Prometheus Chained in Sheffield yesterday |
Last
night in the open-air Greek theatre looming over the railway station in
Sheffield, the historic heart of the British steel industry, Prometheus was
chained to his crag as a punishment for supporting the advancement of the human race and daring
to speak truth to Zeus, the self-appointed new Dictator of the Universe.
The
production of Henry Stead's beautiful new version of the Aeschylean Prometheus
Bound was mounted by citizens of Sheffield and current and former Classics PhDs at
London, Oxford and the Open Universities, led by my own PhD students Lottie Parkyn and Matt Shipton. Lottie graduated from Birmingham University (see below) and Matt, who comes from Sheffield himself, is studying the suppression of the authentic voices of young people in Athenian drama. The production
was an inspiring example of what such young people can do for culture and community
in the 21st century if given even half a chance.
Abolitionist Prometheus & Heracles (1807) |
This great play was adopted in the late 18th and 19th centuries as the
manifesto of the campaign to abolish slavery. It forces its audiences to think about the
potential of humans to create the world they deserve as well as their
eternal vulnerability to sabotage by self-interested ploutocrats, politicians, careerists and "managers".
The
parallels between the crisis in the play and those afflicting international Higher Education are striking. At the University of Virginia, a heroic
President has been ousted for supporting the life of the mind, the culture of the State of Virginia, teachers and students against her
finance-fixated executive board. At Birmingham in England, a cabal of
middle-aged white men (and they are all men)--the Vice-Chancellor
David Eastwood, the Pro Vice-Chancellor and Ancient History Professor Michael Whitby, and a couple of other senior academics--proposes to carve up the available power, salaries and pensions between themselves, while
threatening their juniors with destitution.
Teresa Sullivan, ousted by ploutocrats |
The new gods of the Birmingham Olympus have not yet exiled their victims to
aeons of torture in the Caucasus, but they have made it clear that if these terrified young staff
break their "Confidentiality Agreements" they will only worsen their own plight. Just like the whole
jobless, impoverished international generation born since about 1975, the lecturers are being brutally excluded from any
opportunity to participate fully in the institutional dimension of the human
project.
But
Prometheus knew that Zeus was not invulnerable. His gift of fire enabled humans
to arm themselves against poverty, ignorance, joylessness and oppression. The
technology of the Internet has now given the world powerful new ways in which
to unite in support of a fairer and more humane future, as the use of social
networks in major revolutions has resoundingly shown.
David Oyelowo in Aquila Theatre's Prometheus |
So did the very much smaller case of the FaceBook
group Save Classics at Royal Holloway, which is to close next Thursday (June 28th 2012) exactly a year after it opened, having
achieved its specific goals. It is being replaced by the new group ClassicsInternational (join if you haven't already: non-Classicists are hugely welcome). Prometheus knows things that Zeus
does not, and can communicate via the Internet
with allies. So tyrants of the academic world--you have been notified!
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