The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

166 LAW 22


allmore

intelligent

thanthemembersofthecommittee.
Why

lowerthem-

selvestotheleveloftheir

opponentsbyarguing

with
them?
Why

notout

foxthecommittee

by

appearing

tosurrendertoitwhile

subtlymocking

it?

The

Hollywood

19 listenedtoBrecht

politely,

butdecidedtosticktotheir

plan,leaving

Brechtto
go

hisown
way.

The
committee

finally

summonedBrechtonOctober30.

They

ex-

pected

himtodowhatothers
among

the

Hollywood

19 whohadtestified

beforehimhaddone:

Argue,

refusetoanswer

questions,challenge

the

committee's

right

toholdits

hearing,

even

yell

andhurlinsults.Muchto

their

surprise,

however,

Brechtwasthe
verypicture

of

Congeniality.

He

worea
suit

(something

he

rarely

did),

smoked
a
cigar
(he

had
heard
that

thecommitteechairmanwas
a

passionatecigar

smoker),

answered
their

questionspolitely,

and

generally

deferredtotheir

authority.

Unliketheother
witnesses,

Brechtansweredthe

question

ofwhether

he

belonged

totheCommunist

Party:

Hewasnota
member,

he

said,

which

happened

tobethetruth.Onecommitteememberasked
him,
“isit

true
you

havewritten
a
numberof

revolutionaryplays?”

Brechthad
writ-

ten

manyplays

withovertCommunist
messages,

buthe

responded,

“I

havewrittenanumberof
poems

and
songs

and

plays

inthe

fightagainst

Hitler

and,

of
course,

they

canbe

considered,therefore,

as

revolutionary

because
I,

of
course,

wasfortheoverthrowofthat

government.”

Thisstate

ment
went

unchallenged.

Brecht’s

English

wasmorethan

adequate,

butheusedan
interpreter

throughout

his

testimony,

atacticthatallowedhimto

play

subtle
games

with

language.

WhencommitteemembersfoundCommunist

leanings

in

lines
from

English

editionsofhis
poems,

hewould
repeat

thelinesinGer

man
for
the
interpreter,

who
wouldthen
retranslate
them;

and
somehow

they

would
come

outinnocuous.Atone
point

acommitteemember
read

oneofBrechfs

revolutionarypoems

outloudin

English,

andaskedhimif

hehadwrittenit.
“No,”

he

responded,

“IwroteaGerman
poem,

whichis

very

differentfromthis.”Theauthor'selusiveanswersbaffledthecommit-

tee
members,
buthis

politeness

andthe
way

he

yielded

totheir

authority

madeit

impossible

forthemto
getangry

withhim.

After

only

anhourof

questioning,

thecommitteemembershadhad

enough.

“Thank
youvery

much,”
saidthe
chairman,
“Youarea

good

ex-

ample

tothe

{other}

witnesses.”
Not

only

did

they

free
him,

they

offeredto

help

him
if
hehad
any

trouble
with
immigration

oficialswho

might

detain

himfortheirownreasons.The

followingday,

BrechtlefttheUnited
States,

nevertoreturn.

Interpretation

The
Hollywood

19’sconfrontational

approach

wonthem
alot
of
sympa~

thy,

and
years

later

theygained

akindofvindicationin

publicopinion.

But

they

werealso

blacklisted,

andlostvaluable
years

of

profitableworking

time.
Brecht,

ontheother

hand,

expressed

his

disgust

atthecommittee

more

indirectly.

Itwasnotthathe

changed

hisbeliefsor

compromised

his

values;instead,

during

hisshort

testimony,

he

kept

the
upper

hand
byap-
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