Deus ex machina explained

Deus ex machina ([1] pronounced as /la/; plural: dei ex machina; English "god from the machine")[2] [3] is a plot device whereby a seemingly unsolvable problem in a story is suddenly or abruptly resolved by an unexpected and unlikely occurrence.[4] [5] Its function is generally to resolve an otherwise irresolvable plot situation, to surprise the audience, to bring the tale to a happy ending or act as a comedic device.[6]

Origin of the expression

Deus ex machina is a Latin calque .[7] The term was coined from the conventions of ancient Greek theater, where actors who were playing gods were brought on stage using a machine. The machine could be either a crane (mechane) used to lower actors from above or a riser that brought them up through a trapdoor. Aeschylus introduced the idea and it was used often to resolve the conflict and conclude the drama. The device is associated mostly with Greek tragedy, although it also appeared in comedies.[8]

Ancient examples

Aeschylus used the device in his Eumenides but it became an established stage machine with Euripides. More than half of Euripides' extant tragedies employ a deus ex machina in their resolution and some critics claim that Euripides invented it, not Aeschylus.[9] A frequently cited example is Euripides' Medea in which the deus ex machina is a dragon-drawn chariot sent by the sun god Helios, used to convey his granddaughter Medea away from her husband Jason to the safety of Athens. In Alcestis, the heroine agrees to give up her own life to spare the life of her husband Admetus. At the end, Heracles appears and seizes Alcestis from Death, restoring her to life and to Admetus.

Aristophanes' play Thesmophoriazusae parodies Euripides' frequent use of the crane by making Euripides himself a character in the play and bringing him on stage by way of the mechane.

The device produced an immediate emotional response in Greek audiences. They would have a feeling of wonder and astonishment at the appearance of the gods, which would often add to the moral effect of the drama.[10]

Modern theatrical examples

Shakespeare uses the device in As You Like It, Pericles, Prince of Tyre, and Cymbeline.[11] John Gay uses it in The Beggar's Opera where a character breaks the action and rewrites the ending as a reprieve from hanging for MacHeath. During the politically turbulent 17th and 18th centuries, the deus ex machina was sometimes used to make a controversial thesis more palatable to the powers of the day. For example, in the final scene of Molière's Tartuffe, the heroes are saved from a terrible fate by an agent of the compassionate, all-seeing King Louis XIV — the same king who held Molière's career and livelihood in his hands.[12]

Plot device

Aristotle (in the Poetics 15 1454b1) was the first to use a Greek term equivalent to the Latin phrase deus ex machina to describe the technique as a device to resolve the plot of tragedies. It is said by one person to be undesirable in writing and often implies a lack of creativity on the part of the author. The reasons for this are that it damages the story's internal logic and is often so unlikely that it challenges the reader's suspension of disbelief.[13]

Examples

In medicine

In medicine, the phrase is often used for supposedly "magical remedies" which are not likely to work in practice. For instance, in the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak, when double lung transplantation for terminal COVID-19 patients was suggested, it was immediately denounced as a deus ex machina.[21] In 2006, when electronic fetal heart monitoring was being touted as a preventive measure for cerebral palsy, The New England Journal of Medicine denounced it as deus ex machina.[22]

Criticism

The deus ex machina device is often criticized as inartistic, too convenient, and overly simplistic. However, champions of the device say that it opens up ideological and artistic possibilities.[23] [24]

Ancient criticism

Antiphanes was one of the device's earliest critics. He believed that the use of the deus ex machina was a sign that the playwright was unable to properly manage the complications of his plot.[25]

Another critical reference to the device can be found in Plato's dialogue Cratylus, 425d, though it is made in the context of an argument unrelated to drama.

Aristotle criticized the device in his Poetics, where he argued that the resolution of a plot must arise internally, following from previous action of the play:[26]

Aristotle praised Euripides, however, for generally ending his plays with bad fortune, which he viewed as correct in tragedy, and somewhat excused the intervention of a deity by suggesting that "astonishment" should be sought in tragic drama:[27]

Such a device was referred to by Horace in his Ars Poetica (lines 191–2), where he instructs poets that they should never resort to a "god from the machine" to resolve their plots "unless a difficulty worthy of a god's unraveling should happen" [''nec deus intersit, nisi dignus uindice nodus inciderit; nec quarta loqui persona laboret''].[28]

Modern criticism

Following Aristotle, Renaissance critics continued to view the deus ex machina as an inept plot device, although it continued to be employed by Renaissance dramatists.

Toward the end of the 19th century, Friedrich Nietzsche criticized Euripides for making tragedy an optimistic genre by use of the device, and was highly skeptical of the "Greek cheerfulness", prompting what he viewed as the plays' "blissful delight in life".[29] The deus ex machina as Nietzsche saw it was symptomatic of Socratic culture, which valued knowledge over Dionysiac music and ultimately caused the death of tragedy:[30] Nietzsche argued that the deus ex machina creates a false sense of consolation that ought not to be sought in phenomena.[31] His denigration of the plot device has prevailed in critical opinion. In Euripides the Rationalist (1895), Arthur Woollgar Verrall surveyed and recorded other late 19th-century responses to the device. He recorded that some of the critical responses to the term referred to it as 'burlesque', 'coup de théâtre', and 'catastrophe'. Verrall notes that critics have a dismissive response to authors who deploy the device in their writings. He comes to the conclusion that critics feel that the deus ex machina is evidence of the author's attempt to ruin the whole of his work and to prevent anyone from putting any importance on his work.[25]

However, other scholars have looked at Euripides' use of deus ex machina and described its use as an integral part of the plot, designed for a specific purpose. Often, Euripides' plays would begin with gods, so it is argued that it would be natural for the gods to finish the action. The conflict throughout Euripides' plays would be caused by the meddling of the gods, so it would make sense both to the playwright and to the audience of the time that the gods would resolve all conflict that they began.[32] Half of Euripides' eighteen extant plays end with the use of deus ex machina, therefore it was not simply a device to relieve the playwright of the embarrassment of a confusing plot-ending. This device enabled him to bring about a natural and more dignified dramatic and tragic ending.[33]

Other champions of the device believe that it can be a spectacular agent of subversion. It can be used to undercut generic conventions and challenge cultural assumptions and the privileged role of tragedy as a literary/theatrical model.

Some 20th-century revisionist criticism suggests that deus ex machina cannot be viewed in these simplified terms, and contends that the device allows mortals to "probe" their relationship with the divine.[34] Rush Rehm in particular cites examples of Greek tragedy in which the deus ex machina complicates the lives and attitudes of characters confronted by the deity, while simultaneously bringing the drama home to its audience. Sometimes, the unlikeliness of the deus ex machina plot device is employed deliberately. Note for example the comic effect generated in a scene in Monty Python's Life of Brian when Brian, who lives in Judea at the time of Christ, is saved from a high fall by a passing alien space-ship.[35]

Associated concepts

Thought experiments and speculations in theology, computer science, robotics and AI technology have considered the possibilities and consequences of a machina ex machina - a self-reproducing automaton.[36]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Random House Dictionary
  2. Book: Beckson. Karl E.. A Reader's Guide to Literary Terms: A Dictionary. Ganz. Arthur F.. 1961. Noonday Press. en.
  3. Web site: 2013-11-03. Deus Ex Machina - Examples and Definition. 2021-04-23. Literary Devices. en-US.
  4. deus ex machina . Merriam-Webster . 23 Apr 2018 .
  5. Web site: Deus ex machina . Encyclopaedia Britannica . 23 Apr 2018.
  6. Web site: God Out of the Machine – Theatrical Literary Devices - Oxford Study Courses. 2021-04-23. oxfordstudycourses.com. 14 September 2015 . en-US.
  7. One of the earliest occurrences of the phrase is in fragment 227 of Menander: ἀπὸ μηχανῆϛ θεὸς ἐπεφάνηϛ "You are by your epiphany a veritable god from the machine", as quoted in The Woman Possessed with a Divinity, as translated in Menander: The Principal Fragments (1921) by Francis Greenleaf Allinson.
  8. Chondros . Thomas G. . Milidonis . Kypros. Vitzilaios . George . Vaitsis. John . "Deus-Ex-Machina" reconstruction in the Athens theater of Dionysus . Mechanism and Machine Theory . September 2013 . 67 . 172–191 . 10.1016/j.mechmachtheory.2013.04.010.
  9. Rehm (1992, 72) and Walton (1984, 51).
  10. Cunningham . Maurice P.. Medea ΑΠΟ ΜΗΧΑΝΗΣ. Classical Philology . July 1954 . 49 . 3 . 151–160 . 265931 . 10.1086/363788 . 163893448.
  11. Rehm (1992, 70).
  12. http://www.novelguide.com/a/discover/dfs_18/dfs_18_00023.html "Tartuffe: Novel Guide"
  13. Web site: Literary Terms and Definitions: D . Dr. L. Kip Wheeler . 2008-07-26.
  14. https://www.cinemablend.com/news/2477366/even-the-avengers-endgame-writers-admit-time-travel-is-ludicrous Even The Avengers: Endgame Writers Admit Time Travel Is Ludicrous
  15. https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/movies/2019/04/27/avengers-endgame-gets-captain-marvel-so-wrong-spoilers/3572243002/ How did 'Avengers: Endgame' get Captain Marvel so wrong?
  16. Web site: Top 10 Deus Ex Machina moments. https://web.archive.org/web/20200502180545/https://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/top-10-deus-ex-machina-moments/. dead. 2020-05-02.
  17. Book: Vaninskaya, Anna . Fantasies of Time and Death: Dunsany, Eddison, Tolkien . 9781137518385 . Anna Vaninskaya . 26 December 2019 . Springer .
  18. Book: Friedman, Lawrence S. . William Golding's Lord of the Flies . Bloom . Harold . https://books.google.com/books?id=j1ZJcFqQ7V8C&q=Lord+of+the+Flies,+deus+ex+machina&pg=PA67 . 67–68 . Grief, grief, grief: Lord of the Flies . Infobase Publishing . 2008. 9780791098264 .
  19. Book: A Glossary of Literary Terms . Abrams . MH . 44–45 . Harcourt Brace & Company, USA . 1993 .
  20. Book: Westfahl . Gary . The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy: Themes, Works, and Wonders, Volume 1 . 2005 . Greenwood Publishing Group . 0313329516 . 195 .
  21. Wadowski BJ, Bacchetta M, Kon ZN. Beware the Deus Ex Machina of COVID-19 . Ann Thorac Surg . 110 . 6 . 1787–1788. December 2020 . 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2020.08.001 . 32871108 . 7455797.
  22. Greene MF. Obstetricians still await a deus ex machina . N Engl J Med . 355 . 21 . 2247–2248. November 2006 . 10.1056/NEJMe068176 . 17124023 .
  23. Vaatmann . Veiko . 2022-07-01 . In defence of deus ex machina . Journal of Screenwriting . 13 . 2 . 155–167 . 10.1386/josc_00091_1. 252424778 .
  24. Breton . Rob . Ghosts in the Machina: Plotting in Chartist and Working-Class Fiction . Victorian Studies . Summer 2005 . 47 . 4 . 557–575 . 10.1353/vic.2006.0003.
  25. Handley . Miriam . Shaw's response to the deus ex machina: From the Quintessence of Ibsenism to Heartbreak House . Theatre: Ancient & Modern, January 1999 Conference . January 1999 . 9780749285777 .
  26. Janko (1987, 20)
  27. Poetics 11.5, Penguin (1996, 45).
  28. Web site: Ars Poetica by Horace . 21 September 2017 . Poetry Foundation.
  29. Nietzsche (2003, 85).
  30. Nietzsche (2003, 84–86).
  31. Nietzsche (2003, 80).
  32. Abel . D. Herbert . Euripides' Deus ex Machina: Fault or Excellence . The Classical Journal . December 1954 . 50 . 3 . 127–130 .
  33. Book: Flickinger . Roy Caston . The Greek Theatre and its Drama . 1926 . The University of Chicago Press . Chicago, Illinois.
  34. Rehm (1992, 71).
  35. James Berardinelli, James. "Review: Life of Brian". Reelviews Movie Reviews. 2003
  36. Book: Shanks . Niall . Niall Shanks . 21 June 2002 . Darwinism Developed: The Ontogeny of an Idea . Animals and Science: A Guide to the Debates . Controversies in Science . Santa Barbara, California . Bloomsbury Publishing USA . 155 . 9781576078822 . 6 July 2024 . This is the machina ex machina hypothesis. In Paley's self-replicating machine, it is imagined that the machine has a mechanical program and equipment to first manufacture the components of a watch and then to assemble these parts into a new, functioning, offspring watch that inherits the ability to replicate itself from the parent watch. [...] Von Neumann's development of a machina ex machina hypothesis did not have a theological motivation. Instead, it grew out of a puzzle in computer theory..