Melville’s “Bartleby the Scrivener” (1853) is one of those tantalizing
stories that invite multiple fascinating interpretations:
Bartleby is an eccentric individualist who refuses to
conform to social norms. Society wins.
Bartleby is a mentally ill homeless man who becomes one of
society’s disposables.
Bartleby is H D Thoreau, passively resisting authority and
paying the price.
Bartleby represents all the victims of greedy capitalism.
Bartleby is a victim of the mindless, mechanical work of
industrial society.
Bartleby represents natural human rights (to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness?) in conflict with the property rights of
capitalist, industrial society.
Bartleby is a Christ-figure or, at least, “one of the least
of these” that Christians are commanded to treat as if they were Christ. His fate illustrates the incompatibility of
capitalist, industrial society and Christian values.
Bartleby is the trial sent by God to test the state of the
lawyer’s soul as one of the Elect or one of the damned.
Bartleby represents the dehumanization of those caught in
the capitalist machine.
Bartleby is a projection of the lawyer’s own dehumanization
and his powerlessness to save himself.
Bartleby represents the extreme exercise of free will,
allowing him complete freedom, though it leads to his death.
Bartleby represents the universal human condition of the
individual in conflict with society.
Well, some are more fascinating than others.
And what of the work that the office workers perform? A scrivener is a human Xerox machine,
literally copying documents by hand and then laboriously checking the copies for
accuracy as the lawyer reads the original aloud. This mechanical, mindless work is paralleled
by the predictable behavior of the workers, who themselves seem somehow
“programmed.” The elderly Turkey is
mild-mannered and productive in the morning but turns erratic, and error-prone
in the afternoon. The young Nippers, on
the other hand, is restless and nervous in the morning but settles down in the
afternoon. Does their robotic behavior
reflect the mind-numbing nature of industrial work under capitalism?
Into this Pavlovian world enters Bartleby, who starts out as
a reliable copier but refuses to participate in the checking of the documents,
simply replying “I prefer not to” when called to work by the lawyer. He then begins to reply in the same manner
when asked to run an errand. Eventually,
he refuses to work at all and simply stares at the window at the dark, blank
wall. Unlike the lawyer, who fits
comfortably into the world of Wall Street, Bartleby asserts his free will in
the extreme, using “passive resistance” to defy the lawyer and his world.
The lawyer, to his credit, tries every means of persuasion
to win Bartleby’s cooperation before finally firing him. Bartleby, however, refuses to leave the
premises. It seems he has been living
there all along. Rather than resort to
calling the police or forcibly removing Bartleby himself, the lawyer takes the
extreme measure of moving his office to another site. But, this action, similar perhaps to Pilate
washing his hands of final judgment on Jesus Christ, merely enables the lawyer
to avoid taking any responsibility for the man.
When the new occupant of the lawyer’s old office space shows up to
insist “you are responsible for the man you left there,” the lawyer, like Peter
denying Christ, responds, “the man you allude to is nothing to me…no relation
or apprentice of mine that you should hold me responsible for him.”
If these comparisons to Christ seem to be a bit of a
stretch, consider that, at one point when the lawyer is debating what to do
about Bartleby, he overhears a conversation, which he believes at first is
about his indecision but then realizes is actually about the mayoral election
being held that day. In Melville’s day,
“election” would have a religious as well as a political meaning. In the Calvinist theology in which Melville
was steeped (http://philosopedia.org/index.php/Herman_Melville)
one was predestined to be one of Elect (preordained by God for salvation) or
one of the damned. Is Bartleby a test of
the state of the lawyer’s soul? Is the
lawyer one of the Elect or is he damned?
According to Matthew 25: 31-42 Christ will return on Judgment Day and
determine who goes to heaven and who to hell based on whether one has treated
those in need as if they were Christ himself.
In the end the lawyer visits Bartleby in prison, where he is
found facing a “high wall” among “murderers and thieves.” Is it significant that Christ was crucified
between two thieves? Is it significant
that when the lawyer returns to find Bartleby dead he makes a reference to him
being at rest “With kings and counselors” (Job 3:14)?
For all the compassion that the lawyer feels toward
Bartleby, in the end he does not take responsibility for this “least of these”
(Matthew 25: 40). From a realistic
perspective, we might say that the lawyer went far beyond what was reasonable
to expect by not calling the police on Bartleby or throwing him out
forcibly. Yet, from a Christian
perspective, we might say the lawyer utterly failed to meet the test that
Christ set for salvation. Is Melville
questioning whether a capitalist society can also be a Christian society? Or is he questioning whether Christian ethics
is realistic and reasonable in the human realm?
If the lawyer, who seems to allow circumstances to determine
his actions, represents the Calvinist
belief in predestination (absence of free will), does Bartleby represent the
Transcendentalist belief in free will and individual responsibility? If so, do the two characters represent the
extremes to which the two positions can be taken? Is it fair to condemn the lawyer for failing
to meet Christ’s high standard for salvation?
Is it fair to glorify Bartleby for his (selfish?) insistence on
individual “preference”? Is Melville,
like Hawthorne (see previous posts Oct. 2012 & May 2013), using Puritan
Calvinism to critique romantic Transcendentalism and vice versa?
For that matter, is Bartleby truly a victim of capitalism or
society in general? Or is he a victim of
his own willfulness?
I find myself intrigued, though, by the idea of Bartleby as
a projection of the narrator’s own psyche.
To what extent has the narrator been dehumanized by his acquiescence to
his social and economic circumstances? To what extent is it dehumanizing to
deny the power of free will to individuals?
Does Bartleby represent the lawyer’s own dehumanization on one hand and
his repressed desire to rebel and assert himself on the other? If Bartleby is a fantastic version of the
lawyer’s own psyche, does he take such an extreme form because the lawyer
himself is so extremely passive, non-confrontational, and powerless?
In any case, the story raises profound questions regarding
social organization, material vs. spiritual well-being, religion, individualism,
ethics, and our responsibility to each other as fellow human beings.
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ReplyDeleteI cannot understand how are you capable of saying anything about Bartleby as being a victim of his own willfulness, only the fact of mentioning it is absurd. Bartleby is not a victim of his 'individual preference' as you call it, or the selfish insistence on it, but a victim of the capitalist society that is exploiting and dehumanizing him. One has to understand that within a capitalist society, class struggle is the most difficult challenge we pass through during our lives, and Bartleby, not only is he a working class man but also he has been fired. What can he do without a job in a capitalist society? Is he guilty about it? Is he guilty of being tired after millions of hours working? Is he guilty of not being as productive as intended by a capitalist master? Absolutely not. He is a victim of the capitalist society as well as all the working class people are. There are no free individuals in capitalist societies just because the bourgeoisie restrict the workers.
ReplyDeleteLawyer's dehumanization comes from the economic system in itself. If he is having great income, why on earth would he rebel against the hand that feeds him? It has no sense at all. What is more, I have to highlight very emphatically that the lawyer is NOT being passive in any moment. He choses to have the life that he lives. He choses to be a capitalist and to improve the system by his participation, so how can you say that the lawyer is 'so extremely passive, non-confrontational and powerless'? He is not passive, neither non-confrontational, neither powerless. Why? He is the one who creates the opposition between his profit, his interests and those of the working class, it is the bourgeoisie who creates it, not the working class which is the real part which is powerless in a capitalist system.
I can tell you feel strongly about your interpretation, as perhaps others do about theirs. How many literary critics does it take to change a light bulb? As many as there are interpretations of the instruction manual. I love that literature can be so ambiguous and open to a range of meanings. The interpretations that I respect, however, are the ones that are supported by direct references to the text or other factual evidence. And I have no problem respecting multiple interpretations of the same text.
Delete@imilan: you obviously didn't really get the point... Your interpretation is simply a marxist reading of the text, and not a particularly good one I might add, quite superficial and bland to be perfectly honest.
DeleteDon't get me wrong, I think that an anti-capitalist sentiment is very pervasive in the story, and probably also one of Melville's intended main theme's. I myself prefer to read it in that key.
However, to assume that Melville had one single issue in mind is simply not giving such genius enough credit, and to say that your reading is better or the 'right one' is downright ridiculous, and your argumentation is flawed (to say the least).
@Judy C. Foster: I though your reading was very interesting. I love your juxtaposition of Transcendentalism and Calvinism. Very well argued :)