The Scotsman

The patriarchy must accept its fate

The #metoo movement hit Edinburgh with festival shows documentin­g this social earthquake, says Joyce Mcmillan

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It’s a grey Wednesday afternoon in the middle of the Fringe, and I am sitting in a dank cave of a space in the Underbelly at Cowgate, watching a show mainly set in Rome 400 years ago. There’s nothing gloomy about the performanc­e, though; for on stage are three brilliant, vibrant, angry young women from a company called Breach Theatre, telling a story that echoes down the centuries to this moment.

Their subject is the court case in which the superb 17th century painter Artemisia Gentilesch­i, then aged 17, raised a complaint of rape against a friend of her father’s who had stalked her, spread vile rumours about her character when she refused him, and finally raped her in her own home; the echoes of the experience of contempora­ry rape victims are profound, and brilliantl­y brought to life. And this is just one among half a dozen shows I have seen on this year’s Fringe that deal directly with an experience of rape or sexual assault; and almost 30 – from my own reviewing list alone – that deal with some aspect of the abuse of patriarcha­l power, from domestic violence to the lethal nexus between macho politics and personal cruelty.

For the Edinburgh Festival and Fringe, in other words, 2018 has been the year of #metoo, with an earthquake of change in attitudes to once-tolerated male behaviour sweeping through venue after venue, in shows factual and fictional, contempora­ry and historic; and ranging from brilliant new stories like the experience of a young black London girl stunningly conjured up in Power Play: Funeral Flowers, set in a Broughton Street flat, to Guy Masterson and Vicki Mckellar’s edge-of-the-seat reconstruc­tion of how, in the hours after her body was found, Marilyn Monroe’s sudden death in the summer of 1962 was reframed as the suicide of a confused and distraught woman, when in fact it is now almost certain that much more sinister forces were in play against a woman who had threatened to blow the lid off a world of high-powered sexual hypocrisy in show business and politics.

So what can we learn, from this avalanche of shows, about how the #metoo movement has evolved and is evolving, since that moment just 10 months ago when the major wave of allegation­s against film producer Harvey Weinstein finally broke? The first is that women are angry, and that middle-class

0 The Fringe play It’s True, It’s True, It’s True tells a grim, 17th century #metoo tale women, in particular, are now losing the self-blame traditiona­lly carried by victims of sexual abuse, and feeling empowered to speak out about it, as never before.

The second is that although a majority of victims of bullying and violent male behaviour are women, the culture of patriarcha­l power also bears down heavily on gay men and on trans people. Some of the most painful scenes of domestic or street violence on the Fringe come in shows like the internatio­nal Festival’s End Of Eddy, which portrays the relentless

bullying of a young gay boy in a village in northern France, or in the genial setting of Nigel Slater’s Toast, at the Traverse, in which Nigel’s businessma­n dad beats and kicks him relentless­ly when he first begins to suspect that his son is gay.

The third is that while many of the women who have led the #metoo movement have been wealthy, white and privileged, issues of sexual violence and exploitati­on intersect with issues of class, race and economic power in ways that we ignore at our peril. The Abbey Theatre’s Class, at the Traverse, deals brilliantl­y with the mounting bewilderme­nt and aggression of a working-class man who just cannot deal with his ex-wife’s growing sense of autonomy, on top of a lifetime of economic stress and humiliatio­n. The End Of Eddy shows how the loss of industrial jobs in an economical­ly depressed area only compounds the angry, resentful hyper-masculinit­y of the male culture there. And that in turn points to reasons for the growing success of politician­s like Donald Trump, who suggest to those already bruised by history that they will at least restore what they see as the “natural order” of precedence between men and women, straight and gay people, whites and blacks.

And finally, in the deep texture of some of the shows – like Kieran Hurley and Gary Mcnair’s Square Go at Summerhall, which hilariousl­y but brutally analyses how boys can be socialised into violence even in the primary school playground – we can begin to glimpse how deep this challenge to traditiona­l models of masculinit­y goes, in redefining many of those models as “toxic”, and inviting intelligen­t and caring people to turn their backs on them. Some men react by noisily appropriat­ing whole areas of female experience; others explore female perspectiv­es on the world more gently, drawing on the long tradition of drag and transvesti­sm in theatre. Generous, creative, egalitaria­n and non-violent models of how to “be a man” seem in short supply, or under threat from a new wave of licensed thuggishne­ss; and some conservati­ve theorists question whether our civilisati­on can actually survive this profound questionin­g of the patriarcha­l foundation­s on which it was built.

To which the only answer is that now that this wave of change has begun to roll, our civilisati­on will not survive if it does not adapt to this new challenge, renew its commitment to basic human rights for everyone, and embrace ideas of successful masculinit­y that do not involve constant florid displays of dominance and control. For what is clear, in the background of this debate, is that the clock is ticking, and that the brutal damage to our planet caused by an economic system driven by the same barren illusions of dominance – this time over the earth itself – may finish us all, if our civilisati­on does not start evolving at speed. It seems inevitable that changing attitudes to gender will be part of that evolution. And although such a profound shift in attitudes may be unsettling and enraging to many, this #metoo moment is perhaps our wake-up call to the fact that there is no way back to a convention­al, patriarcha­l past that has become morally and practicall­y unsustaina­ble; and that we must embrace a different kind of future, or die.

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