.. STUDENTS IN REVOLUTION: Experimentation with Traditio Make This Shakespearean Festival the Fulfillment of a Dramatic Dr By ROBERT ROSS N MAY AND JUNE of 1960 thousands of Japanese students surrounded the Diet buildings in Tokyo chanting, from an ancient folk-ritual, "Wasshoi! Was- shoi!" They filled the streets for days, protesting the United States-Japan Mu- tual Security Pact and the proposed Eisenhower trip. They caused one of the most severe international crises of post World War II Japan. This summer, without publicity, without fanfare, some Sengalese students in Dakar" plotted ways to overthrow their president, Leopold Senghor. Senghor, they would probably say,. is "a tool of the colonial- ists," and Senegal is being held in the grips of "neo-colonialism." Further north, across the Sahara, the Algerian nationalists are in their seventh year of bitter struggle for independence. In their army will be found boys, young girls, old men, anyone who will bear a rifle for the FLN. And overseas in countries of various political leanings, Algerian students study with one purpose in mind - to bring knowledge to an independent and sov- ereign goverment of Algerians. In Latin America the power of the often misunderstood shout, "Cuba, si, Yanqui, no!" is felt at all the Congresses of the national unions of students. There is a genuine popular front structure, in Peru, and in Brazil, where coalitions of "Fidel- istas," Communists, and left socialists have captured the student unions. These students, at the slightest provo- cation, launch into tirades about the reactionary United States which is re- sponsible for all of their country's prob- lems. They see the "imperialist colossus" as the reactionary force in the world. THESE STUDENTS are part of a world- wide revolution. There is no use in dividing that revolution into anti-West or pro-Soviet slogans. As Senator Gale Mc- Gee of Wyoming said on the floor of the Senate:. ... .there are great movements and great changes which would take place even if there were not a Com- munist nor a Russian on earth . . ." The social ferment that is sweeping the underdeveloped nations of the world, and which is having its effect in the Western nations as well, frequently finds the stu- dent population in the vanguard of action. The examples of Japan, Algeria, West Africa, and Latin America are not inclu- sive. In Korea Syngman Rhee was over- thrown by what started as a student dem- onstration. In Turkey Menderes was over- thrown with help from students and intellectuals. Batista of Cuba was forced into flight by a combination of students and peasants, and Fidel Castro now faces underground activity by students of the Revolutionary Student Directorate. Iran- ian students have been threatening revo- lution against the Shah for several years. In protests, demonstrations, riots, and From Algeria to Brazil revolutions students have been exerting their demands for a better world. This is often due to unique factors of the culture in which they live, but there are several common demoninators amongst them. * * 1 IN JAPAN the Zengakuren-the All- Japan Federation of Self - Governing Student Autonomies - an activist, ex- tremely left wing union of students. It played a major role in the Tokyo riots of May and June, 1960. The Zengakuren is the most left-wing student organization of its size in the world. Its leaders think Mao is too conservative on the imperialism issue; he does too much talking for them. They think the Soviet Union has sold out because of its peaceful coexistence line. In fact, the Zengakuren leaders have been expelled from the Japanese Com- munist Party as extremists; they in turn call the party and its sympathizers within the Zengakuren might-wing opportunists and deviationists. They consider their Marxism-Leninism to be absolutely unim- peachable. The doctrinal purity that is almost an obsession with the Zengakuren leaders puts them in a tradition of revolutionaries that includes students all over the world. These people are more than purists; they are puritans. The purity of their doctrine is more important to them than its popu- larity. The extremism of the younger leaders have led the old Zengakuren leaders to a great deal of concern about a trend to- ward nihilism. When asked what they wish to do when they graduate, one of the younger leaders of the Zengakuren said, "I want to be a professional revolution- ary." A former Secretary-General of the group declared, "To deny completely is to create." TheZengakuren was originally inter- ested in economic issues that affected the students of Japan. In the last few years their concern has become almost exclu- sively for peace and disarmament. It is the violence of their demonstrations which creates a tension with their aims, THE ZENGAKUREN demonstrations against the Security Pact appealed to a generally pacifist stream of opinion among the young people of Japan. The riots of May and June 1960 were not so much anti-American as they were anti- Militarist. These students are resolved not to see the leaders of Japan launch their nation on another set of imperialist ad- ventures, and this is what they fear from the leadership of the highly conservative Liberal Democratic Party. The puritanical temper that the Zenga- kuren leaders demonstrate is one thing that we can understand about them in relation to other revolutionary young people. But there is another. They are deeply committed to a sense of participa- tion in the decision-making of their na- tion. In the Toyko riots the Zengakuren led a mass movement that the largest of its kind in modern Japan. Although it defied the decision of a majority of the legally elected Parliament, some people have said that the demonstrations strengthened rather than weakened democracy in Japan. By bringing intellectuals, students, and workers together in social protest, the Zengakuren seriously questioned the ex- isting authority. But in Japan tradition pulls one away from this kind of action. Acceptance of authority, in fact,;has been cited as one of the cultural traits that democracy would have a hard time over- coming in Japan., In this light, the wide participation in the Security Pact protest was an advance in participation, and therefore, democracy, in the political life of the Japanese people. Whatever the judgements of the Zenga- kuren are, one thing must be recognized. It is the acknowledged leadership of the Japanese student community. Participa- tion in it is low, and agreement with it i certainly not high, but for all intents and purposes it is the voice of the Japanese student. And it doesn't like the United States government, the United States policies, the United States National Stu- dent Association, and especially not the United States bombs. Students Are Leading The World's Revolutions Perhaps Mr. Irving saw beyondthe im- mediate personal benefits, and realized that this cold, somber work could pre- sent severe problems. The play requires an enormous cast, and yet there are no morethan seven or eight roles of any importance. The ma- nipulation of large angry crowds calls for the utmost skill, and they are are handled poorly, and without imagination, the meaning of the play is hopelessly muddled. Director Michael Langham anticipat- ed these problems, and solved them with a great deal of skill and ingenuity. He ob- viously took great pains to make each of the crowd a believable indi- vidual, with definite characteristics and goals. At the head of this surly mob, he placed one of the old reliables of the act- ing company, Max Helpmann. Putting a strong actor in with a crowd has a remarkable effect, not only on the other members of the group, but on the total impact the crowd makes in each scene. With a strong mob of citizens, the character of Coriolanus makes much more sense, for his battle is essentially with these people for whom he holds nothing but contempt. Although he regards them as unworthy of his attention, he has no desire to rule them, thus it is hard to make Coriolanus the complete tyrant. He is content 'to serve under an older general, and his sense of military duty is closely allied with the sense of filial duty. The sense of filial duty is going to prove his down- fall, but for Coriolanus, it is the inevitable end and the only way. Paul Scofield in his North American. debut brings to the role of Coriolanus the surliness of attack, and the virility which The Stratford theatre is specially designed to handle the unus lavish productions of the company. the part demands. Coriolanus is a man given to frequent outbursts, but Mr. Sco- field never taxes our sensibilities with un- controlled raging. He plays these high intensity scenes forcefully, but never al- lows the expression to exceed the emo- tion. Putting the play into a Napoleonic framework proved to be a very successful interpretation. This is a period of history generally associated with political unrest, and the dangers inherent in a dissatisfied mob. And after all, this is the essence of Corialanus. A mob can be tricked and de- American students in the South effect their own kind of revolution. MOVING TO French - speaking West Africa, the context of student action 1 is different. In Senegal, as in most of French West Africa, the students are not part of1 protests that are only occasionally effec- tive; they are part of movements that have gained independence. They are now the revolutionary elites of a government constructing a new nation. They are steeped in the reality of building a nation. Within the student community of West Africa, Marxist thought has had profound influence. Perhaps this is the case because of the great interest and sympathy the French Communist Party showed for the colonial peoples in the Thirties and For- ties. In that period the organization ofj African trade unions was extremely active1 in the CGT-the Communist Union of France. The leaders of these unions, like Tour6e of Guinea, have become leaders of their countries; and though they are not Com- munists, and not controlled by the party line, they analyze world conditions and movement in Marxist terms. This current1 of intellectual Marxism is part of the student tradition too. The radicalism of French-speaking African students is of two types, and two1 expressions. One is the extreme, almost irrational Marxist revolutionary -doctrine of the FEANF-the Federation of African Students in France. These are students' who are part of a tradition of Paris intel- lectuals, who see themselves in the French image of the "young intellectual workers" It is a tradition which promotes an asser- tive,-self-righteous sense of independence. The FEANF has criticized every ruler in Africa but Lumumba, Toure, and Nkrumah for being stooges of the im- perialists. Their language is always ex- treme, their sentiments always explosive. They belong to the International Union of Students, the Communist controlled international student structure, and re- fuse to take part in the International Student Conference (the organization in which the Western nations, and most others, take part). The other student group of French- speaking ,West Africans is the General Union of West African students (UG- EAO).'This student union is based at the University of D~kar which 'also serves all of former French West Africa. The stu- dents of UGEAO tend to think of the FEANF people as too abstract, too talky, removed from the actual work of national reconstruction. They are just as radical in the organization of society that they de- sire, but more concrete in their actions. They tend to be more reasonable people to talk to, if you happen to be an Ameri- can; in fact, the difference between the groups seems to be_ that UGEAO people will talk to Americans. ALL OVER AFRICA the name of Patrice Lumumba sparks emotional reactions of an anti-Belgian, anti-American, anti- West nature. The Lumumbists represent to students aggressive, even belligerent independence that assures them- that their leaders are not collaborating with their former rulers. Paradoxically, mixed in with some of the most intensely nationalistic senti- ments in the world is the concept of "pan- africanisme." A student union, like the- one which unites the students in Dakar will rail against the Peace Corps as a neo-colonialist plot, but will swear its loyalty to Pan-Africanism. Unfortunately, the longer African unity is delayed, the harder the unity of at least former French West Africa and Ghana will be to achieve. A paper by David Apter pointed out that the needs of socialism (which is the prevailing preference for economic. or- ganization), and the demands of national- ism will build strong national barriers to eventual unification. But the ideal is. alive. BACK ACROSS THE SAHARA are the Algerian students, a group with dif- ferent ideas, and a different struggle. The Algerian students consider themselves part of the fight for Algerian indepen- dence, Scattered all over the world in various universities, the Algerians main- tai contact with the FLN and the Pro- visional government through their na- tional union of students Union Generale des Etudiants Musulmans-Algerie (UG- EMA). In each country in which they study, Algerian students compose sections of UGEMA. They try to meet with each ROBERT ROSS, a political sci- ence major, attended the National Student Association's International Student Relations Seminar last summer. ceived, it can be approached through reason or emotion, but those who would mould citizens to their own desires must be alert. Mobs- are dangerous, mob rule is even more dangerous, as most of the characters in Coriolanus sadly discover. * * * GEORGE McCOWAN'S approach to Henry VIII proved to be an interest- ing combination of speed and spectacle. He kept the play moving at a very brisk pace, which accounted for a good measure of its success. The Stratford actors can handle a rapid pace without becoming unintelligible, in fact they seem to thrive on it. Douglas Campbell managed to capture the complexity of Henry, by clearly show- ing us another side of the man who could be unmerciful in his courtly in- trigues. There was a real person under this despot, and Campbell seemed to relish his task of pointing this out. At times, Campbell is difficult to un- derstand. He has a voice which is often imprisoned in his throat and consequent- ly, a substantial part of the dialogue was lost at times unless you happened to be in the direct path of his address. Although Henry is the motivating force of the play, the evening belongs to Queen Katharine and Wolsey. Douglas Rain, one of the long-time members of the company, was outstanding in the Wolsey role. When the Cardinal has fallen =from favor; we are exposed to a man whose world has collapsed, leaving him noth- ing but remorse. Rain's handling of this scene was a brilliant display of range, and understanding. Kate Reid as Katharinie, gave a per- formance which was dignified and emo- tionally moving. Without allowing her scenes to become maudlin, she portrayed the intense suffering of an innocent wom- an, condemned by the forces of greed and ambition. The outstanding feature of Henry VIII was its spectacular staging. In the christ- ening scene for example, the costumes and vestments were done in rich shades of yellow, gold, and white. The massing of all this color, together with the elegance of the croziers and staffs of the clergy, brought a full minute of applause from the audience. THE STRATFORD DIRECTORS have realized, as many professional com- panies have not, that Shakespeare was an eminently practical writer. If the scene requires orientation in time and place, he provides it in the dialogue. If the locale doesn't make any difference, then there is no reason to impose an un- necessary scenic background. Their free ada stage permits a pered by the c of shifting a g furniture. The a tational style w in the staging o It was a swi a planned patt so swiftly and s never had time being fed an e terial. Simplicity of tume and prop style are vitalj the Stratford p the Festival ha certain venture beautifully des manent theatre is constantly be - ed, so that the tradition of arti Stratford will succeed, as it - founders and d rity and imagir to care,' and, me ences will conti ~"' ~Richard Burke is a teaching f el- lown in the speech department and -~ 2:-.Coordinator of the Laboratory Playbill productions. He has at- tended several seasons at Stratford Paul Sofield played the tyrant Coriolanus tnCanada l with high intensity.___ _________ SUJNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1961 THE MICF Y MAGA7IN