Pretty Creatures: Children and Fiction in the English Renaissance.
Mischo, John Brett
Michael Witmore. Pretty Creatures: Children and Fiction in the
English Renaissance.
Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2007. ix + 233 pp. index. illus.
$39.95. ISBN: 978-0-8014-4399-2.
Michael Witmore's Pretty Creatures: Children and Fiction in
the English Renaissance argues that prevailing post-Foucaldian analyses
fail to account for the presence of an unacknowledged agency in the
early modern era's recognition of the kinship between children and
the faculty of the imagination. His study ranges over such cultural
fictions as civic pageantry, theater, and witchcraft trials. Rather than
merely replicating and supporting hierarchical structures, Witmore
argues that these cultural productions of the imagination also manage to
elude such a reductive dialectical paradigm of power and subversion.
Witmore's goal is to illuminate this new territory of agency and to
examine the cultural anxiety produced by the dynamic link between
children and the imaginative fictions associated with them. He organizes
his argument around the four modes that he applies to his analyses:
animation, touch, impetus, and recursion.
Chapter 1, "Ut Pueritas Poesis: The Child and Fiction in the
English Renaissance," is perhaps the most valuable of the book. It
historically contextualizes Renaissance discussions of the nexus between
children and imagination within the era's theoretical debates over
issues in rhetoric, poetics, drama and theatricality, biblical exegesis,
and post-Reformation liturgy. In pre-Enlightenment and pre-Romantic
England, the philosophical valuation of the faculty of the imagination
was indeed vexed. The consensus view recognized the imagination as
mediating between the senses and the appetites, on the one hand, and
between the senses and rationality on the other. There was controversy,
however, over whether to regard the power of the imagination positively
or negatively, whether it led one to or away from the truth. Beginning
with Plato's denunciation of imagination as childishly irrational
imitation, and moving from there to Aristotle's acceptance of
mimesis in the Poetics as innately human and healthy, Witmore then
traces the debate from Quintilian and Cicero to Luther and Calvin and
through a range of English Renaissance authors such as Foxe, Munday,
Cranmer, Whitgift, Hooker, and Thomas Wright. While Witmore notes a link
between a Puritan rejection of the theatricality of both the stage and
Roman Catholicism, he argues convincingly that Puritan thinking revealed
ambivalence toward imaginative play by allowing for a distinction
between self-conscious recognition of fiction as fiction and the
"idolatrous self-absorption" (45) of traditional Church
ritual.
Chapter 2 focuses on the role of the multitudes of child
performers--singers, actors, orators, and dancers--impressed into
service for the coronation pageant of Queen Elizabeth. Witmore begins by
examining the Renaissance fascination with automata, mechanical clocks
especially, to illustrate his first "mode" of the imagination,
which he refers to as animation. While Witmore recognizes the argument
that civic pageantry indeed employs its subjects to validate royal
authority, he argues that Elizabeth's coronation cannot be reduced
to "the creeping power of Foucaldian discipline" (90). The
role of the children performing in the coronation display is not utterly
mechanical in its service to monarchy. Instead, Witmore demonstrates
that here the imagination operates by its own rules to create an
"ontological space" (91) that withdraws, in its status as
fantasy, from the highly pressurized political forces that set it in
motion. The child performers, then, communicate "as representation,
not through it" (68).
The English children's theater is the concern of chapter 3,
where Witmore examines the role of child characters and child actors in
the drama of Marston, Jonson, and Beaumont. Here he elaborates on the
mode of touch, arguing that these three playwrights self-consciously
employ the child actors' physical presence on stage
metadramatically to articulate their ideas about the power of the
imagination. The theatrical experience is itself rendered a childlike
fiction, one that functions on a "phatic" level prior to and
concurrently with any "deliberate exchange of messages or
narratives and serves as the ground for such an exchange" (106).
Chapter 4, on Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale, develops
Witmore's mode of impetus. Drawn from an analogy to medieval
mechanics, this conception of the imagination sees in fiction its
capability to assume a life and momentum exterior to the contingencies
of the world in which it is initially launched and how the creations of
fiction "continue their motion through space beyond the reach of a
guiding hand" (17). In the character of Mamillius, Shakespeare
explores the possibilities of an ontological space fostered by the power
of dramatic illusion. In chapter 5 Witmore examines the most
"disturbing" (175) mode of fiction, recursion, through his
discussion of the literature surrounding various witchcraft trials. Here
the early modern concern involved the dangerous possibility that
mimesis--children counterfeiting demonic possession--could actually
produce the state being counterfeited. Whether the symptoms of the
possessed children were truly satanic, or whether they were "human
fictions" (188) implanted by manipulative adults, the disruptive
threats of fictionalizing remained. Witmore's epilogue concludes by
examining the role of imagination in the new epistemologies being
fashioned in the seventeenth century. Even though a fundamental anxiety
over the fantastic idols produced by the imagination lingered, Witmore
shows how both Bacon and Newton celebrated a redemptive, childlike
curiosity driving the new methodologies behind the search for truth.
Building upon and moving beyond New Historical paradigms,
Witmore's insights should reinvigorate critical discussions of
early modern culture studies. In his investigation of the affiliation of
the childlike and the imaginative productions of the adult, Pretty
Creatures succeeds admirably in isolating an often unacknowledged agency
whose power continues to tempt, enthrall, and bewilder.
JOHN BRETT MISCHO
Southeastern Oklahoma State University