Carl Jung once observed that it is easier to
discern the presence of archetypes from the collective subconscious in works of pulp
fiction by writers such as H. Rider Haggard than it is in literary masterpieces. If only
Jung had put Edgar Rice Burroughs on his depth-psychologist's couch. Burroughs was the
George Lucas of his day, creating in Tarzan and other characters beings as profoundly
mythical--and as stereotypically superficial--as Darth Vader. Like Luke Skywalker's saga,
the tale of Tarzan mixes and matches motifs from the archetype-haunted dreamtime of
humanity anatomized by Jung and Jung's disciple, Joseph Campbell. The tale of the prince
raised in secret by adopted parents (King Arthur, Luke Skywalker) is fused with the story
of the feral child raised by animals (Romulus and Remus, Enkidu, Mowgli, Pecos Bill) in
the romance of the orphaned English lord raised by a foster family of African apes.
The fact that Tarzan is really an English lord--Lord Greystoke, to be precise--was
central to Burroughs' conception of his character. In the pulp fiction of Burroughs, as in
pulp fiction of any period, timeless archetypes rub shoulders with the vulgar prejudices
of the writer and his audience. In the works of Burroughs, today's race/class/gender
theorists can easily find a key to the racial, social, and sexual anxieties of early
20th-century white American men and boys. When the first Tarzan books were published, the
British Empire ruled the waves, the United States had recently joined the ranks of
imperial powers, and white supremacy was the norm in the United States and throughout the
world. Confidence in the innate superiority of the Caucasian race--and, within that race,
of its Anglo-Saxon variant--coexisted with paranoia about the yellow peril and black
"savagery."
The two major characters in the oeuvre of Edgar Rice Burroughs are Tarzan of the
Apes and John Carter of Mars. Although John Carter never made it in Hollywood the way that
his cousin in the jungle jockstrap did, it is worth reviving him to make a point. Tarzan
and John Carter were both exemplars of Anglo-Saxon masculinity--Tarzan, the heir to an
aristocratic English family, and John Carter, an upper-class Virginian by birth. The
Tarzan and Carter stories can be viewed as experiments--take a member of the Anglo-Saxon
ruling class, strip him of all his advantages, and put him in a radically different
environment, in order that the innate superiority of his breed may be demonstrated.
Whether in Africa (the symbol of precivilized savagery) or on an old, desiccated Mars (the
symbol of overrefinement and cultural exhaustion), the Anglo-Saxon man proves that he is
royalty. Tarzan becomes Lord of the Jungle, John Carter weds the Princess of Mars. Space,
in Burroughs, is a metaphor for time. Tarzan and John Carter represent the era of
Anglo-American civilization, at the midpoint between prehistoric barbarism and
post-historic decadence.
Burroughs' genius can be seen in the way that he redeemed the imagery of savagery for
his Anglo-Saxon ape-man. In the mythology of white supremacy, even before Charles Darwin,
black Africans and other nonwhites were assimilated to apes (Thomas Jefferson, in his
Notes on the State of Virginia, finds credible the rumor that African women mate with
orangutans). In much 19th- and early 20th-century pulp fiction, American Indians and black
Americans have a mystical rapport with animals, which author and audience alike understood
arose from their proximity on the evolutionary scale. But Burroughs' Tarzan is closer to
the animals than the black Africans who live nearby. The Great White Hope is at once more
civilized and more savage than the "natives"--he is the Lone Ranger and
Tonto. With Tarzan monopolizing the highest and lowest rungs of the Chain of Being, the
"natives" find themselves deprived of the one asset that racist mythology
attributed to them, closeness to the animals, leaving them without any particular function
in the economy of kitsch literature, except to be rescued by Tarzan from rogue elephants
and the occasional witch doctor.
When first published, the Tarzan stories provided a largely American audience of white
men and boys with a fantasy version of the ultimate White Guy, the virile aristocrat, who,
far from being effete and degenerate, could go Ape as well as Ascot. Something like this
vision inspired Theodore Roosevelt, the asthmatic Yankee patrician who turned himself into
a cowboy and, as an ex-president, nearly died while exploring a tributary of the Amazon in
Brazil, in an adventure that might have been scripted by Burroughs. George Bush--a
professed admirer of TR--is the Tarzan of our day: A patrician Yalie (Lord Greystoke), and
at the same time a Texan redneck (Tarzan), engaged in wildcatting (could there be a more
metaphorically resonant term?). By jumping out of airplanes in his 70s, Bush continues to
battle the Wimp Factor. Perhaps he should swing from vines as well. By contrast, George
W., a rich kid who, unlike his father, sat out the war of his generation, is Boy.
The Tarzan mythos, then, depends on a balance of tensions--between Tarzan the Ape-Man
and Lord Greystoke, between England and Africa, between civilization and savagery. Play
down one side of the equation, and the meaning of this whole system of pre-World War II
social stereotypes collapses.
This is what happened when Hollywood got hold of the Tarzan story. Beginning with the
Johnny Weissmuller films, the jungle began eclipsing the English manor. Tarzan became
simply a feral child, a white Mowgli. The genre changed to pastoral: Tarzan and Jane
became the equivalents of the innocent shepherds and shepherdesses of Hellenistic Greek
and Renaissance pastoral fiction, striving to preserve their natural idyll from corruption
by civilization. Pastoral Tarzan need not be an English lord. He need not even be white. A
black or brown or Asian Tarzan would defeat the whole point of the Burroughs mythos but
would not be out of place in the Hollywood or TV versions.
Disney's new animated Tarzan is the politically correct heir of several generations of
Hollywood Tarzans--a facsimile of a facsimile. Gone is the social Darwinist worldview that
underpinned the original. In the prologue we see Tarzan's parents, but we do not learn
they are titled. Indeed, from their facility at assembling a tree house we might think
that they are, not Lord and Lady Greystoke, but Mr. and Mrs. Robinson (as in Crusoe or
Swiss Family). The embarrassing problem of what to do with the "natives" in a
post-racist age is solved by eliminating the natives altogether. Disney's gorillas live in
a jungle uninhabited by human beings, until Europeans intrude.
The Disneyfied Tarzan is such a wimp that he is not allowed to kill anything or
anybody, although our Paleolithic pacifist is permitted to use martial arts techniques in
self-defense. The two villains of the movie are a homicidal (and simiocidal) cheetah and
an English hunter--the Evil White Male without which no PC epic would be complete. But
when the time comes for them to die, both do themselves in accidentally while fighting
Tarzan: The cheetah falls atop a spearhead that Tarzan happens to be holding, and the
Englishman inadvertently hangs himself on jungle vines. This Tarzan is a warrior for our
day, when the United States refuses to send soldiers into combat because one of them might
actually get hurt.
In the Epic of Gilgamesh, a prostitute lures Enkidu away from his animal companions.
Once he has slept with a woman, the animals refuse to associate with him; he cannot go
home again. Masculine wildness is overcome by civilized femininity. In Disney's Tarzan
film, nature is feminine and civilization masculine. Disney's Tarzan is not only
post-imperial, post-racist, and post-classist but also post-masculine. Tarzan is a momma's
boy. His gorilla foster mother, Kala (whose voice is provided by Glenn Close), remains on
the scene after he reaches adulthood. When Tarzan introduces Jane to Kala, he grovels and
whimpers before a disapproving Ma Gorilla.
Halfway through the film, Tarzan, a Victorian-era Enkidu, lured by Jane, is prepared to
follow her back to England. But then, having learned how evil civilized Englishmen can be,
Tarzan, Jane, and her father (in the PC universe, old and feeble white men are tolerable)
decide to renounce civilized society for the jungle. There, by happy coincidence, the two
alpha males (Kerchak the bull ape and the evil English hunter) are gone, clearing the way
for the utopia of beta males and females. Although Tarzan is now nominally in control, one
suspects that Kala the Ape-Mom, the Empress Dowager of the Jungle, is really in charge. At
movie's end, Tarzan and Jane move in with Mom and her furry family, like '90s yuppies who
have given up and moved back home. Perhaps Jane's widowed human father will wed Tarzan's
widowed gorilla mother (so the Southern Baptist Convention should be worried about
bestiality but not homosexuality).
If the pulp fiction of Edgar Rice Burroughs gives us a glimpse into the often appalling
collective unconscious of white-supremacist America, the Disney version of Tarzan
will provide a similar service to future scholars pondering the equally weird mentality of
feminized and Green America, circa 2000. If the original Tarzan celebrated the Anglo-Saxon
male proving his superiority over Nature red in tooth and claw, Disney's version embodies
the ideology that vilifies the "white male" and idealizes the feminine (human
and ape) and the wilderness imagined by customers of The Nature Store. Me, Tarzan. You,
Jane. Nature Good. Civilization Bad. Girls good. Boys bad.
Rumor has it that the next object of touchy-feely bowdlerization by Disney is Beowulf.
No doubt in the Disney version, Beowulf and the feisty, coed-army warrior-princess who
inevitably will be written into the script as his partner will befriend a misunderstood
Grendel and Grendel's mom (it's not easy being green). For my part, I plan to endorse the
Baptist boycott of Disney. Disney is evil--not because it's turning children into
liberals, but because it's turning them into wimps.
Copyright 1999, Slate
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