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Assessing Kay Ryan, our new poet laureate.
Meghan O'Rourke
posted July 29, 2008 - 100 Candles
Anne of Green Gables grows old and gets her due.
Meghan O'Rourke
posted July 8, 2008 - 'Tweenyboppers at Work
The Miley Cyrus controversy.
Meghan O'Rourke
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The demise of the female slacker.
Meghan O'Rourke
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Susan Faludi's terrible dream.
Meghan O'Rourke
posted Nov. 19, 2007 - Search for more the highbrow articles
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The Second ComingWhat Yeats is doing on The Sopranos.
By Meghan O'RourkePosted Thursday, May 31, 2007, at 3:04 PM ET
Over in the TV Club, my colleagues were wondering who the rough beast might be: A rival coming to replace Tony as boss of the DiMeo crime family? Phil Leotardo? Paulie? A ghost from Tony's violent past? His dead mother, who helped shape his "sociopathic" qualities? Or something deeper?
For it's possible to imagine that the allusion to the poem foreshadows a more profound change—a true "new dispensation." From the very first episode of the series, Tony has been hounded by a sense of belatedness, a sense that the old ways are not going to survive in the highly computerized world of late-capitalist commerce that is his children's to inherit. In this regard, Yeats has arguably played an important role in The Sopranos from the start. The series opened with a scene hauntingly reminiscent of Yeats' famous poem "The Wild Swans at Coole." An encounter with a group of ducks who have settled in his pool during their fall migration prompts Tony to realize how much he has lost, how diminished the world seems to him. (As "The Wild Swans" puts it: "I have looked upon those brilliant creatures,/ and now my heart is sore./ All's changed since I, hearing at twilight,/ The first time on this shore,/ The bell-beat of their wings above my head,/ Trod with a lighter tread.") An anxiety attack sends Tony to the psychiatrist Jennifer Melfi and sets the stage for the show's preoccupation with decline. Tony tells Melfi, "The morning of the day I got sick, I been thinking: It's good to come in something from the ground floor. I came in too late for that, I know. But lately, I'm getting the feeling that I came in at the end. The best is over." She responds: "Many Americans, I think, feel that way."
Just t'ink aboud it, as Tony might say. If Yeats' swans opened The Sopranos, it is plausible that his destructive sphinx has come to close it—and that this "rough beast" alludes not just to a rival to Tony, but to both the invasion of Jamba Juice and Starbucks along the DiMeos' old collection routes, and, now, in 2007, the encroachments of Islamic fundamentalism. After all, it is Tony's increasing intimation (and ours, and A.J.'s) that in the light of 9/11, the old dispensation truly has changed. Consider that the last few episodes cycle back to a pair of mysterious Arabs who have been doing business with the mob and may have nefarious purposes. Even Tony, made nervous by them, gives the Feds a heads up, realizing that some threats are more menacing to his family than the FBI. Meanwhile, the angry and unstable A.J. was busy checking out AlJazeera.net, as if entertaining the notion of joining forces with the oppressed in the Middle East. His suicide attempt, the show implies, isn't just the action of a lovelorn young man, but of a young man brutally woken to the fact (duh) that nothing about his upper-middle-class American life is cozy and safe. (It's worth noting that Tony's ducks settled in the same pool where A. J. later tries to drown himself.)Whether the show will end with a terrorist event is unclear; what is clear is that we're meant to feel a gathering threat.
Finally, in a roundabout way, "The Second Coming" underscores one of the most powerful themes of the show: Tony's habit of misreading the world around him—a tendency he and Carmela (who shares it) have passed on to their children. I think we are meant to feel the dissonance between the poem's vision and A.J.'s transformation by it. On the deepest level, this poem has very little to do with A.J. and Tony Soprano. In the lines "the best lack all conviction, while the worst / are full of passionate intensity," Yeats was originally mourning the collapse of the aristocracy ("the best") in the West and the arrival of mobs of revolutionaries ("the worst" with their "passionate intensity"). Indeed, Yeats might be horrified by A.J.'s appropriation of the poem as an expression of a slacker's anomie: Neither A.J. nor Tony—nor anyone on the show, really—could be read as "the best" by any stretch of the mind.
But this irony plays into the tragic comedy of the show; it has always been Tony's habit (and is now A.J.'s) to continually find a way to view himself as one of the best—a good guy bent on preserving the old order, doing his hardest to provide for his family in a chaotic world. He has never seen that he himself is the rough beast; nor will he, one imagines.
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