The
stories we tell, whether fictional or “real,” are adaptations in social
evolution. That is their function, and our brains have evolved to crave them. A
people, or a person, without stories is without a framework of life and without
hope.
Stories
are experiments in which we test hypotheses about how to live in a world of
limitations and conflicts. In addition, I believe that all stories are just one
story, the story of love, which is always costly. Stories are not mere
entertainment. They are the way we members of the primate species Homo sapiens live in the world.
As
such, stories (whether fictional or not) must weave together plots that provide
some sense of cause and effect (without which the world is meaningless) and
offer some hope for going forward. Reality may, in fact, be unmitigated
depression and hopelessness, but stories should not be, for stories are our way
of coping with hopelessness and maybe overcoming it.
These
are my thoughts after seeing a movie many of you have seen and all of you have
heard about, Twelve Years a Slave. It
is the story of a free black man living in New York, Solomon Northup, who was
kidnapped and sold into slavery in Georgia. Such kidnappings happened hundreds
of times, and Northup was one of the few people to ever escape from this
situation. For almost the entire two hours, I felt totally asphyxiated with
depression. Nearly every person and event in the movie was the picture of
hopelessness. Every time it looked like there might, just might, be a flicker
of hope, it was dashed. For example, Northup realized that he might be able to
use blackberry juice to make ink in order to write a letter to tell his friends
where he was so they could rescue him. But his hopes were crushed by the
treachery of the white man whom he trusted. The slaves were subjected to every
imaginable indignity and suffering, and some that I had previously (despite my
fertile writer’s imagination) never imagined, such as when the clinically crazy
plantation mater made his slaves act out ballroom dances so that he could
pretend that he had a social life. Oh, it’s all true; slave owners did not
treat their slaves as property, to be managed wisely, but would inflict
suffering on them even though it entailed economic loss. The principal demon of
the story personally beat his most productive slave nearly to death—a process
shown in full graphic detail. Every possible hopelessness was depicted, such as
Northup crushing his beloved violin.
At
the end, I felt sick for being mostly white, and as if the suffering of my
Native American ancestors counted for nothing. But there were even blacks in
this movie who were cruel. This movie made me feel filthy for being human. It’s
enough to make you wish we would just go extinct.
This
is not what a story is supposed to do. If Twelve
Years a Slave were fiction, it would be totally unacceptable; its only
saving grace is that this story actually happened.
But
the producers of this movie made their story even worse than the reality.
According to historical records, Northup’s white friends back in New York kept
trying to locate and rescue him. Now this would have conferred a plot line of
hope had it been included in the movie. But in the movie, the rescue was
nothing but random good luck, when a random Canadian (Brad Pitt) happened to randomly
pass through and take Northup’s message back to his white friends in New York.
What
is the message of this story? That all humans are depraved? Or is it that we
should, like Solomon Northup, persist in our circumstances no matter what they
are just in case a one-in-a-thousand random rescue comes along? Neither of
these messages offers any hope.
A
story, in order to fulfill its evolutionary function, should offer a reason for
hope, not just random good luck at the end. In this sense, the movie almost
reminded me of the P.D.Q. Bach opera (by the humorist Peter Schickele) in which
all the characters died at the end then got up and started singing “Happy
ending, happy ending…” The producers of Twelve
Years a Slave excised every possible element of hope, even the one that
really happened.
The
movie was very well done, and deserved the acclaim it received. My review is
from the viewpoint of a scientist who sees stories as an evolutionary
adaptation, and who also writes fiction. As a matter of fact, I finished
writing a novel only two hours before seeing this movie.
I
will mention one valuable insight from this movie. The plantation masters
forced the slaves to listen to Biblical passages about how servants should be
submissive to their masters. Certainly, in many if not most cases, religion has
been used and continues to be used as a tool of oppression. It does not have to
be this way. But religion in the hands of the rich and powerful is nearly
always oppressive, itself a form of slavery. Once in a while, religion provides
a message of liberation.
The
contrast with another famous slave movie, Amistad,
could not be greater. Amistad, like Twelve Years a Slave, was based on a
real event. But Amistad had a message
of hope woven through it. If, in fact, it could be shown that the captives on
the ship Amistad were part of an illegal (as opposed to legal) slave operation,
there was the real chance that they might be freed by the American court system.
Eventually, they were. And it was not random luck that freed them, but the
persistent efforts of an old and retired John Quincy Adams. Amistad inspired me. Twelve Years a Slave just made me just
want to crawl in a hole.
Why
did human language and human intelligence evolve? Nobody knows. But I’ll bet
one of the first uses to which either was put was to offer the tribes that
developed these abilities a sense (even if it is a delusion) of hope that kept
them going despite desperate circumstances and eventually made them prevail. We
are the descendants of the people who told stories of hope, not those who
wallowed in depression.
I also posted this essay on my evolution blog, but did not include the paragraph about religion therein.