The Revolution At The Base-
Bertolt Brecht’s "The Mother"
PLAY/BOOK REVIEW
THE MOTHER, BERTOLT BRECHT,
GROVE PRESS, 1989
More than one socialist commentator has noted that a revolution is made at the base of society by a combination of experiences that cause the masses to throw of their former servitude, indifference or fear and just go for it. Needless to say those times are few and far between so that it is important to study the mechanics of those changes even if, as here, they are changes in agrarian Russia in the early 20th century. I believe, as Brecht obviously did when he brought it to the theater in highly industrialized Germany, that those same sentiments would also be expressed in more developed capitalist societies when tensions reached the breaking point.
Brecht has adapted for the
stage this story written by the great Russian writer, and sometime
revolutionary, Maxim Gorky. The story line in both cases is fairly straight
forward. A peasant mother is fearful that her son’s Bolshevik revolutionary
activities will bring disaster on him and the family. As the story unfolds and
the son’s commitment grows in line with the government’s repressive policies
the mother starts, slowly, very slowly, to get the point of his work. Along the
way her own ‘politics’ change and by the end she is as committed to the cause
as her son. Her banner is now red.
On the stage this story gets
told amid banners and music that add to the dramatic effect. In either format
this is a powerful story and good piece of socialist propaganda. I remember an
old German Communist Party member once telling me that in his youth he was
actually recruited to the Communist Youth League by this play. Apparently the
German CP set up literature tables in the lobby of the theater and at
intermission and the end would sign up theater patrons after they had
experienced the play. WOW, would that our tasks were so easily done these
days.
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