canonical truth or pulp fiction: tracing the exclusion of the screenplay from the literary canon

Upload: delbert-ricardo

Post on 31-May-2018

221 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    1/29

    Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction ?:

    Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay

    from the Literary Canon

    by Gregory K. Allen

    Copyright 2001

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    2/29

    Allen 1

    1

    The only link between Literature and Drama left to us in England at thepresent moment is the bill of the play.

    - Oscar Wilde

    The Oxford English Dictionary defines the word literature as [l]iterary

    productions as a whole; the body of writings produced in a particular country or period,

    or in the world in general. Now also, in a more restricted sense, applied to writing

    which has claim to consideration on the ground of beauty of form or emotional effect

    (Oxford English Dictionary 342). It is ironic that one must appeal to a literary form in

    order to locate a definition for literature. But even so, the essence of literature expands

    far beyond mere definition. The nature of literature what it is and what it isnt

    seems, at first, to be a simple enough investigation. However, no definitive conclusion

    to such a query has ever been reached by scholars, and the debate has raged for

    centuries perhaps even millennia. While these literary scrappers have not always been

    of English origin, the process of literary canonization, to a certain degree, propels itself

    into the next generation as a sort of method by which a culture can decide what, as the

    Oxford dictionary puts it has claim to consideration on the ground of beauty of form

    (Oxford English Dictionary 342).

    Yet, somehow the process of literary canonization has moved beyond Oxfords

    all too clear and succinct definition. The question of the age no longer remains what is

    literature, but rather, what is good literature. The literary concerns of the moment

    sidestep the quantitative, the literal, and the textual; to embrace the qualitative, the

    ethereal, and the subjective means by which one text is celebrated as a classic, and

    another is merely forgotten. This forgotten text lingers only momentarily for critics to be

    scorned and reduced to nothing, and like the foamy excess of some prohibited juicy

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    3/29

    Allen 2

    2

    concoction, the word pulp becomes the name by which these works come to be known.

    But there are far more consequences for the critic and reader alike than readily apparent

    in the distinction between pulp texts and canonized literature. Even a perusal of the

    history of the literary canon provides enough background for one to identify the

    privileging and exclusion of certain texts and authors. An enormous amount of

    scholarship has already documented this phenomenon, and a great deal more probably

    could and should be undertaken by scholars. But it is not the exclusion of authors or

    certain texts that this project is engaged in, but rather the exclusion of entire formats or

    genres of literature. Given the vast array of texts that critics have placed in the literary

    canon such as the epic, the poem, the short story, the novel, the stage play, etc., it

    becomes problematic that the film is discussed more in terms of being read like

    literature, than the screenplay. In fact, while film studies as a discipline has become

    increasingly more pervasive in the academy over the past thirty years, little public

    scholarship has been attributed to the study of the screenplay as a literary format or

    genre in its own right.

    Film scholars and critics have generally excluded the screenplay from the literary

    canon. Most film scholars, when discussing film narrative or even the creative choices of

    the screenwriter, only position their projects in relation to the film production itself, and

    not back to the screenplay as a text. Dana Polans analysis of Pulp Fiction , as published

    by the British Film Institute, is an enactment of this phenomenon, among others, and

    whose implications will be discussed somewhat more fully later. But that the literary

    establishment has positioned the classic American screenplay against other more

    traditional forms of literature, and that Hollywood has empowered and even

    encouraged academia to do so, remains indisputable. The crisis and contradiction

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    4/29

    Allen 3

    3

    involved in a canonization that includes the dramatic script for stage, while

    simultaneously excluding the dramatic script for cinema, based on reasons that initially

    seem to relate to technology, but prove contradictory upon further interrogation must be

    exposed for what it is a prime example of how marketability and capitalistic concerns

    inform and co-opt literary taste, and thus, the literary canon, above and beyond even the

    traditional notions of aesthetics. If the literary canon is to remain a reliable body of

    writings [. . .] which has claim to consideration on the ground of beauty of form, the

    literary canon must include the screenplay ( Oxford English Dictionary 342). If it does not,

    while allowing the stage play and even the film to remain, without at least some sort of

    explanation, not only do literary critics become inconsistent in their judgment, but the

    canon itself becomes jeopardized by intellectual hypocrisy. Double jeopardy ensues if

    the screenplay can be proven to accomplish the same literary ends as the epic, the short

    story, the novel, or the stage play to an equal or even to a greater degree of aesthetic

    deft.

    All of these formats as aesthetic productions exist in similar fashions as words on

    paper produced by one or more authors by the time they are canonized. The screenplay

    exists as words on paper created by one or more author, as well, but as a format, the

    screenplay has yet to receive canonical attention. Certainly, the screenplay is an

    aesthetic production. But, as a genre of text with all of its similar characteristics to the

    novel, the short story, the stage play, and even the epic poem, the screenplay still has

    been marginalized by both filmmakers and critics. This marginal positioning is not the

    result of some sort of elitist cinematic prejudice, however, because even now, in certain

    academic and critical circles, Film has already come to be regarded as Literature. David

    Bordwell and Kristen Thompson observe in their textbook, Film Art: An Introduction :

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    5/29

    Allen 4

    4

    If you are listening closely to a song on a tape and the tape is abruptly

    switched off, you are likely to feel frustrated. If you start reading a novel,

    become engrossed in it, and then misplace the book, you will probably

    feel the same way. Such feelings arise because our experience of artworks

    is patterned and structured. The human mind craves form. For this

    reason, form is of central importance in any artwork, regardless of its

    medium. The entire study of the nature of artistic form is the province of

    the aesthetician [. . .] But some ideas about aesthetic form are

    indispensable in analyzing films (Bordwell and Thompson 41).

    Countless commentaries have been published critiquing and analyzing films,

    and while, on occasion, these commentaries might have included various drafts of the

    films screenplay or shooting script, I have yet to encounter a critical work that engages

    the screenplay independent of a cinematic production. Yet, when it comes to the stage

    play, every sort of commentary imaginable has been produced, both in conjunction with,

    and independent of theatrical production. For instance, when one studies a

    Shakespearean play, it is virtually impossible to consider the text in light of any

    particular production that the author himself might have had access to. Certainly, there

    might be sixteenth-century notes of some sort referencing those in attendance, or a

    performance date, or even a cast list, but the production itself would have since

    dissipated in the memories of an audience long dead.

    This difficulty recurs even when considering a specific performance of

    Shakespeares Othello , for example. Lets assume that two individuals wish to discuss a

    staged performance of the Moors tragedy of jealousy, betrayal, and vengeance. Even in

    light of contemporary theatrical production, unless this discussion is undertaken by two

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    6/29

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    7/29

    Allen 6

    6

    stage production still remains elusive at best since the Fences that can be attended at a

    local high school may not necessarily be what August Wilson intended.

    For this reason, it would seem that academics have privileged the text over the

    production. As Walter Benjamin argues, The authenticity of a thing is the essence of all

    that is transmissible from its beginning, ranging from its substantive duration to its

    testimony to the history which it has experienced (Benjamin 221). By this reasoning,

    the academy in a Benjamin-like manner handles the stage text as if it more fully

    transmits the authentic playwright. Though the published play may have been

    mechanically reproduced by a printing press, or even a photo copy machine, it is almost

    as if academics suppose that more of the theatrical aura, to borrow a term from

    Benjamin resides in a copy of a stage text that is precisely transcribed and accessible in

    written form than what could possibly reside in any such performance that may be

    inspired by the text. This is not to say that critics would not consider a handwritten

    manuscript of Measure for Measure by Shakespeare more valuable than an edition

    published by Penguin Books; but it is to say that, in terms of literary merit, it is quite

    possible that the two texts would be rendered of equal worth to the literary community

    with one maintaining greater value only in terms of duration to its testimony to the

    history which it has experienced (Benjamin 221). Since the study of literature tends not

    to be based on a students access to original texts solely, but rather access to words and

    ideas of authors, even if conveyed by translation, the historical testimony of original

    texts has often been de-emphasized in favor of a more careful consideration of the

    aesthetic merit that even a facsimile, like a printed paperback, can retain. Benjamin

    complicates his argument by stating, Since the historical testimony rests on the

    authenticity, the former, too, is jeopardized by reproduction when substantive duration

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    8/29

    Allen 7

    7

    ceases to matter (Benjamin 221). In this particular instance, the former refers to the

    essence of all that is transmissible from [a work of arts] beginning (Benjamin 221).

    Since substantive duration or the amount of time that a text has been around does not

    seem to matter to a canon that can produce literary criticism of Lorraine Hansberrys A

    Raisin in the Sun just as readily as for an Aristophanes trilogy, there must be some sort of

    unbroken connection with the authors own words that canonization is invested in. In

    this respect, the Shakespeare of the text is more authentic than the Shakespeare of

    todays stage. Perhaps the sixteenth-centurys stage could have offered the most

    authentic Shakespeare yet, but a lack of mechanical reproduction of those performances

    prevents the access to determine whether or not this could be so. Besides, the difficulties

    that contemporary playwrights encounter on todays stage, even in the age of

    mechanical reproduction, reinforces the notion of the authentic playwrights presence in

    the stage text.

    But if literary critics are only interested in stage plays in relation to their textual

    merit; i.e., language, character, plot, verbal authenticity, and all of the various other

    qualities for which the poem, the short story, and the novel have been praised; true

    Drama would lose its privileged position in the literary canon. Though Drama can be

    read or performed, theoretically, so can most any other form of literature. Dialogue in

    novels can be performed aloud by readers, and actions can be acted out if the reader so

    desires. The sonnet can be recited in an attempt to woo the lover, and the short story

    can be played out very often just as easily as a stage performance. The lack of proximity

    of location and props might make this explanation seem ridiculous, at first. But stage

    texts dont come off the presses with their locations and props either. While one might

    argue that the stage play exists as a genre more conducive to performance because of the

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    9/29

    Allen 8

    8

    style in which it is written, what is conducive versus what is not conducive still remains

    a matter of relativity. Without question, it is conceivable to have a novel or short story

    that is more easily translated into a dramatic production than a stage text, so in this way,

    in purely textual terms, the stage play is more limited than other literary forms. The fact

    is that stage texts are not studied merely for their textual merit because the potential for

    Drama that can occur on a stage, ironically enough, is highly valued among literary

    critics. Aristotle claims that, Epic poets were succeeded by Tragedians, since the drama

    was a larger and higher form of art (Aristotle 7). While Andre Bazin says this:

    Drama is the soul of theater but this soul sometimes inhabits other bodies.

    A sonnet, a fable of La Fontaine, a novel, a film can owe their

    effectiveness to what Henri Gouhier calls the dramatic categories. From

    this point of view it is useless to claim autonomy for the theater. Either

    that, or we must show it to be something negative. That is to say a play

    cannot be dramatic while a novel is free to be dramatic or not. Of Mice

    and Men is simultaneously a novel and a model tragedy. On the other

    hand, it would be very hard to adapt Swanns Way for the theater. One

    would not praise a play for its novel-like qualities yet one may very well

    congratulate a novelist for being able to structure an action (Bazin 81).

    Bazin rightly notes the existence of certain novel-like qualities inherent in other

    formats, and likewise, there exists certain qualities unique to the text written for the

    stage. But Bazin continues, if we insist that the dramatic is exclusive to theater, we

    must concede its immense influence and also that the cinema is the least likely of the arts

    to escape this influence. At this rate, half of literature and three quarters of the existing

    films are branches of theater (Bazin 81-82). So then if half of literature and three

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    10/29

    Allen 9

    9

    quarters of film is theater in terms of drama, the screenplay at the very least could be

    considered a [branch] of theater based on dramatic merit, and thus be deemed

    admissible into the literary canon based on its relationship to the theater.

    One might argue, however, that stage plays are not canonized for their dramatic

    merit. Being closer to poetry, some sort of appeal to the usage of language might be

    offered in the stage plays defense. But if a successful divorce between the drama of the

    stage and the verse of the plays dialogue can be effectively argued, the study of theater

    is rendered impotent and impossible. To study stage plays independent of stage

    production would be a fruitless enterprise if the end were to come to an understanding

    of theater. The text does not become fully realized as theater until it is performed before

    an audience. Yet, throughout the past few centuries of scholarship, one finds both

    student and teacher alike pouring through the stage text as if it unlocked some sort of

    mystical door to a full realization of theater, or even more erroneously the aesthetic

    essence of the human artist.

    Lauded by The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Boston Globe , and more

    appropriately The Wall Street Journal , Harold Bloom argues in his fascinating Shakespeare:

    The Invention of the Human that before Shakespeare, literary characters remained static,

    evolving only in an external relationship to the gods or God. However, Bloom insists

    that after Shakespeare, literary characters achieved individualism and first began to

    develop in relation to themselves, asserting that there are more Hamlets than actors to

    play them (Bloom xxi). According to Bloom, Shakespeares work highlights humanity

    most accurately because it is Shakespeare who, through his theatrical literature in true

    Wildean fashion, even before Oscar Wilde invented the human by turning the human

    into an aesthetic. According to Bloom, in Shakespeares texts one can discover an art so

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    11/29

    Allen 10

    10

    infinite that it contains us, and will go on enclosing those likely to come after us

    making fiction more real than reality, and rightly so in Wildean terms where [t]he first

    duty in life is to be as artificial as possible (Bloom xxi, Wilde 572). Being also the author

    of a text entitled The Western Canon , it is important to note that as a scholar and critic of

    English literature, Harold Bloom when considering Shakespeares stage plays, and thus

    the literary potential for stage texts in general, states:

    The plays remain the outward limit of human achievement: aesthetically,

    cognitively, in certain ways morally, even spiritually. They abide beyond

    the end of the minds reach; we cannot catch up to them. Shakespeare

    will go on explaining us, in part because he invented us [. . .] (Bloom xix-

    xx).

    It is interesting to note that Shakespeare accomplishes this and Bloom comes to

    recognize this without the aid of any particular stage production. So from a canonical

    perspective, Blooms assertions support this being the aim of the stage text.

    Supposing that it is the similarities of the stage play to other forms of literature

    for which it has bound up an irrefutable place in the literary canon, an inventory of

    those similarities must then be made. Aristotle in his Poetics insists that art must

    represent objects through the medium of colour and form, by way of rhythm,

    language, or harmony, either singly or combined (Aristotle 1). One of the earliest

    treatises on fine art, Aristotle discusses poetry in terms of tragedy and comedy, finally

    concluding that the epic tragedy must be the higher form of art because it more perfectly

    in its presentation of beginning, middle, and end evokes both fear and pity in the

    absence of spectacle, that is, by merely being read. It is useful to note that while

    Tragedys essence existed in epic poetry, as well as in the theater of the fourth century

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    12/29

    Allen 11

    11

    B.C., Aristotelian reasoning privileges not the performance of tragedy whose spectacle is

    deemed the least artistic, and connected least with the art of poetry, but rather, the

    reading of it (Aristotle 13). Certainly the academy has clung to much of Aristotles

    thought process in the compilation of the literary canon, and such emphasis on the

    legible stage text remains consistent with the primary disciple of the academys founder.

    But how does this thought process justify the exclusion of the screenplay?

    Like poetry, having meaning whether read silently or aloud, the screenplay

    employs rhythm, tune, and metre (Aristotle 2). If, as Aristotle suggests,

    conversational speech runs into iambic lines more frequently than into any kind of

    verse, the screenplay with its replete array of all manners of dialects and speech

    patterns becomes a virgin canvas for the poet of verse or prose (Aristotle 8). When Jules

    first recites Ezekiel 25:17 in Scene 8 of Tarantinos screenplay, the poetic potential of the

    screenplay has been skillfully interwoven into the text on many levels. First, Ezekiel

    25:17 of the Hebrew Bible only consists of one line: I will carry out great vengeance on

    them and punish them in my wrath. Then they will know that I am the LORD, when I

    take vengeance on them. (New International Version, Ezek. 25.17). Yet in his

    screenplay Tarantino writes:

    JULESTheres a passage I got memorized, seemsappropriate for this situation: Ezekiel25:17. The path of the righteous man isbeset on all sides by the inequities of

    the selfish and the tyranny of evil men.Blessed is he who, in the name of goodwill, shepherds the weak through thevalley of darkness, for he is truly hisbrothers keeper and the finder of lostchildren. And I will strike down uponthee with great vengeance and furiousanger those who attempt to poison and

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    13/29

    Allen 12

    12

    destroy my brothers. And you will know myname is the Lord when I lay my vengeanceupon you. (Pulp Fiction, Scene 8, pp. 25)

    This is an example of a screenwriter creating verse, and exercising what William Blake

    termed, Poetic Genius (Blake 35). There is no such Scripture to be found anywhere in

    the Bible that reads like this. It is a poetic invention of verse on the part of Tarantino via

    the persona of Jules Winnfield. Tarantino has thus, like the director of Shakespeare fully

    aware of the liberties of public domain, taken a public literary source and made it his

    own. Not only has he fictionalized the Bible text through his character Jules, but also

    through his own role as a screenwriter. It would be inaccurate to say that Tarantino has

    merely misquoted the Bible text, because the fictional context prevents one from fully

    knowing the intent of this pseudo-reference. It would be more accurate to concede that

    through the persona of Jules, Tarantino has effectively aestheticized and made pulp , a

    sacred text via his screenplay text. Bear in mind that this process occurs fully on the

    page, even before Samuel Jackson comes to interpret the character. In fact, I only

    mention Samuel Jacksons performance, and thus the production of the film, in order to

    augment the production of the film as superfluous to my argument. If there are more

    Hamlets to be played than there are actors, certainly there is more than one Jules

    Winnfield, who after being noted in the screenplay as wearing a cheap black suit with

    a thin black tie under a long green duster is merely described by Tarantino as black

    (Pulp Fiction , Scene 2, pp. 7).

    Even if one erroneously concedes that Shakespeare was the first to define an art

    so infinite that it contains us, and will go on enclosing those likely to come after us, it

    would be difficult to contend with the screenplays ability to do the very same (Bloom

    xxi). In fact, if a single film as a single interpretation of a given screenplay successfully

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    14/29

    Allen 13

    13

    endures beyond its own historical context, it too becomes an explanation of what is

    human. As a screenplay, this explanation remains infinitely complex and variable,

    depending on a director or readers vision. As a film, mechanically-reproducible and

    accessible, this interpretation of the screenplay text is more convincing than anything

    Shakespeare has managed to contrive. Not necessarily in terms of aesthetics, but, at

    least in terms of the power to persuade. No doubt, film invades the consciousness of a

    popular culture in a far more thorough and ubiquitous way than canonized literature.

    Certainly, Hamlet has become in Wildean terms, a real person who never existed, but

    who is to say five centuries from now whether Hamlet or Jules Winnfield will emerge

    the more prevalent version of the human aesthetic. One need only study the James Bond

    phenomenon to note cinema, and thus the screenplays effectiveness in terms of

    mythmaking. (Granted, Bond first existed as a literary character, but it has certainly

    been the film series which debuted in 1962 and not Ian Fleming, who died in 1964, that

    has mostly been responsible for Bonds international appeal.)

    In this way, not only is Tarantino a poet, who cared not for consequences but

    wrote, so is Jules, making light of Ezekiel, the prophet whom William Blake likens to

    a poet in The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, in a similar manner by likewise putting words

    into the prophets mouth (Blake 35). Yet, where Blakes work lays claim to beauty of

    form by way of text, verse, prose, and picture, through the text of the screenplay both

    Tarantino and Jules merge as poets, forging a poesis through character, drama, dialogue,

    verse, prose, action, and the imagination. In this aesthetic collaboration, Tarantino and

    Jules revise the prophets text, who by his own admission, according to Blake, failed to

    see the need for such revision since none of equal value was lost (Blake 35). One can

    only assume that Blake asserts this not only as Ezekiels defense of his texts that remain

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    15/29

    Allen 14

    14

    in the Biblical canon, but also as a defense of the words and phrases of these texts.

    Unquestionably, Ezekiel would have had a problem with both Blake and Tarantino

    altering the word of God. In this particular instance, Tarantino has reenacted Blakes

    controversial project with an entirely new genre of literary text. In religious terms, such

    innovation may be blasphemous, but in artistic terms, such is the essence of grace,

    enabling screenplays then to be tributaries of the Poetic Genius (Blake 35).

    However, in addition to the screenplays content, the screenplays form in terms

    of Poetic Genius ought to enhance its critical attention. There are, again, some arts

    which employ all the means above mentioned,--namely, rhythm, tune, and metre,

    states Aristotle, privileging language and its usage in his assessment of poetic and

    literary art (Aristotle 2). The means above mentioned that Aristotle refers to has

    imposed a sort of standard for literature, and a poet or makers employment of these

    rhythmical, melodic, and metrical devices has proven crucial to a poets subsequent

    canonical placement. Although the screenplay as an art form had yet to be invented in

    Aristotles day, it is undeniable that as a format it too employs rhythm, pacing, and

    metre. While a screenplay in general may lack tune, even the musical screenplay as a

    genre proves to be an exception to this rule. Further, if a screenplay is read aloud or

    acted out, dialogue can still take on a melodic quality.

    Tarantino is fully aware of this fact, and makes use of it from the very first page

    of his script by actually providing direction for how certain lines should be read.

    Though it is possible to reference Tarantinos screenplay directly as evidence for this,

    Polans citation of this scene direction is more useful. While he does reference

    Tarantinos screenplay, stating were told on the first page that Honey Bunny and

    Pumpkins dialogue is to be said in a rapid His Girl Friday style, the context of this

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    16/29

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    17/29

    Allen 16

    16

    A counter argument to this convention of form may emphasize how such an

    apparently minute detail like font in terms of the screenplay appeals to standard

    conventions of film production more so than writing and literature with the emphasis

    on screen time. Yet, there is no need to do away with these conventions completely

    since, in fact, a true screenplay, whether produced or not, ought to always present the

    potential for production. Granted, there are more screenplays written than will ever be

    produced, but these literary works of art need not only be considered by critics after a

    film has been adapted from them. There is a difference between a screenplay that could

    be produced versus a screenplay that must be produced. The screenplay that could be

    produced frees the screenwriter of budgetary, technological, creative, and even political

    constraints that almost always ensue from cinematic film production. It is exhilarating

    to consider how ingeniously the technique and form of screenwriting could be

    expanded, if the screenwriter only had to concern him or herself with the text, and not

    the constraining possibilities of production in an industry more controlled by capitalism

    than creativity or the beauty of form. If a screenplay like Pulp Fiction was worthy of

    Dana Polans criticism in his literary analysis be it ever so brief after its translation

    into film, it is fair to conclude that such merit existed in the text even prior to

    production.

    There are grave consequences for a canon that completely excludes the

    screenplay as a format, while promulgating textual analyses of films with script

    references that achieve nothing more than lip service. Since [a]ny man today can lay

    claim to being filmed, but any man cannot produce a film because of the economical

    burden of releasing the film to the general public, wealth privileges those who do the

    representing in film over those who are represented (Benjamin 231). In addition, most

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    18/29

    Allen 17

    17

    men, or women for that matter, cannot afford to make, market, and distribute a film. So

    even if the common man had fair access to the means of film production, his or her voice

    would still be co-opted by those capable of showcasing his art. Even in cases like Robert

    Rodriguez El Mariachi , which according to him only cost $7,000 to make, and can be

    rented from any local video store, marketing and distribution for this film after it was

    picked up by Columbia Pictures still cost over $1 million dollars (Rodriguez 176).

    Yet, Walter Benjamin further states about the contemporary world of publishing

    in which he lived that [a]t any moment the reader is ready to turn into a writer

    (Benjamin 232). While Benjamins conclusions serve to demonstrate the political

    advantages of mechanical reproduction, this notion has considerable implications for the

    screenplay, since as an aesthetic production, any man with knowledge of the form and a

    typewriter or word processor can write a screenplay. This may be oversimplifying the

    aesthetic process just slightly, but certainly a mere glance at the list of credits for a

    Hollywood film proves that it is easier to write a screenplay than to produce a film in

    terms of personnel, resources, and energy. Even so, in terms of literature, a screenplay

    text that surpasses a film text is still quite conceivable. That the screenplay for Pulp

    Fiction has more literary merit than the film print for Debbie Does Dallas may be a matter

    of opinion, but it would be an opinion held by most. After all, how many times has one

    heard it said that the film was not as good as the book? This common phrase supports

    the inherit privileging that even the public maintains for written texts over those that are

    visual. So if film as a format cannot always do a novel justice, it is within the realm of

    possibility that a film director will not always do a screenplay justice in his

    interpretation of it.

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    19/29

    Allen 18

    18

    Novels are published to be consumed by the public, but publication does not

    innately change the essence of a novel. Publication merely duplicates the printed

    material in order for larger masses of people to more readily consume it. Arguably, the

    only real difference between an unpublished novel and a published one is an ISBN

    number. So if a screenplay must be produced in order to be consumed by the public,

    then the screenplay must change forms to be consumed by the masses ceasing then to

    be words on paper, and rather becoming images of light and shadow; and cacophonies

    of music and dialogue; as conceived, often times, by another artist the director.

    Even in the case of Pulp Fiction , where the screenwriter and the director remain

    the same, Dana Polans analysis of the film only furthers the distinction between the film

    text and the screenplay text. However, being a playwright, a screenwriter, and film

    director myself, I understand that the process of writing and directing are very different,

    even if you have created both texts. The film is not a direct presentation of those words

    on paper, but rather a mechanically-reproduced interpretation of those words on paper

    that necessarily evolves independently of the written text. Thus, the screenplay is never

    really made public, but instead hermeneutically sealed within the confines of the films

    narrative. This phenomenon, even if the screenwriter and director are one in the same,

    produces a sacred-like document with a sacred aura, where only those in the cult of

    the film production itself have access to the true text prior to production. How many

    film scripts has even the most fanatical film fan ever read or had access to before the film

    was made? And even for every ten screenplays that have been published after the

    films production, of course there are one-hundred times that many, at least, that even

    the most connected and zealous of screenplay readers could never access. Not to

    mention the thousands of screenplays that never become films in the first place. It seems

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    20/29

    Allen 19

    19

    then that the viewer, like the plebian or neophyte of old, comes to be considered

    unworthy of dealing with the original text of the film called the screenplay. He or she

    is denied the opportunity to engage the screenplay text critically through his own

    distraction in a process that would create his own cinema of the mind (Benjamin 240).

    Colin Higgins, who wrote Harold and Maude and Silver Streak supports this notion:

    The job of the screenwriter is to run the film in the readers imagination.

    And nothing should get in the way of that [. . .] Good prose is the only

    way to have a reader envision an exciting film [. . .] The worse thing you

    can do is direct the film on paper [. . .] Its up to you to make [your

    screenplay] the most exciting, appealing, fun-filled reading experience

    possible. Theres nothing more boring to read than a shot-by-shot

    description of the action. When I write a script, I write in the best prose

    possiblewriting that will vividly create the film in the mind of the

    reader (Wolff & Cox 114).

    Unfortunately, these intended readers in the present state of the film industry

    tend to only be studio executives, actors, and directors. There is no truly public

    screenplay reader. There is the Hollywood insider, and there is the viewer-outsider

    forced to sit through a ceremony of mystery, ritual, spectacle, and interpretation,

    prepackaged, cut, and edited by the producer, the director, and for all intensive

    purposes. . .the priest. So while Benjamin argues that for the first time in world

    history, mechanical reproduction emancipates the work of art from its parasitical

    dependence on ritual he is only partially correct, because the screenplay a

    mechanically-reproducible work of art in its own right has already been tampered

    with and reconstructed in its process of being filmed (Benjamin 224). While it may be

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    21/29

    Allen 20

    20

    true that [w]ith the emancipation of the various art practices from ritual go increasing

    opportunities for the exhibition of their products, film certainly has not brought forth

    this emancipation completely because the screenplay has no public exhibition (Benjamin

    225). Hollywood makes sure of this:

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science Building at 8949

    Wilshire Blvd. in Beverly Hills (278-8990) has a library on the 4 th Floor

    that is open to the public for reading and study. Hundreds of produced

    screenplays are available for your perusal on the premises (they cannot be

    checked out). There is no charge, but your drivers license must be left

    with the librarian while you take your script to your table (Wolff & Cox

    105).

    Hundreds may seem like a lot, but Hollywood produces over a hundred films

    each year, so, in fact, of the thousands upon thousands of films that have been made this

    century the average Blockbuster video store alone probably carries at least 5,000 titles

    the reality is that not many screenplays that have been written are actually available

    even in places like the UCLA Theater Arts Library, where scripts cannot be checked out,

    and reference cards are required even for mere reading access (Wolff & Cox 105). Note

    the security with which screenplays are protected so that a reader must leave their

    drivers license with the librarian, proving that even when scripts can be read, they

    cannot be possessed. This example solidifies Hollywoods apparent overprotection of

    their own screenplays, pinpointing their own contribution to the formats exclusion from

    the canon. Even so-called screenplays available on websites such as www.script-o-

    rama.com do not always feature screenplays in their original formats, but rather

    transcriptions, that in some cases, are not even penned by screenwriters, but by

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    22/29

    Allen 21

    21

    overeager fans transcribing their cinematic experience as they watch the film. There is

    always an inherent risk in relying on the internet for authentic screenplays that is, for

    screenplay texts of films that have already been produced. For unproduced screenplays,

    on the other hand, the internet, may indeed be the future.

    If the screenplay has no public exhibition, neither does the common person, since

    the process of screenwriting is far more accessible than the process of filmmaking.

    Benjamin supposes that in terms of film, with the different methods of technical

    reproduction of a work of art, its fitness for exhibition increase[s] to such an extent that

    the quantitative shift between its two poles turn[s] into a qualitative transformation of

    its nature, but this is only true if one supposes that the aesthetic production begins with

    the director, and not the screenwriter (Benjamin 225). If aesthetic production begins

    with the former the director fitness for exhibition remains rooted in quantitative

    notions of marketing and economics. Yet, even when aesthetic production begins with

    the latter the screenwriter the qualitative still remains compromised, because, at

    present, only the formers work is mechanically reproduced frequently enough to meet

    with critical assessment whether quantitative or qualitative.

    The screenplay has much more potential than the film to exist independent of

    marketing pressures. The screenplay can thus have more freedom to be intrinsically

    aesthetic, because in and of itself, the screenplay can be created written, produced, and

    even published outside of far less commercial considerations than the film that

    inevitably will cost exponentially more to mechanically reproduce, distribute, and

    exhibit. Why then has the film arrived at literary analysis prior to its more literary form?

    Early films like Workers Leaving the Factory and LArroseur arrose (1895) did not have a

    screenplay, and early silent films like The Great Train Robbery (1903) and The Life of an

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    23/29

    Allen 22

    22

    American Fireman (1902) by definition lacked screenplays (Bordwell and Thompson 452-

    455). They merely had scripts brief descriptions of the action to be photographed with

    perhaps a note of captions to be cut in later. It was only after the advent of sound in

    1927 with The Jazz Singer , that screenplay became a viable term, being in fact a play,

    as in stage play, for the screen. Yet, as an aesthetic production, the screenplay does not

    become the equivalent of the unproduced film. Film existed before the screenplay. But

    practically, in the making of a film today, the screenplay must exist before the film, and

    therefore exist after it. Yes, there are tales of films that began before the script was

    finished, or scripts that were changed as production continued. But what of the

    screenplay that remains in the Poetic Genius of the screenwriter, that is not

    compromised by the tradition of filmmaking, which eventually must be considered

    separately from the screen text if the dimensions of cinema are to expand beyond the

    corporate multiplex?

    It is very probable that many screenplays of notable literary value will never be

    produced as films. Therefore, a vast amount of deserving literature will never receive

    the critical attention it is due. This is not to say that only unproduced screenplays can be

    evaluated critically. Even the produced screenplay can still be considered after its film

    production and utterly independent of it. While this process may seem improbable or

    difficult, as Polans treatment of Pulp Fiction suggests, it cannot be forgotten that this

    occurs as commonplace in terms of theater criticism, and its canonical assessment by the

    academy.

    Though both the stage play and the film are dramatic works intimately linked to

    commercialization, production, performance, and audience in terms of their ultimate

    aesthetic relation to either viewer or reader, many stage texts have been studied to the

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    24/29

    Allen 23

    23

    point of establishing firm roots within the academic and critical canon, independent of

    any of these production or commercial considerations. The converse is true with the

    screenplay. On the one hand, the literary canon positions the screenplay outside of

    literature because of its dependence on technology, via the mass-produced apparatus of

    cinema. On the other hand, the stage play has been privileged among literary history

    from Aristophanes to Shakespeare to August Wilson. However, at every historical point

    the stage play has relied on modes of production and technology. In fact, it could be

    argued that the stage play depends on technology even more so than the screenplay

    because no two stage performances are exact. The nuances of technology manifested in

    differences of production, lighting, venue, and budget rely heavily on technological

    constraints. For example, Broadways rendition of Jesus Christ Superstar would no doubt

    differ greatly from the production of a local high school in terms of technology, though

    the text both directors would be using might be identical. This technological difference

    holds true for stage texts that are produced over long periods of time, as well, because

    technology is constantly advancing, and these advances inevitably will play out in

    theatrical technique and presentation. Thus, technology and production actually inform

    the plays presentation to its audience more intensely since these factors play

    themselves out almost infinitely when considering the many nuances of multiple theater

    productions of a single text versus the exactness with which a cinema performance of a

    screenplay can be reproduced.

    The exact reproduction of screenplay performances facilitates a process that can

    separate the film script from its production because, unlike in theater, a clear, tangible

    distinction between the film production and the film script can be made and reproduced

    for consumption. In other words, this distinction would be the difference between the

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    25/29

    Allen 24

    24

    screenplay and the actual film. Because stage performances cannot be studied by those

    who are not initially present at the performance in any direct or specific way, the stage

    text rather than the production has been fetishized and studied as the privileged

    technology of study. Because film performances can be studied by those not initially

    present during a films theatrical release and because anyone who sees a film

    ultimately becomes its audience the screenplay possesses a unique relationship to its

    mode of production. Technology allows for the production of a screenplay, and

    therefore, the film itself, to be studied in specific ways that theater productions, because

    of their multivalent, subjective, temporal, and elusive natures cannot be. While these

    same adjectives may be applied to cinema, the difference is that when two critics discuss

    a film, they are discussing the same film in terms of the empirical experience of light

    and shadow and sound as it is recorded by strips of celluloid acetate, video, or digital

    disc. Unfortunately, it is this very access to the screenplays film production that has

    justified its exclusion from the literary canon in its more basic written form, the

    screenplay itself. However, by examining how this exclusion has occurred, a motion

    towards the revision of the literary canon can be made. In this way, just as critics have

    considered literature in terms of language, and theater in terms of Drama, etc., the

    screenplay, a hybrid of both, can in the future be analyzed by way of its own unique,

    aesthetic merits. Like the stage play, the screenplay can be dramatic both in the general

    sense, and in the more Aristotelian sense. Though in the contemporary, Drama has

    come to be regarded as a genre, or style of literature, Aristotle conceived it more as a

    necessary quality for the tragedy. Like the Aristotelian stage play, the screenplay too,

    has vividness of impression in reading as well as in representation, but unlike the

    stage play, the screenplay can be cinematic (Aristotle 59).

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    26/29

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    27/29

    Allen 26

    26

    Some directors have said that the film itself is the last draft of the screenplay.

    Other directors have mused that films are never completed, but only abandoned because

    a film can always be re-edited, changed, or tweaked, infinitely. If this is true, then the

    last draft of the screenplay is never truly completed, only abandoned by a particular

    director, or interpreter. But what happens if that screenplay falls into the hands of

    another? Whether they are merely reading the screenplay text, or intending to produce

    their own version of that screenplay, this dilemma lends credence to the notion of the

    screenplay as an aesthetic production.

    Pulp Fiction is a screenplay, an aesthetic work that is semi-canonized on its merits

    as a film as illustrated through Dana Polans British Film Institute project. The

    screenplay for this film has even been published in various editions, and yet when this

    work is considered critically, direct reference to the actual screenplay text remains

    minimal. This effectively demonstrates the exclusivity of the literary canon, even when

    both the film and screenplay are accessible and considered by many to be cinematic

    masterpieces.

    The publication of certain screenplays over others, already seems to be making

    some sort of move towards a kind of canonization. But the screenplay itself, as a style of

    literature poses canonical possibilities from which more innovative texts can be studied

    and created. Like the film, the screenplay too is cinematic. So why must a

    screenwriters text be produced as a film before it can be studied? The film is already a

    study of the screenplay a project of interpretation, taken on by the director. Why then

    are only directors backed by major studios, production companies, and big budgets, the

    only makers privileged enough to access the films screenplay text? Why not the

    intellectual? Why not the scholar, or the film student? Why not even the average

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    28/29

    Allen 27

    27

    moviegoer? Why must scripts be locked away in college libraries where IDs are

    demanded and collateral is expected? It is almost as if the screenplay has been guarded

    by Hollywood because they are aware of the genres intrinsic value as literature, as a

    true literary format, and as an aesthetic production.

    As Benjamin states, there is indeed no greater contrast than that of the stage

    play to a work of art that is completely subject to or, like the film, founded in,

    mechanical reproduction (Benjamin 230). Since the screenplay as a text somehow

    manages to split this difference, linking Drama and Literature in ways Oscar Wilde

    could only imagine, the screenplay proves to be the unique literary and textual

    negotiation of the greatest literary contrast. When the literary canon comes to accept

    this, then and only then, can the missing link of Literature move beyond the bill of the

    play.

  • 8/14/2019 Canonical Truth or Pulp Fiction: Tracing the Exclusion of the Screenplay from the Literary Canon

    29/29