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The Queen's Gambit
Art Is Not Therapy
Unlike the âtrauma plot,â Parul Sehgalâs coinage for the use of trauma as narrative payoff, the therapeutic plot doesnât wallow in trauma itself. Instead, it offers formulaic accounts of diagnosis and healingâwhat Janet Malcolm has called âthe streamlined truisms of the age of mental health.â
Book blogs sort recommendations by pathology (severe social anxiety, schizophrenia, body dysmorphia), symptom (anxiety, panic attacks), and trauma (parental suicide, psychiatric stay). Fans diagnose characters with mental disorders (a fan theory diagnoses the character Bruno from another recent Pixar offering, Encanto, with obsessive compulsive disorder). Self-diagnosis even informed the development of Everything Everywhere. In early drafts of the script, Evelyn suffered from undiagnosed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Writing and researching her character inspired Kwan to identify and seek treatment for his own heretofore undiagnosed ADHD.
No doubt, such a medical diagnosis can provide relief and resolution. But is such a diagnosis the job of art? What is lost when audiences and creators eschew other ways of discussing fiction (for example, E.M. Forsterâs distinction between round and flat characters) and instead reduce characters to clinical profiles?
In ancient Athenian tragedy, catharsis was defined by Aristotleâs Poetics as the ritual purification and purgation of emotions, particularly pity and fear. Pity arises from identification with the tragic hero, whose nobility is compromised by a fatal flaw, and fear is elicited by his excessive punishment. The therapeutic significance of catharsis originated much later in the theories of Sigmund Freud. By applying Joseph Breuerâs âcathartic method,â Freud theorized that hypnosis allowed patients to recall the traumatic experience at the root of their condition. Catharsis was Freudâs first major breakthrough, and his first brush with the powers of the unconscious that would form the underpinnings of psychoanalytic theory.For Aristotle, catharsis was the result of anagnorisisâthe humility produced by the tragic heroâs recognition not only of the calamity that had befallen him, but also of his own role in bringing it about. Freud, meanwhile, described an inherent tragedy in the âimpossible professionâ of psychoanalysis, âin which one can be sure beforehand of achieving unsatisfying results.â It wasnât that Freud had no faith in his own methods; he simply perceived the enormity of the human condition, and understood that the odds of success were not stacked in the psychoanalystâs favor.Humility is absent from todayâs therapeutic catharsis, which assumes with algorithmic certainty that sharing will lead to understanding, and that understanding will lead to healing. Artâs role, according to Everything Everywhere actress Stephanie Hsu, is âto hold space for trauma and offer catharsis,â and to recognize that âempathy and radical empathy and radical kindness are also a tool.â Buried beneath this gauzy language is the fact that the âempathyâ of Turning Red and Everything Everywhere rely on the transformation of the mothers, not their children. The adults must learn that children are individuals rather than extensions of parental will, and when empathy is granted to mothers, it is only through their shared status as victims.
Notes on [[Catharsis]]
Pity the immigrant women who fled war-torn nations and corrupt regimes only to be subjected to psychoanalysis from hipster filmmakers and their own children
All this is not to say that storytelling holds no empathic power, nor an ability to transcend individual perspectives. But this power lies in artâs ability to overthrow, not reify, easy solutionsâto challenge rather than âvalidate.â The transmission of suffering from one generation to the next is a worthy subject for art, but not because its effect on any particular demographic has been under-represented.
Our approach to culture should account for rigor and complexity, not defer to trite solutionism.