In the Janeites yahoogroup this morning, Michael Chwe wrote the following:
“Hi
all---my book "Jane Austen, Game Theorist" has been reviewed by John Mullan
in the Guardian:
To
which I replied:
Bravo
once again, Michael Chwe!
I
have one comment about Mullan’s review, where he opines that Michael was wrong,
but actually he is inadvertently exposing his own cluelessness:
Mullan
wrote: “More strangely, [Chwe] persuades himself that many of the minor characters
in Persuasion – Mrs Croft, Charles
Musgrove, Captain Harville – are conspiring to bring Anne and Captain Wentworth
together again. In fact, the novel's high voltage comes from their ignorance of
feelings,
of which the reader is sharply aware. Chwe's error is telling: he always wants
to turn motivational complexity into rational strategy, the sine qua non of game theory.”
In my
opinion, there is nothing strange about Michael Chwe's (as Mullan puns) persuading himself that secondary
characters scheme offstage in Persuasion,
in fact the contrary is true—Michael is entirely correct.
It is
Mullan who is doubly wrong—first,
wrong on a textual level, in that he is unable to see the textual clues which
hint that many of the minor characters in Persuasion
do, under one plausible reading, indeed conspire to bring Anne and Wentworth
together again.
And
second, Mullan’s also wrong on a meta
level, because he cannot imagine a Jane Austen who would intentionally provide
more than one valid way of reading the same novel text.
Like
that wonderful moment in the current AT&T commercial, with the 6 year old
kids being led in “discussion” by a man, when one kid points out that says
“infinity times infinity” is larger than "infinity plus infinity" ---the man simply points to his head and says
“Poof!” to signify his brain
exploding
at the kid’s brilliance.
Similarly,
Mullan’s brain explodes when he reads Michael’s suggestion, because he cannot
conceive that, in the case of JA, bigger (meaning more than one valid
interpretation) is better.
And
anyway, the idea of secondary characters playing matchmaker in Persuasion is not new, it has been out there
for twenty years, courtesy of my friend Jim Heldman who wrote the following
article in the JASNA journal Persuasions in 1993...
...presenting
ideas which I have taken further in more recent years:
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
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