needed is wife-as-co-star. Not Nixon and his wife Patricia,
always in the shadows, more along the lines of Jack Kennedy and 
Jacqueline Kennedy  -and she was a star in her own right.
 
There is a whole genre awaiting to be exploited, call it "gender  
partnership" films, 
of which  I cannot think of even one. But I am not a movie buff,  maybe
there are a small number.
 
The idea is dramatization of the lives of famous  couples:  The Curies in 
France,
Louis Napoleon III and his wife Eugenia,  James and Dolly  Madison,  
and so forth, where each of each twosome is interesting, or  fascinating. 
Plenty of room for psychodrama, as well, and subplots, murders,
scandals, adventures, nail biting, and you name it. But all in the  context
of marriage:  Between one man and one  -or more-   women.
 
Let's not overlook, speaking of JFK, his various liaisons, as with Marilyn  
Monroe,
or even Brigham Young and his harem (think "King and I"), the many  complex
marriages that people love to talk about but rarely have a chance to  see 
in the movies. And don't tell me that there aren't some films of this type  
that 
could not  become sensations. How about Jean Paul Sartre and Simone  
Bouvier;  
even if it wasn't a legal marriage it was a  de facto  marriage?  And you'd 
think
that there is a story to be told about, say, the marriage of Clare  Boothe 
Luce
and  Henry Luce, the publisher of Time, Life, and  Fortune. 
 
Or how about the story of Sacajawea and Toussaint Charbonneau? 
Or,   ...say, Jesus and Mary Magdalene ?  Whatever your  religious beliefs,
it is plausible, you know, and as for film drama, well, how could you top  
this?
 
 
Billy
 
==============================================
 
 
Christianity Today
 
 
 
Where Are All the Good Stories about Marriage?
And how Christians in the  arts can bring them back.
W. David O.  Taylor/ November  11, 2014


 
In her book I Do and I Don’t: A History of Marriage in the Movies,  film 
historian Jeanine Basinger describes a trend that has marked movies for the  
past 40 years: the lack of interest in married life. Incapable of imagining a 
 dramatically interesting marriage, she explains:  
Hollywood kept only the ritual, making movie after movie about  weddings. 
Since no one felt the need for marriage—you could have sex,  children, and 
cohabitation without it—films elevated the event and made it the  main point: 
the Big Wedding in which you could have the decorations, the food,  the 
booze, and the outfits without having to be bored by marriage  problems.
According to a former editor of Marvel Comics, one reason why the  graphic 
novel has nearly universally eschewed marriage is that it “kills a good  
story.” Whatever could be exciting about Clark Kent if he were to remain 
married  to Lois Lane? Not much, apparently, because DC Comics erased the 1996 
marriage  from history, returning Superman to bachelorhood, the preferred state 
of our  superheroes. 
Exceptions exist, of course. Amour, The Incredibles, and  In America, along 
with many Tyler Perry films, focus on and celebrate  marriage. Recent 
movies, such as Drinking Buddies, also trace the  relation between friendship 
and 
romance, and even between friendship and  marriage, explored, for example, 
throughout the Harry Potter franchise. 
One marvelous exception is the critically acclaimed television  series 
Friday Night Lights (FNL), which aired from 2006 to 2011. It  tells the story 
of 
ordinary people in a small Texas town and their impassioned  love of 
football. But, as Basinger notes, FNL is not so much a show  about football as 
it 
is “a show about how marriage works when it actually does  work.” For 
critics and fans alike, there has arguably never been a more honest  marriage 
portrayed on the screen than that of coach Eric and Tami Taylor. 
Theirs, unfortunately, remains the exception. More common on the  small and 
large screen is the sense that marriage, particularly traditional  
marriage, is dull and irrelevant as storytelling material. More usual is the  
view 
that, “as in the days of the judges,” each one does with marriage what  
seems right in his or her eyes, whether in “open,” “free,” or “transgressive” 
 style. 
It is my contention that, while movies and television cannot be  blamed 
exclusively for our society’s rejection of theologically conservative  ideas 
about marriage, they have certainly made it easier for our neighbors to  
imagine that such a marriage, especially its exclusive status, is impossible or 
 
undesirable. I also contend that we have not fully reckoned with the power 
of  the artistic imagination. 
And therein lies a task for us. 
Category Work
In a 2012 interview with NPR, communications professor Edward  Schiappa 
discussed the results of his research on the effect of television to  decrease 
prejudice against gay persons. “These attitude changes are not huge,”  he 
said. “They don’t change bigots into saints. But they can snowball.” 
Whether watching Will & Grace or Glee, more  Americans, “from the safety of 
their armchair,” can “learn a bit about gay  people who they might not 
otherwise have learned from in real life,” he said. It  has been a vicarious, 
and rather effective, lesson for a fifth of Americans who,  according to an 
Ipsos MediaCT survey, said that television has inspired them to  embrace 
same-sex marriage. 
Shows like Modern Family (which prominently features a  gay couple) achieve 
what Schiappa calls “category work.” The show takes a  categorical 
stereotype (like the flamboyantly fickle gay man) and complicates it  by 
showing 
other possibilities (in this case, the trustworthy gay man). 
Modern Family performs an additional function: By  presenting empathetic 
gay characters, it helps the viewer exchange an anxious  feeling about gay 
people with a likeable feeling and, as the case may be, it  enables the viewer 
to imagine him- or herself in friendship with a gay person.  What was once 
fundamentally questionable, especially for many younger viewers,  becomes in 
due time a new normal. 
Star Trek performed a similar function for a previous  generation. In 1966, 
it became
the first primetime show to favorably depict  an African American woman, 
Nichelle Nichols. Nichols almost didn’t return after  the first season of 
playing Lt. Nyota Uhura. As she explained years later, the  turning point came 
at a fundraiser for Martin Luther King, Jr., the  self-proclaimed “biggest 
Trekkie on the planet.” 
King told her, “You are changing the minds of people across the  world, 
because for the first time, through you, we see ourselves and what can  be.” 
NASA astronaut Mae C. Jemison, the first black woman to travel into space,  
was one of those people inspired by Nichols. Jemison said simply: “Images show 
 us possibilities.” 
What fictional narratives like Modern Family or the  menagerie of Star Trek 
tales foster, then, is a sympathetic sense that  “this is the way things 
could be and in fact should be.” And like all good works  of art, movies and 
television can summon the imagination not simply to conceive  the improbable, 
for black people or gay people or others, but also to desire it  as good. 
Imagination in Action
In June 2013, the Supreme Court ruled against the  constitutionality of the 
Defense of Marriage Act. One Christian commentator  remarked that if 
Americans couldn’t handle complex verbal arguments, then they  ought to be 
given 
something easier, by which he meant an appeal to the artistic  imagination. 
This is a view common among Christians who regard the imagination  as a 
distraction at worst, and a form of persuasion suited to the  “unsophisticated”
 mind at best. Against this somewhat naive view, I suggest that  the 
artistic imagination performs important work, in the following three  ways. 
1. By inviting us to imagine an alternative world, the artistic  
imagination brings us into vicarious experiences. This is a dynamic that Jesus  
himself uses while speaking with a certain lawyer (Luke 10). Instead of telling 
 
the young man “just the facts,” Jesus tells him a story. The story, in turn, 
 pulls the lawyer vicariously as well as affectively into a role he might 
never  have imagined for himself: the “bad guy” instead of the “good guy.” 
With Jesus,  as with a movie like Brokeback Mountain or Milk, the  
unimaginable becomes imaginable because we have experienced it vicariously,  
“from 
the inside.” 
2. The artistic imagination enables us to live beyond the givens  of the 
world. In the story of the Good Samaritan, Jesus encourages his listeners  to 
reimagine an ethnic given: the “no-good neighbor” Samaritan. In a movie 
like  The Kids Are All Right, director Lisa Cholodenko invites the viewer to  
reimagine a marital given: the supposed impossibility of a happy lesbian  
marriage. In this case, one given (the wrongness of such a marriage) is 
replaced  by another given (the rightness of it), and a once incredible reality 
eventually  becomes an assumed reality. 
3. The artistic imagination shapes our desires. As Paul the  apostle well 
knew, we come to desire what we repeatedly imagine. In this vein,  the common 
slogan “Love = Love,” emblazoned on T-shirts worn on college campuses  
across the country, encourages us to imagine love as the right to be “true to  
oneself” and to love whomever one wishes, regardless of sexual or marital  
preference. For many, to see this idea played out on the small or large 
screen  is to begin feeling the desire to see it realized. 
"Leading the conversation. Shaping the media narrative. Changing  the 
culture." While this might sound like the slogan of a zealously conservative  
group, it is actually the stated mission of GLAAD (the Gay & Lesbian  Alliance 
Against Defamation). And it reminds us that we are all in the same  
business: word-smithing, story-telling, culture-shaping, ultimately  
heart-forming. 
GLBT Americans have long understood that in order to effect  permanent 
change in this country, they must capture our imaginations. They  understand 
the 
power of a story well told, and they understand that it costs  something. 
If it’s true that the average American spends close to 200 hours  every 
month in front of a screen, then gay Americans, like secular Jews or  agnostics 
or liberal Christians—but often unlike conservative Christians—are  right 
that society’s perception of romance and marriage will be uncommonly  shaped 
by the stories we tell on television and film. This is another way of  
stating—as have Peter Wehner, senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy  
Center, and “crunchy con” journalist Rod Dreher—that politics routinely exists 
 downstream of popular culture. 
To nuance my original contention, it is not that all conservative  
Christians have failed to take the artistic imagination seriously. Many have,  
and 
in very thoughtful ways. It is that too many conservatives have not taken  
the artistic imagination seriously enough—enough to invest in the sort of  
institutions, cultures of patronage, communities of artists, and rigorous 
habits  of art-making that over decades would yield a winsome Christian 
presence 
within  the industries of art and entertainment. 
Christians have made so little artistic culture in the “public  square,” 
in fact, that our witness to the graces of traditional marriage is  feeble, 
capturing the attention of few. 
Thankfully, this is not the full story. 
In Word and Deed
While writing this article, I corresponded with several Christians  who 
have written for a range of TV shows, from That ’70s Show to  Buffy the Vampire 
Slayer. They told me that, while there are more  Christians in the studio 
system today than even ten years ago, their numbers are  miniscule and their 
power to make a difference is relatively small. As one  writer said, “The 
real issue is not the writers but the gatekeepers (the  networks and studios), 
and what they want or will allow on the airwaves.” Though  we needn’t 
subscribe to a conspiracy theory, as a lecturer at the University of  Southern 
California’s Peter Stark Producing Program mentioned, Hollywood  nonetheless 
feels little motivation to explore traditional marriage, especially  when 
story lines about single people seem far more dramatically exciting. 
Another writer stressed that “it is difficult to write about that  which 
you do not know: a good marriage.” When 60 percent of industry marriages  
result in divorce, there is little incentive to write about a reality that 
seems 
 too good to be true, or even necessary. Even if a writer wanted to change 
the  plot, he or she likely could only provide a minor “salting” presence 
in a  process that involves hundreds of people to produce a single television 
episode,  and many more for a feature film. 
A writer for The Americans, which The New Yorker dubbed  “a show about 
marriage dressed up as a spy drama” (and which my wife and I place  on par with 
FNL, alongside NBC’s Parenthood), pointed out that  of the 500 story pitches 
that a network hears each season, only 5 are turned  into a new series. 
That is a 1 percent chance of success for stories that may  have included a 
nuanced picture of traditional marriage. 
In light of this, is there anything for Christians to do? Yes, in  fact. 
For starters, as valuable as parallel efforts such as Big Idea  Productions 
or Sherwood Pictures may be, I would encourage us not to abandon the  
center of Hollywood (or Bollywood, for that matter). We should offer  
wholehearted support to the writers, producers, and executives who labor within 
 the 
industry, whether in Los Angeles or in our own cities, performing their  small 
but brave labors on behalf of God’s kingdom, even if they add only a pinch  
of light for the common good. 
Beyond this, pray for artists. Befriend an artist yourself.  Patronize them 
with financial and practical helps. Encourage them to put in the  10,000 
hours and the discipline required to make good work, to tell the kind of  
nuanced, textured, winsome, even humorous stories that evoke a desire in an  
audience to be truly, fully human. Help them to discern the shape of their  
calling. Help them connect to a good community. 
If Christians are to reshape the public square of art and  entertainment, 
it will not be due to a single person. It will be due to the body  of Christ 
everywhere, releasing artists in all stations of life to remain  faithful to 
their vocation. It will take more than a handful of TV shows or  movies; it 
will require hundreds of them. It will require a decades-long  endeavor, 
not a few enthusiastic years here and there. And it will call for a  humble 
relinquishment of all our efforts and desires to the good, often  inscrutable, 
will of God. 
Beyond these artistic activities, I would encourage the church to  keep 
offering a brave, clearheaded articulation of sexuality and marriage. Good  
teaching and preaching are essential. It is also important that we not pit  
relational efforts against political ones. Both have their place, even if the  
integrity of our lives may speak most convincingly. 
For those of us who are married, we need to give ourselves  permission to 
live transparently before our neighbors, letting them witness our  marriage’s 
imperfections and tensions, as well as the moments of grace when God  
rescues us from our worst selves. We ought also to support those whose 
marriages  
are breaking or broken. 
As always, we should seek every opportunity to lay down our lives  to serve 
our neighbors, gay or straight or otherwise, offering them the  hospitality 
of Christ in witness to the fatherly love of God. Nothing good will  come 
of holding onto stereotypes. Our neighbors are not our enemies. They are  men 
and women made in the image of God and beloved by him. To them we owe the  
same kind of humble love that Christ has shown us. 
In the end, faithful artistry together with faithful living may  well 
enable our neighbors to imagine life not “just as it is” but as the triune  God 
would have it. 
The Good Marriage
Critics often ask what made FNL’s marriage work,  dramatically speaking. 
For New York Times critic A. O. Scott, the  answer is that Eric and Tami’s 
marriage was neither complacent nor predictable,  and it included the “messy 
delights and petty frustrations” that make lifelong  fidelity interesting. 
Basinger adds: “There was no ‘strategy’ for their marital  story: no clever 
plot twists, no dream episodes, no other woman or man, no cheap  theatrics or 
misunderstandings.” 
Marked by great writing, an honest friendship, and a permission to  take 
its time, FNL exhibited what Basinger calls an emotional truth,  which viewers 
week after week could recognize, absorb, and be nourished by. In  my case, 
it frequently made me want to be a better husband. 
I contend that Friday Night Lights is exactly the kind of  story that we 
need played out on the small and big screen—a story that helps us  not only to 
imagine a flourishing marriage but also to desire one. We need such  
stories to help us feel again that it is actually possible to have this kind of 
 
marriage, despite the relational fragmentation and ideological mayhem that 
daily  surrounds us. 
If a Christian community were willing to invest in those who are  called to 
produce such television and movies, then I believe we might be looking  not 
at the failure of the Christian imagination in the public square, but at 
the  gift of a vision of marital love, in all its complexities and pleasures. 
God  willing, viewers may yearn for much more of where that came from. 
W. David O. Taylor is assistant professor of theology and culture  at 
Fuller Theological Seminary and the director of Brehm Texas, an initiative in  
worship, theology, and the arts. You can read more from Taylor at his blog, 
_Diary of an Arts  Pastor_ (http://artspastor.blogspot.com/) .

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
  • [RC] Ma... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
    • Re... Dr. Ernie Prabhakar

Reply via email to