23 April 2015 A.D. MORE CATERWAULING FROM FIRST THINGS: From a Law Professor (Who Should Stick with Contract Law), More Whining about Thomas More and Thomas Cromwell in Wolf Hall
23
April 2015 A.D. MORE CATERWAULING FROM FIRST THINGS:
From a Law Professor (Who Should Stick with Contract Law), More Whining about Thomas
More and Thomas Cromwell in Wolf Hall
Movsesian,
Mark. “Thomas More, Villain: What Wolf Hall Means for Religious Freedom.” First Things. 21 Apr 2015. http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2015/04/thomas-more-villain. Accessed 21 Apr 2015.
When it comes to up-market
historical fiction, nobody delivers like the Tudors. There’s so much
entertainment value in that Renaissance dynasty: royalty; costumes; cool
accents; lust and murder; political and religious intrigue; the works—plus
enough history to make you feel virtuous for watching. In the 1930s, studios
turned out films like The Private Life of Henry VIII and Fire over England, which, for my money, still has the best
portrayal of Elizabeth on film, by the great British actress Flora Robson. In the
1960s, there was Anne of the Thousand Days. Forty years
ago, PBS broadcast Elizabeth R and The Six Wives of Henry VIII. More recently, there was
Showtime’s The Tudors. And now on PBS’s
Masterpiece there is Wolf Hall, a BBC dramatization of
Hilary Mantel’s 2009 novel.
All historical fiction involves anachronism, of course, and depictions of
the Tudors often reveal more about contemporary issues than they do about the
past. Robert Bolt’s A Man for All Seasons portrayed Thomas
More as a liberal dissenter from state ideology, a man committed to individual
conscience and the rule of law. (In the 1960s, liberals identified with such
people.) Glenda Jackson’s 1971 portrayal made Elizabeth an icon for the rising
feminist movement.
I was able to catch an episode of Wolf
Hall on Sunday, and it seems to me the new series likewise
reflects our current cultural moment. Maybe I spend too much time thinking
about these things, but to me it is impossible to miss the allusions to current
debates about rational government and religious belief. The message, for
religious liberty, is not a congenial one.
Wolf Hall—which, incidentally, has
great production values and wonderful performances, especially by Damian Lewis
as Henry VIII—inverts the conventional portrayal of the Henrician Reformation.
Most past film and television versions, even those sympathetic to Henry, show
More as a kind of hero, a noble, if misguided, martyr for freedom of
conscience. In Mantel’s version, by contrast, it’s Cromwell, the supporter of
state orthodoxy and More’s tormentor, who is the hero. And More, the man who
resisted the state from religious conviction, is the unalloyed villain.
Now, More was a more
complicated figure than widely understood. Even saints have failings. He may
have been, as Swift famously wrote, “a person of the greatest virtue this
kingdom ever produced,” but, as chancellor, he persecuted Protestants and
approved burning heretics at the stake. Mantel’s portrayal goes beyond offering
a helpful corrective to the conventional wisdom, though. Her More is not deeper
or truer to the historical record. He is simply evil, a nasty piece of
work—cold, fanatical, and sadistic.
Mantel’s Cromwell, by contrast, is warm, self-effacing, and pragmatic, even
wistful—a family man, though with a ruthless edge. Between him and More,
Cromwell is easily the more reasonable. Religious enthusiasm is not for him; he
is far too insightful and levelheaded. He is also more compassionate. When More
tells him that torture is for the victim’s own good—the real More forcefully
denied that he ever tortured anyone—Cromwell is aghast. Cromwell is far too
tender-hearted to believe something like that. He cannot bear to see someone
burned at the stake for heresy. More, we gather, would be delighted.
I know nothing about Mantel’s politics. Perhaps her choices in Wolf Hall are purely aesthetic. Maybe she set herself the
artistic challenge of portraying Cromwell, one of British history’s great
villains, in a favorable light. But I’m guessing she has an agenda.
Increasingly, secular liberals are losing patience with claims for religious
liberty, particularly from traditionalists who dissent from progressive
orthodoxy. Only fanatics could object to progressive goals like the
Contraception Mandate and same-sex marriage, they believe, and it’s wrong to
accommodate such people.
Accommodation encourages backward and malevolent attitudes that cause
innocent people grave harm.
In its biased portrayal of More, British history’s great example of
religious resistance to state orthodoxy, Wolf
Hall is sending its audience a message: Don’t think this man was
at all admirable. He was a dangerous head case. And, by extension, be careful
of his analogues today, who continue to oppose religious fanaticism to
tolerance, reason, and progress. Cromwell, and pragmatic people like him who
protect us from the forces of reaction, are the real heroes.
It’s a powerful message, and one with increasing influence. Perhaps this
explains why PBS is advertising Wolf
Hall as “a historical drama for a modern audience.” The fact that
this hatchet job on Thomas More appears in an impeccably well-done BBC
production—surely the gold standard in upper-middle class entertainment—shows
how fast our culture is changing, and how much work defenders of religious
liberty have before them.
Mark Movsesian is the Frederick A. Whitney Professor
of Contract Law and the Director of the Center for Law and Religion at St.
John’s University School of Law. His previous blog posts can be found here.

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