Trickster as Figure and Force:
Katrien Vloeberghs, Antwerp
German nineteenth century children's literature tends to represent an intact and harmonious world in which conflict situations are avoided. The disobedient child embodies a potential disturbance and children's literature affirms proper behaviour and attitude toward authority. This appears not to hold true as far as the picture-books by Heinrich Hoffmann and Wilhelm Busch are concerned. Their complexity may explain their enduring success. Busch's famous stories Max und Moritz, Fipps der Affe and Eispeter and Hoffmann's Struwwelpeter provide a moral agreement. Hoffmann's and Busch's tales can be read as typical examples of 'intimidation-stories': disobedient children experience a cruel but justified punishment. But a closer analysis shows that this pattern functions primarily as a protective layer hiding a different story. Subliminally, Busch's and Hoffmann's tales hide a disorienting and even subversive attitude. Of the many levels on which such an alternative meaning can be detected, two are discussed in this analysis: the first concerns the action and the characterization of the protagonists, the second the reliability of the narrating instance.
It is generally acknowledged that German nineteenth
century children’s literature represents an intact and harmonious world in
which conflict situations, particularly those involving parental authority,
are avoided. Within the parental rule of law, the disobedient child embodies
a potential disturbance. ‘Der verkommene Sohn, die mißratene Tochter, sie
verkörpern in der Ordnung der Eltern [...] ein Stück elementarer Un-Ordnung
oder Gegen-Ordnung’ (von Mattt 1995: 23). In an attempt to control this danger,
enlightened pedagogics and the corresponding children’s literature insistently
affirm the norms concerning proper behaviour and attitude toward authority.
This model however does not seem entirely adequate where the picture-books by Heinrich Hoffmann and Wilhelm Busch are concerned. Their greater complexity may explain why they were not only internationally successful during their author’s lifetime but are still widely read today. A closer look at Hoffmann’s Struwwelpeter and Busch’s Max und Moritz, Fipps der Affe and Eispeter reveals their ambivalent messages and multiple addressees. Existing interpretations which have detected elements distinguishing Busch’s and Hoffmann’s stories from the traditional German nineteenth century children’s literature, have so far only discovered selected fragments that do not seem to fit a traditional moral code, which for the rest remains intact. Also, these readings have reintegrated those foreign elements into an equally moralizing system.[1] I want to show that these texts’ disruptions are located right within and not next to their repressing and confining messages and that a subversive and irrecuperable subtext underlies them as a whole.
The obvious content of these stories provides author
and reader with a moral agreement and thereby assures the educator of their
pedagogic legitimacy. ‘Ach, was muß man oft von bösen / Kindern hören oder
lesen! / Wie zum Beispiel hier von diesen, / Welche Max und Moritz hießen.’
Hoffmann’s and Busch’s tales can be read as traditional and typical examples
of ‘intimidation-stories’: Disobedient children experience a cruel but justified
punishment. Playing with matches leads to death by fire, refusing to eat your
soup to fatal starvation and sucking your thumb to eventually losing it. After
the rebels have been punished, order is restored. The lesson seems straightforward
enough, but a closer analysis shows that this pattern functions primarily
as a protective layer hiding a different story.
Subliminally, Busch’s and Hoffmann’s tales hide a disorienting
and even subversive attitude. Of the many levels on which such an alternative
meaning can be detected, I will discuss two: the first concerns the action
and the characterization of the protagonists, the second the reliability of
the narrator. On one level, the protagonists continuously demonstrate their
untiring flexibility, anarchic vitality and an archaic, triumphant resistance
against instrumentalization and domestication. The motivations of their actions
prove to be essentially free of egotistic interest and are clearly invested
with the sympathy of the authors for joyful ‘Übermut’, an excess of untamed
energy. On a second level, the stern and moralizing narrator is robbed of
his authority. His language and his reasoning are riddled with false conclusions,
logical contradictions and references to conflicting paradigms.
Failure of instrumentalization
Busch’s famous ‘Diogenes-story’ ends with the pompously
uttered sentence: ‘Das kommt von das’. The statement pretends that there is
a natural, almost fateful balance between cause and consequence, between the
offence against order and its re-establishmentthrough punishment. In using
a crooked syntax however, Busch ironically discloses the equally crooked reasoning
of the moralizing instance. This move is exemplified inone of the strategies
used by Hoffmann and Busch to undermine the credibility claimed by traditional
‘intimidation-stories’. The outcome in Struwwelpeter,
in Max und Moritz, Fipps der Affe and Eispeter shows a striking gap between the degree of the crime and
that of the punishment, between relatively harmless action and disproportionate
reaction. The list of punishments occurring in these stories is quite impressive:
protagonists – children and a monkey – are beaten up, stung, bitten and scratched,
nearly drowned, blown away, mutilated by giant scissors, publicly exposed,
ridiculed, burned, starved, shot, baked in a white hot baking-oven, ground,
frozen, defrosted and potted in a barrel.
Some of these punishments are rationally explainable,
others are not. It is natural that enlightenment pedagogics should use warnings
that work with causality and proportionality, but these somehow seem to be
considered insufficient, since many of the punishments also have a mythical,
irrational dimension. Next to logical consequences of uncautious or wild actions
we witness the staging of elementary forces, legendary figures and impossible
metamorphoses. This need to invoke the uncanny and put the punishments into
the hands of supernatural forces not only shows a deficit of rational pedagogics
but relieves the forces of authority of their personal responsibility. Ultimately,
both the rational and the mythical system of intimidation fail.
Endeavours to master the archaic forces and engage them
in the pedagogical project are bound to fail by their very nature. Where a
boy is ‘liquified’ – which has the same root as liquidated – and where the
hare ends up shooting the hunter, where a dissolution of categories and structures
occurs, the uncanny is felt in its overwhelming and disruptive presence. In
‘Struwwelpeter’ a mythical appearance is staged twice. Both Saint-Niklas with
the giant ink stand and the ‘great, long, red-legg’d scissorman’ belong to
precisely that sphere of infant phantasy which enlightened pedagogues untiringly
combat. Their efforts to avert the danger of untamed elements penetrating
into orderly, everyday life, result in a reversal of their initial aim. In
spite of naughty Konrad’s painfully executed symbolic castration in Hoffmann’s
‘Daumenlutscher’, the intended result, his eventual socialization, is not
explicitely achieved. The static and final character of the last stanza rather
suggests the contrary: ‘Ohne Daumen steht er dort, / die sind alle beide fort.’
It is unlikely that Konrad will henceforth become a useful member of society.
Implicitly we are being told that natural or mythical forces cannot be instrumentalized
for the sake of socialization, domestication or adaptation: Any effort to
master these archaic elements and direct their effects will result in the
emergence of an autonomous dynamic counterforce.
Tricksteresque protagonists
It is precisely this ungraspable quality which reveals
the affinity of Busch’s and Hoffmann’s protagonists with archaic natural forces.
They link up with different literary traditions displaying a fundamental and
archaic anarchism. The iconography of the trickster and of other mythical
figures such as the petrifying and petrified Medusa on the one hand and the
liquifying and liquified Undine on the other help to situate these protagonists
in a realm immune against enlightened moralizing.
The representation of these figures have affinities
with various motifs related to the trickster, the amoral troublemaker who
intrudes into the suffocating atmosphere of apparently harmonious bourgeois
home. Rebelling against any kind of fixed system, against order and regulation,
the trickster as archetype embodies dynamic and flexible thinking. As a consequence
he / she is neither bound to an unchangeable appearance nor to a stable identity.
He / she also ‘invites us to take pleasure
in the confusion of boundaries, in the fragmentation and fraying of the edges
and of the self’(Bordo 1990: 144). I quote from the introduction to the adventures
of Busch’s roguish monkey called Fipps: ‘Selten zeigt er sich beständig’ or
else ‘So ist der Schlechte, daß er immer was anderes möchte’. The changing
rhythm with which Philipp’s fidgeting is described, – ‘Er gaukelt / und schaukelt
/ er trappelt / und zappelt’ – discloses hidden delight and excitement and
invites the reader to feel the same.
The trickster is the other of the cultural hero(see
Lenk 1983: 45-47). Heroes consciously protest against existing life circumstances
or power structures. They behave constructively and purposefully in order
to contribute to a better and fairer world. The trickster is not interested
in improving conditions, not for others but certainly not for himself. He
is neither single-minded, nor is he effective or systematic.[2]
Busch’s protagonist Fipps shows precisely those
characteristics: He is not a Robin Hood protecting vulnerable members of society
– but then why is he saving baby Elise from death by fire? Why is he peacefully
playing music with cat and dog, and in the next picture grasping little Dümmel’s
slice of bread or toppling over the old hobbling tramp? Fipps, like the other
protagonists, is not immoral, but amoral.
Victorious self-destruction
Looking at Hoffmann’s and Busch’s protagonists as embodiments
of anarchic forces enables the reader to consider their fate not as an intimidating,
violent perishing – the viewpoint held by the current interpretations – but
as a self-destructive victory. Tricksteresque beings in their multiple and
flexible personalities impersonate a subversive anarchy able to break up established
‘Fremdbestimmungen’, structures and determinations imposed by an external
authority. In offending the laws of physics, the children and animals in these
picture-books undermine the smooth course of natural events. Peter von Matt,
in another context, distinguishes two categories of subversive strategies
involving transformations of physical states of aggregation. All the possibilities
he mentions happen to be found in at least one of the stories mentioned above.
‘Dem Flüssigen, Fliegenden, Brennenden, Wachsenden steht das Gefrorene, Gelähmte,
Erlöschte, Gestockte gegenüber’(1989: 221). Von Matt’s first category applies
not only to such a mythical figure as Undine, but also to her unlikely relatives,
burning Paulinchen, flying Robert, melting Peter, fidgetty Philipp: their
selves too dissolve in the environment. His second category, which has overtones
of the Medusa-iconography, could also describe the static appearance of Struwwelpeter,
of starving Kaspar, ground Max and Moritz and shot Fipps.
All these little mischief-makers burst with energy,
which is either poured out to blast cramped bourgeois bodies in dressing gowns
and night caps orispiled up and kept inside to sabotage the predictable course
of events, like growing up. Their strategies can be situated on the axis of
dynamism. They are located on the opposite poles of extreme kinetic energy
on the one hand and of extreme static energy on the other hand. The characteristic
common to both the dynamic and the static pole, is the negative relation they
have to compromise, moderationand mediocrity.
Their excessive energy provides the protagonists with
the power to resist any attempt to socialize them. Eispeter falls into icy
water, the giant ice block he has become is thawn near the stove. Subsequently,
one expects him to gain an insight into his incautious behaviour and to form
thewise resolution never to be disobedient again. Eispeter however is not
willing to reintegrate into the existing order and prefers to changehis state
of aggregation by transforming into a thick liquid which is then collected
as pulp in a barrel. It is interesting to notice that ‘liquid’ has two meanings,
which both apply to Eispeter’s existence and to the trickster-motif. ‘Liquid’
is both an adjective referring to a state of aggregation and
the antonym to anything steady and stable. The failing attempt to shape a
child according to laws that are considered natural by the parental generation,
is demonstrated graphically – literally pulp fiction.
With one athletic swing, Fipps smashes the mirror into the tailor’s face – ‘Der Spiegel klirrt, die Hand erlahmt; / Der Meister Krüll ist eingerahmt’. Is it too far-fetched to see in the motifs both of the mirror and of the paralysis an ironic echo of the Medusa-topos? The literary topos of the mirror moreover refers to the process of individuation, of distinction between object and subject. The broken mirror then becomes a metaphor for Fipp’s refusal of becoming an autonomous self.[3] No wonder: fixing the boundaries of the self and delimitating them from the environment would mean the end of a subversive existence. Medusa’s petrifying power gets lost when she is forced to look into the mirror. Max and Moritz’ elimination through bruising millstones can, from this perspective, be considered the ultimate refusal to be recognizable and as a consequence to be seizable. ‘Hier kann man sie noch erblicken (...) doch sogleich verzehret sie Meister Müllers Federvieh’. In spite of the radical outcome of these stories, the protagonists keep their indestructible character(cf. Spinks 1991: 185).
The narrator as trickster
The introductions to Hoffmann’s and Busch’s stories
taken into consideration here present the storyteller explicitly. This mode
implies the possibility of a discrepancy between the author’s unspoken point
of view and the comments of the storyteller in narrating the events. It is
remarkable how often the narrator falls into contradictory reasoning. He draws
absurd or meaningless conclusions, presumes causality between non-related
observations, particularly in those scenes that do not simply tell but also
evaluate the events, and repeatedly argues with conflicting paradigms.
An example of pseudo-logical reasoning can be found
in the three final stanzas of Max and Moritz’s adventures, the place where
traditionally a moralizing judgment is expected. Indeed, each one of Max and
Moritz’s victims comments upon the boys’ well-deserved punishment. But there
are two unexplained exceptions. It is surprising that neither the farmer,
who ordered the miller to grind the children, nor the miller, who killed them,
have their say. ‘Doch der brave Bauersmann / Dachte: Wat geiht meck dat an!’
It is evident, that the farmer is the last person to have a right to pretend
‘what’s that to me?’This statement of indifference turns against the farmer
himself: At the end he cares so little that his murderous punishment doesn’t
seem to be motivated by any lesson, but by pure sadism. The silence of the
miller, the executor of the farmer’s verdict, confirms this gratuitous cruelty:
the one who finally kills the children was not even one of their victims.
One of the factors undermining the narrator’s reliability
is the vocabulary in which he describes the naughty actions of the little
rascals. He repeatedly introduces precisely those words which are commonly
used for praise by the representatives of the bourgeois order: As if inhabited
by the work ethics propagated by its authorities, Max und Moritz are described
as diligent craftsmen, as ‘gar nicht träge’. They saw a fissure in the bridge,
which will cause the fall of Schneider Böck. The narrator also uses a vocabulary belonging to
conflicting paradigms, a heterogenous language which causes a clash
between different value systems. The pious ‘Herr Lehrer Lämpel’, whose name
indicates that he is nothing but a weak reflection of the Enlightenment, not
only worships Gott every day with organ music in the church, but is also ‘Von
dem Tobak ein Verehrer’. Furthermore, a discourse of utility and profit is
mixed up with a vocabulary of religion or ethics. Widow Bolte thinks it for
the best ‘ganz im stillen und in Ehren / gut gebraten zu verzehren’.
Busch even makes clashing words rhyme to cover the hidden contradiction. Rhyming
can be seen as the protective layer disguising the hidden discordant note
in a harmonizing way. Reconciling these two incommensurable words – ‘Ehren’
and ‘verzehren’ – Busch not only criticizes the bourgeois urge to avoid and
gloss over conflicts artificially. He also unmasks mere utility as the standard
of all bourgeois values. In Hoffmann’s ‘Fidgetty Philipp’ utilitarian values
are undermined in the false emphasis on the consequence of the boy’s behaviour.
‘Und die Eltern stehn dabei. / Beide sind gar zornig sehr, / haben nichts
zu essen mehr.’ Would they really have found nothing else in their pantry?In
any case they seem hardly concerned that their son could have a broken neck.
The ridicule of Herr Lämpel and the pathetic call for empathy for the parents
seem to cast a welcome shadow on the narrator and the grey and cramped ‘Moral
dieser ganzen Geschicht’.
Having written books resisting pedagogic instrumentalisation,
Hoffmann and Busch act as tricksters themselves. Their figures, drawings and
verses have entered public lore but have barely participated in the taming
of unruly youngsters. Their actual moralizing impactmay have varied over the
years. Their undeniableachievement
is their indestructibility – a tricksteresque capacity if any.
References
Bonati, Peter
(1988) Zum Spielcharakter in Buschs Bildergeschichten. In: Vogt, Michael (Ed.)
(1988) Die boshafte Heiterkeit des
Wilhelm Busch. Bielefeld: Aisthesis Verlag.
Bordo, Susan
(1990) Feminism, Postmodernism and Gender Scepticism. In: Nicholson (1990).
Busch, Wilhelm
(1960) Die schönsten Bildergeschichten
für die Jugend. Munich: Südwest Verlag.
Hoffmann,
Heinrich (cited from 1999 edition) Der
Struwwelpeter, oder: lustige Geschichten und drollige Bilder für Kinder von 3
bis 6 Jahren, pictures and excerpts from Gondrom Verlag: Bindlach.
Kaminsky,
Winfred (1992) Antizipation und
Erinnerung. Studien zur Kinder- und Jugendliteratur in pädagogischer Absicht.
Stuttgart: M und P Verlag für Wissenschaft und Forschung.
Könneker,
Marie-Luise (1977) Dr. Heinrich Hoffmanns
‘Struwwelpeter’. Stuttgart: Metzler Verlag. In this study, the
‘disturbances’ amidst the official moralizing message are recuperated in
different ways. A strong example is Könneker’s psychoanalytical interpretation
in which the disruptive textual elements have a sublimating effect on the
reader for cathartic purposes.
Lenk,
Elizabeth (1983) Die unbewußte
Gesellschaft. Munich: Matthes und Seitz Verlag.
Nicholson,
Linda (ed.) (1990) Feminism/Postmodernism. London: Routledge.
Pape, Walter
(1988) Zwar man erzeugt viele Kinder’ – Das Vaterbild bei Wilhelm Busch. In:
Vogt (1988: 153-182).
Spinks, C.W. (1991) Semiosis, Marginal Signs and Trickster. A Dagger of the Mind, Houndmills
a.o.: MacMillan.
Von Matt, Peter
(1989) Liebesverrat: Die Treulosen in der
Literatur. Munich, Vienna: Carl Hanser.
Von Matt, Peter
(1995) Verkommene Söhne, mißratene Töchter
– Familiendesaster in der Literatur. Munich, Vienna: Carl Hanser Verlag.
Vogt, Michael (ed.) (1988) Die boshafte Heiterkeit des Wilhelm
Busch. Bielefeld: Aisthesis Verlag.
Biodata
Katrien Vloeberghs is completing her doctoral dissertation within the Department of Germanic Languages and Literary Criticism at the University of Antwerp in Belgium, where she teaches courses on Jugendliteratur. Her research is into the dislocation of the child motif in recent children’s and youth literature, and she has published a number of articles on aspects of Jugendliteratur ranging from multiculturalism in contemporary youth literature, the legacy of the Bildungsroman in specific genres in children’s literature today to the representation of the Holocaust.
[1] Cf. Könneker (1977), Kaminsky (1992) and Pape (1988:
153-182) In these studies critics recuperate the ‘disturbances’ amidst the
official moralizing message in different ways. A strong example is Könneker’s
psychoanalytical interpretation in which the disruptive textual elements
have a sublimating effect on the reader for cathartic purposes.
[2] ‘Auch wenn in den Streichen von Fipps, [...] und anderen
Tätern egoistische Motive mitschwingen, so werden sie im Augenblicke des
Triumphs abgeworfen’. From Bonati 1988: 86.
[3] Bonati describes the protagonists as ‘Menschen [...]
in einem Zustand vor der Individualität’ (1988: 89).