Essay, Research Paper
The Caucasian Chalk Circle
The Caucasian Chalk Circle by Brecht uses epic theatre to bring forth an idea or
meaning for the audience to consider while entertaining the audience. Epic theatre
involves the use of alienation techniques to distance the viewer from the story but still
concentrate on the overall meaning. The person who just views the story would likely
take it as fantasy and not reach the true depth of the play. Brecht shocks the viewer by
making the events and actions in the play “strange and abstract” this contrasts with
dramatic plays where the audience sympathises and relates to the characters of the
play. The theme throughout the play is natural justice versus class justice.
The title has links to other parables and stories before it. The Chalk Circle, a Chinese
play involved a legal action where the false claimant was granted custody due a bribe
to claim her dead husbands estate. This however was overturned by the emperor, the
guarantor of the law, in a retrial as the emperor was the father. This particular story is
a whisper to the result of Grusha’s trial. The emperor is portrayed as the epitome of
justice and gives a true verdict. The trial scene is also adapted from the parable of
King Solomon. Solomon the paragon of justice and truth oversees the trial of two
mothers, one child is dead the other alive, they seek custody of the alive child. The
king asks the child to be cut in half, the real mother relinquishes her claim and thus
gains custody of her rightful child. In these two whispers the law is shown to be
equated with justice, however Brecht seeks to highlight that within Grusinia this is not
the case and it takes a greedy Azdak who despises the upper classes to give a just
verdict.
The class justice presented in the novel has close links to the Marxist view of the law,
with the law serving all, but in reality it protects and secures the interests of the ruling
classes. The play seeks to emphasise that within this class justice the poor can only
gain justice under exceptional circumstances. Azdak as the judge and arbiter of justice
has come to this position only through a matter of chances and mistakes. Firstly he
harbours the Grand Duke from Shauva, then he confesses to the Ironshirts only to be
made judge because the Duke escaped. Then through shear chance just before his
execution the Duke redeems him and makes him judge, finally making him the arbiter
of justice between Natasha Abashvilli and Grusha. This shows that the poor
only get justice under a system of whims and extraordinary circumstances and that
justice is intrinsically linked to a series of chances and not linked to the law as it
should be in a feudal regime. Azdak finally decides in Grusha’s favour on the spur of
the moment, the chalk circle is a real test, and it is through this test that Azdak decides
the child’s fate. In order to entertain the audience, Brecht sought to keep the verdict in
flux, keeping the audience in suspense as to the final outcome.
Azdak although seen as the arbiter of justice between Natasha Abashvilli and Grusha
is shown throughout the play as greedy and corrupt when dealing with the upper
classes. The humour that Azdak displays toward the upper class is entertaining, he
constantly refers to them as “arse-holes.. sows.. well-born stinkers.” This anal imagery
is continued right through the novel. Azdak is so disgusted by the odours the upper
classes emit that he occasionally “before passing judgement, I went out and sniffed the
roses.” This helps Azdak give the verdicts he gives to the “monied classes” such as the
Invalid, and the landowner. He swindles them into giving him money for a bribe then
turns about and gives a contradicting verdict against the upper classes. This duplicity
when passing judgement is seen by the audience but the lower classes see that for once
the law is on their side. This is the final hint that Grusha will get the child, as she is
good for the child and will continue to do good for the child, contrasting to Natasha
Abashvilla’s intent to get the child only to keep her late husband’s estate.
The singer sums up the meaning of the entire play, linking the prologue with the stories
of Azdak and Grusha. “That what there is shall belong to those who are good for it,
thus the children to the maternal, that they thrive; the carriages to good drivers, that
they are driven well; and the valley to the waterers, that it shall bear fruit.” Brecht in
the play seeks to highlight the difference between justice and the law within Grusinia.
The feudal society, or Marxist society, is shown to have harder implications for the
poor than the even distribution of wealth which is the main emphasis of the Marxist
state. The Marxist law is not equated with justice for all rather justice for the upper
classes, or class justice, where the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.
By Michael McAuliffe, Western Australia, email: aussiemmc@icqmail.com
The Caucasian Chalk Circle, Bertolt Brecht, Published by Methuen Press