adam white midnight term paper
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The Flying Dutchman in American Literature and British Scifi: The Myth Across the Atlantic
By: Adam White
Dr. Julieann Ulin
American Literature
11/18/2010
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Sometime two stories separated by decades, continents, and cultures share a number of common traits
that seem to suggest the stories are related. Amiri Barakas Dutchman and the Doctor Who episode
Midnight are vastly different, but have common traits and myths that link them. Dutchman is a story
about racial violence set in a New York subway car, while Midnight tells of an alien traveler on a
diamond planet far away from Earth. One story is part of the American Literature canon, at least as set
by the Norton anthology, while the other is a British sci-fi episode, part of popular entertainment.
Within this paper, I will analyze and explain how a common myth, in this case, that of the Flying
Dutchman, can link two stories by common tropes, even across two shores. Additionally, I will suggest
that certain tropes may appear simply because they are common to human nature, and provide an
avenue for an audience to study humanity in detail, from a safe vantage point, while coming to the
realization that they may not be as safe as they initially feel.
Both stories employ the myth of the Flying Dutchman, a legend written about by authors such as John
Leyden, who described it as a spectre-ship denominated the Flying Dutchman which appears in the
dead of night as a luminous form of a ship (176). Barakas play updates the myth of the flying
Dutchman to take place in the flying underbelly of the city, a subway heaped in modern myth
(Baraka 2745). The use of a subway not only provides a vehicle to parallel the mythical ship, but also
provides a claustrophobic location for the story, the outside world being nothing but flashes by thewindows (2745). The Doctor Who episode midnight employs a similar setting to evoke a similar sense of
claustrophobia. Rather than a modern city, the story takes place in a science fiction setting, a tram car,
similar in appearance to a small airliner cabin or even a modern subway car, about seven rows of four
seats, separated into pairs in the middle by a single aisle, with windows shielded from the outside world
(Midnight). These settings not only provide a sense of claustrophobia, but an insulated space from the
outside world. The hostess in midnight apologizes that the view is shielded, and Professor Hobbes, a
researcher of the planet Midnight states, We look upon this world through glass, safe inside our metal
box [...] crossing Midnight but never touching it (Midnight, 8:09). These insulated settings allow the
characters only a false sense of security and serve a useful purpose for the narrative. The audience is
always isolated in some way from the dangers on stage, either viewing the world through glass on a
television screen, or sitting behind the proverbial fourth wall, comfortable in their theater seats. Theyare given the same sense of security as the characters begin with, but will be quickly reminded of how
dangerous the world outside their living room or theater is. The isolated setting allows the dangers
outside the vehicle to be shown with greater clarity. By using only a handful of characters, their flaws
can bring clearer focus to the flaws of society as a whole. The trams serve as a microcosm for
humankind. By eliminating all other elements except for the victim of the act and those complicit in it,
the story directs the audiences focus to evils that normally go unnoticed in the sea of people that makes
up society. This shatters not only the characters senses of security, but that of those watching as well.
The viewer is separate from the performance, but must eventually leave the theatre or living room and
face the outside world where these evils exist. Each person must also examine themselves to see if they
possess such evil.
The idea of an evil or a sin is another important element of the Flying Dutchman myth. Leydan writes
that the crew of this vessel are supposed to have been guilty of some dreadful crime, in the infancy of
navigation, and are ordained to traverse the ocean on which they perished, till the period of their
penance expire (Leydan, 176). The crew of the flying Dutchman is forced to wander due to their sin,
exiled from every place they might find some rest. The Doctor is such a wanderer. In the 1963 pilot
episode of Doctor Who, The Doctor is traveling with his granddaughter and explains to his first two
human companions, [w]e are not of this race. We are not of this earth. We are wanderers in the fourth
dimensions of space and time cut off from our own planet and our own people (An Unearthly Child).
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His initial sin is that of interfering in the lives of less advanced people, a violation of the laws of his
reclusive people. Later, when the show returns from cancellation as a new series in 2005, the doctor will
be given a new reason for wandering the universe.
Barakas character list dictates that the passengers on the subway car should be white and black
(Baraka 2745). This choice leaves no room for anyone white or black to blame another race for what
transpires within the story. The passengers who allow the crime to transpire, and then help to throw
Clays body off the train could represent a large number of people. White and black is specified, but
these characters could represent any member of the audience. Similarly, the Doctor Who episode
Midnight employs a wide range of ordinary characters who, despite the futuristic setting, are dressed in
a contemporary and plain style. The unnamed hostess is a black woman in a uniform similar to a flight
attendants. She is a by the book worker with a forced polite smile. When The Doctor explains that his
exclamation of allons-y is French for lets go she simply smiles, and gives a curt fascinating before
moving on (Midnight, 2:07). She represents those who make themselves slaves to protocol and rules,
telling the Doctor and others to get back to your seat when things begin to go wrong (13:50). She is
the first to suggest murder after the first passenger is possessed, saying we should throw her out, as
she feels a responsibility to protect the tram and its passengers from any danger (26:00). Despite this,
she is the one who sacrifices her own life to save The Doctor (39:30). Biff, Val, and Jethro are membersof the same family on vacation, and could represent many middle class families. Biff is the father of the
familly and dresses like one might imagine the typical vacationing dad, wearing a maroon polo shirt,
khakis, goatee, and an analog wristwatch. Biff is a bit of an overbearing father who complains that his
son is ashamed of us but doesnt mind us paying (3:00). Val is the typical image of a tourist mother,
focused on the complimentary trinkets such as paper slippers provided for the travelers. When disaster
begins, she allows her fear to influence her, claiming that whatever creature possesses Sky Sylvestri, the
went from her to him, The Doctor (36:50). Her fear causes her to see things, and she forces others to
try and see the same things. She asks her son Jethro, a rebellious teenager who wears black clothes and
would rather sit at least one seat from his family while listening to music, if he saw the same thing.
When he says I dont know, she tells him Oh, dont be stupid, Jethro! Of course you did, and
convinces her son that he saw the same thing (37:10). She also uses the same manipulation on herhusband, convincing him to throw The Doctor out of the car by playing on his insecurity, saying do it,
youre useless, questioning his adequacy as a husband and father (37:30). Deedee, a young black
college student traveling with Professor Hobbes on research, aptly concludes that Val is just making it
up, demonstrating a stronger insight but also calling for the murder of Sky with everyone else to
protect herself saying I wanna go home. Im sorry. I want to be safe (27:51). Hobbes is an older
professor, bald, wearing a cardigan, knit tie, and glasses. Hobbes appears very non-threatening, but he
feels overly secure in his own scientific expertise. When the entity begins knocking on the tram he
explains that the light out there is extonic and would destroy any living thing in a split second,
believing that it is impossible for someone to be outside (13:38). As the entitys existence becomes
more apparent, he continues to fall back on his limited knowledge, trying to overcome his fear by relying
on his own intellect. Sky Sylvestri, the passenger who becomes possessed, wears a business suit and is
traveling alone, reading a novel and keeping to herself when the story begins. Her initial interest in her
novel over the other passengers Is similar to the passengers in Dutchman who go back to newspapers
or stare out of windows while Clay and Lula are arguing (Baraka 2755). She is targeted because she is
the most afraid. She calls out Its coming for me while backing against a wall before the entity takes
control of her body and she begins repeating the words of the others in the car (Midnight 10:10).
Dutchman paints a broader stroke by simply specifying that the passengers be both white and black, but
gives little other information. Midnight episode gives passengers specific qualities, but presents such a
wide variety of distinct personalities that the audience may identify with at least one of them. The
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insecurities they hold as fathers, mothers, business people, intellectuals, and their natural fear for their
own safety and sanity motivates them.
Lula suggests Clay knows someone named Warren Enright[,] a tall skinny black boy with a phony
English accent (Baraka 2751). She is implying that Clay is putting on an act, being someone he is not,
and keeping company that is just as phony. Baraka seems to take a similar attitude towards him, even
though he is the protagonist, and arguably the hero of the story. Lula asks Clay why he is wearing a
jacket and tie like that, and says that his narrow-shoulder clothes come from a tradition you ought to
feel oppressed by, his three-button suit and striped tie a product of European fashion sense brought
over to the United States by people who were most likely slave holders (2750). Amiri Baraka changed his
name from Leroi Jones by taking a Bantuized Muslim name (Norton 2743). Both Clays name and his
style of dress may be under judgment not just by Lula, but by the playwright himself. Baraka changed his
name to separate himself from the white European tradition, while his character Clay embraces this
tradition, telling her that he thought he was Baudelaire in college (Baraka 2750). He is similar to The
Doctor in this respect. The Doctor is alien but throughout all his incarnations he has spoken English with
a UK accent. The tenth Doctor in particular who is in the story Midnight speaks with a mainstream
London accent. He sometimes gives away that he is alien however. Jethro observes however that the
doctor called us [the passengers] humans, like youre not one of us (Midnight, 29:00). He also dressesas a human might, wearing a brown suit with purple pinstripes, and a matching purple dress shirt
underneath with a tie. The only hint that something is alien about his dress sense is the fact that he
wears converse sneakers with a suit, but even so, his dress style is alien to his culture and allows him to
blend in. For the Doctor, this is simply a fashion choice and a way to blend in. He also makes concessions
with language, simplifying and using other peoples terminology for explaining complex things.
Ordinarily, he travels in his own time/space traveling vehicle known as the TARDIS, rather than a tram. It
appears and disappears much like the luminous Flying Dutchman, fading in and out as a light on top
slowly pulses. Though it does not appear in the Midnight episode, it is similar in this respect to the myth,
as well as Barakas stage directions for [d]im lights and darkness (2745). In the pilot episode, he must
explain its function as a traveling machine to a pair of school teachers in 1963 in a manner which they
will understand. He calls it a ship, explaining to them, I use your own outdated terminology for anycraft which does not roll along on wheels (An Unearthly Child). The vernacular is not his own, but it
allows him to fit in and be understood and accepted by those around him. This concession to the people
he interacts with makes him similar to Clay, though it does not cause him the same condemnation. The
word ship also links his machine more closely with the Flying Dutchman myth that connects both
stories.
Clay wears his suit, as he says to keep himself from cutting all your throats, referring to Lula and the
other passengers, though possibly focusing on the white passengers (2756). He is putting on an act to fit
in. Baraka does not seem to view these violent urges as negative or a sin, but suggests through Clay that
Charlie Parker. Bird wouldve played not a note of music if he just [...] killed the first ten white people
he saw (2756). Attributing these violent tendencies to a great musician who is respected by both races
gives them legitimacy within the story. The reader also sees him acting violently toward Lula prior to the
revelation about how dangerous she is. He [s]laps her as hard as he can, across the mouth attempting
to shut her up, and does so violently that her head bangs against the back of the seat (2755).
Assuming that Baraka is not condemning this violence, having attributed similar urges to famous
musicians, Clays sin, the transgression that relates him to the Flying Dutchman myth is his choice of
name, dress, his English friends, and his general adoption of European descended traditions.
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The Doctor is a heroic figure, but has potentially violent tendencies as Clay does. A young boy at a
military academy on the verge of World War 1 describes The Doctor as being like fire, and ice, and
rage, expressing how dangerous he is, but finishing by saying that The Doctor is also wonderful (The
Family of Blood, 24:50). His qualities are heroic, but he is somewhat of a tragic flawed hero. In the new
series, The Doctor reveals that not only is he separated from his people, but they died by his actions as
he protected the rest of the universe. He finds what he believes to be the last remaining member of an
enemy race, the Daleks, and gloats your race is dead, you all burned all of you, ten-million ships on fire,
the entire Dalek race wiped out in one second, emphasizing I watched it happen, I made it happen
(Dalek, 8:30). He also reveals that his race The Time Lords also burned with the Daleks, and laments
that had no choice but to end the war with a near double genocide to keep the rest of the universe
from being destroyed (8:50). The Doctor has become the sole survivor of his race by his own actions,
and so he must wander the proverbial seas of the universe without a home port to land his luminous
ship. Clay has violent urges, but his sin is not violence, but trying to be someone he is not, Baudelaire or
any other figure, though the myth applies more to the subway car and its passengers in general than to
Clay only. Clay is violent, but justifiably so in the eyes of the playwright, while the Doctor is punished for
his violent tendencies. The Doctor however wears the clothes and adopts the language of another
culture without any judgment against him, while these tendencies in Clay allow him to be targeted and
killed more easily. They both have violent tendencies, and make concessions to fit in. Though they arenot condemned for the same reason, the theme of condemnation for a sin connects them by a common
myth, as does being alien like the Dutchman, unable to find a friendly home port. The curse is on the
ship as well. The Doctors TARDIS travels with him, and events after Clays murder suggest that his death
may not be the only one.
When Clay first appears, he is holding a magazine, while Lula is carrying a net bag full of paper books
(2745). At the end of the story, we see a YOUNG NEGRO who comes into the coach, with a couple of
books under his arm before becoming the new subject of Lulas interest as she gives him a long slow
look (2758). Lula is targeting another educated young black man, and the subway train continues like
the Flying Dutchman ship. The cycle of racial violence is about to continue, as if the subway car is forever
traveling in this sea of trouble. The net bag full of books that Lula carries may likely be trophies fromprevious young black men that she has killed. Even if she changes subway cars, wherever she goes the
curse will continue.
The antagonists in each story make the protagonist repeat them before taking control. Lula initially gets
Clay to give up his voice by a simple direct command for him to repeat her. She order him stating, Now
you say to me, Lula, Lula why dont you go to this party with me tonight? Its your turn and let those be
your lines (2749). He adds a Huh to the end of her statement and uses her name only once, but she
quickly corrects him so that he repeats her request verbatim, telling him to [s]ay her name twice
with no huhs (2749). The Doctor is also made to repeat by the entity inhabiting Mrs. Silvestre. She
begins repeating what The Doctor says, picking him because she needs his voice in particular[,] the
cleverest voice in the room (Midnight 32:23). The Doctor is being targeted for his intelligence as Clay
and the young black man after him have been. She mimics everything he says, coming into closer and
closer sync with him until she speaks first, still inhabiting the body of Mrs. Sylvestri, but physically
disabling The Doctor while forcing him to repeat her words. Professor Hobbes observes that she spoke
before he did, and Jethro comes to the conclusion that hes copying her (33:10). The entity can now
speak on its own, answering when someone asks if Mrs. Sylvestri has returned saying Yes, its
me(33:50). Jethro concludes that its passed into The Doctor (34:00), and the entity confirms their
suspicions by saying that its inside his head while smiling and maintaining a gentle tone to gain
everyones sympathy (35:59). Lula uses similar methods, saying I lie a lot. It helps me control the world
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(Baraka 2747). Like Lula, the entity lies, but allows people to form their own conclusions first repeating
The Doctor and then paralyzing him , forcing him to repeat so that they conclude that he is the entity
because thats what the thing does, it repeats (36:40). The Doctor lives, but his condition during this
period is similar to Clay after Lula stabs him. Clay slumps across her knees, his mouth working stupidly,
his voice stolen as The Doctors was, and his body is unable to move save for what mute motions he can
make with his mouth.
After stealing The Doctors voice, making him repeat her, the creature controlling Sky is still unable to
fully control her body and calls in a docile, helpless tone Help me Professor, get me away from him,
please, an order which Professor Hobbes quickly obeys (Midnight, 34:30). Similarly, Lula exercises
similar control over the passengers on the subway car after she has killed Clay. She calls out to them,
Get this man off me! Hurry, now, having committed the murder herself, she recruits the passengers of
the train to help her clean up the evidence. The circumstances from each story are slightly different, but
follow similar patterns. The entity asks to be pulled away from The Doctor, while Lula asks them to take
hold of Clay instead, but both manipulate others to put distance between themselves and the one they
have attacked.
After the passengers pull Clays body off, she tells them to [o]pen the door and throw his body out(Baraka 2757). The entity in midnight manipulates people into trying to do the same thing with The
Doctor, though by using peoples insecurities to put the thought into their head. The Hostess was the
first to suggest throwing Mrs. Sylvestri out (26:00) when she began repeating, and so the entity waits
until peoples tempers flare up and lies, explaining [t]hats how he does it. He makes you fight, creeps
into your head, and whispers before commanding people to listen. Just listen (37:40). She is more
indirect than Lula, but just as effective, planting mental suggestions with words alone so that people
convince themselves that they can hear the entity. Biff is the first to suggest lets throw him out
(38:01). Val puts her fingers to her temples, beginning to believe she is hearing voices, saying get him
out of my head before telling Biff Dont just talk about it [] youre useless, making him feel
inadequate and spurring him on (38:00). Whereas Lula directly commands, the entity uses peoples own
insecurities and fears to get them to do her will. The indirect manipulation of peoples insecuritiesseems more realistic and believable than Lula simply commanding everyone to do her bidding. The
audience is able to see what motivates each person to commit terrible acts, and learns that they have,
as Clay said very rational explanations (Baraka, 2757) for what they are doing. Biff for example, has his
adequacy as a husband and a man is called into question, and he decides his course of action. He only
needs prompting when having trouble working up the nerve to actually commit murder. He hesitates,
his hands shaking as he contemplates murdering The Doctor though, the entity becomes as direct as
Lula, calling Yes! Throw him out! Get rid of him! Now! (37:33).
Though being targeted for his intellect as Clay was, The Doctor manages to use his intelligence to save
his life. Although he can only repeat the entity, he gets the entity to say Molto Bene and Allons-y
(38:59), two phrases that the hostess would remember he had spoken at the beginning of the trip. The
hostess exclaims shes taken his voice (39:26) and sacrifices herself. Looking at her actions in relation
to the Flying Dutchman myth, this act of self sacrifice serves as her penance for being the first to suggest
murder. No such penance is displayed in Dutchman however, only the sin and its grim results.
Mrs. Sylvestri is killed and The Doctor released from her control parallels closely with Clays threats to
Lula. The Doctor is only released when the hostess sacrifices herself, pulling Mrs. Sylvestri and the entity
possessing her outside (Midnight 39:40). The light outside is called extonic, and the driver of the tram
states that its one hundred percent extonic out there, wed be vaporized (10:00). Mrs. Sylvestri is
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dragged outside into this light and dies in a way that very closely resembles Clays threats against Lula.
He threatens that the blues people and half-white trusties will drag you out to the edge of your
cities so the flesh can fall away from your bones, in sanitary isolation (Baraka 2757). Midnight is
certainly a planet of sanitary isolation, a diamond planet with no humans on the surface save for a small
resort and those protected in the tram cars. No life is present on the surface, save for the entity in the
story as any flesh in the light is vaporized. The scene of Mrs. Sylvestris death also mirrors Clays
statement to Lula that the only thing that would cure the neurosis would be your murder (2756). The
Doctor continues to repeat everything the entity says until it is either killed, or flees when Mrs. Sylvestri
dies, at which point he tells the other passengers Its gone after being released from its controlling
madness (Midnight 39:48). Perhaps murder is what Baraka believed was the only penance that would
end the curse of his Dutchman. The passengers get off the train, but the proverbial ship continues sailing
with a new educated black man on board with Lula. Barakas work is more about race, and helping his
race escape this cycle of violence while Midnight is more universal, showing the ugly side of all humans,
regardless of color. Both stories are connected by the common myth of the Flying Dutchman, and by the
need for the viewers to analyze themselves as well as the world around them and to be aware of such
dangers.
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Works Cited
Baraka, Amiri. "Dutchman." The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Seventh ed. Vol. E. New York:
W.W. Norton, 2007. 2745-758. Print.
Baym, Nina. "AMIRI BARAKA (LEROI JONES)." The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Seventh ed.
Vol. E. New York: W.W. Norton, 2007. 2743-744. Print.
Coburn, Anthony. "An Unearthly Child." Doctor Who. British Broadcasting Corporation. London, United
Kingdom, 23 Nov. 1963. Youtube. Web. 14 Nov. 2010.
.
Cornell, Paul. "The Family of Blood." Doctor Who. British Broadcasting Corporation. Cardiff, United
Kingdom, 30 Apr. 2 Jun. 2007. Netflix. BBC America. Web. 17 Nov. 2010.
Davies, Russel. "Midnight." Doctor Who. British Broadcasting Corporation. Cardiff, United Kingdom, 30
Apr. 2005. Netflix. BBC America. Web. 4 Nov. 2010.
Dicks, Terrence & Hulke, Malcolm. "The War Games." Doctor Who. British Broadcasting Corporation.
London, United Kingdom, 19 Apr. 1969. DVD.
Leyden, John. Scenes of Infancy; Descriptive of Teviotdale. Edinburgh: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and
Brown, 1811. Google Books. Web. 9 Nov. 2010.
.
Shearman, Robert. "Dalek." Doctor Who. British Broadcasting Corporation. Cardiff, United Kingdom, 30
Apr. 2005. Netflix. BBC America. Web. 10 Nov. 2010.