Document Type : Research Article

Authors

Department of English, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran

Abstract

1. Introduction
Sartre’s famous line in No Exit “Hell is other people” (p. 45) stands as a direct confirmation of the power of Others. In fact, “[o]ur perception within the field of the Other is therefore always a battle with the Gaze: we struggle with the limitations of the structure that is laid out for us” (Grootenboer, 2012. p.45). To spin a piece of common thread intertwining all entities together right at the outset, Burt (2008) asserts that: “When validation and identity derives from others, others become hell, a state where torture is not meted out by devils but self-inflicted and inescapable” (p. 411). Therefore, under the gaze of the other person, our identities withdraw into the shell of reduction. We no more exist by ourselves, but our lives seem to be entangled in the labyrinthine network of others’ existences.
The story of No Exit turns around three people trapped in a setting resembling a hotel room in Hell. Finding themselves situated in the endless life after death free of earthly boundaries, they are seemingly given the desired liberty to define who they may be. But as it happens they are unable to do so because of the power of the Others in the room.
2. Methodology
This paper adopts Sartre’s theories about gaze and individuality in the light of Foucault's insights (1997) about power relations. We can follow the reiteration of this commitment in Boileau’s thesis (2004) as well. He has acknowledged the vote in favor of “[t]he gaze and discipline of the Other actively weave individuals into the relations of power,” as interspersed among his observations (1998, p. 13).
3. Discussion
Sartre’s famous play No Exit, as it was initially entitled les autres (The Others), betokens the sweeping declaration of Sartre that Garcin yields to near the end of the play that “Hell is other people”( p.30). So the very title shows Hell and Others are aligned with the very same attributes that frame their perimeters. Lois Gordon brings to light the significance of the original title: “For those who have spent their lives catering to or dependent on the world of Others, hell is indeed, and appropriately, other people, with an emphasis on ‘other’” (Fahy & King, 2005, p. 170). And as it is obvious Sartre’s No Exit, treats “not only with life at its limit (namely, death) but also with the utter Hell of human relationships” (Solomon, 2006. p.51).
The story of No Exit pivots on a very few characters, “each take turns attempting to gain control of the situation through their looks” (Brunner, 1997. p.60). The characters of Garcin, Estelle and Inez see themselves helpless at the surveillance of the Other’s mutual gaze, their destiny becomes directed by their power, as Inez’s words reverberates and epitomizes this state, “each of us will act as torturer of the two others” (Sartre, 1989.p. 49). And what the Others make of them in fact, will torture their self-identity (Solomon, 2006).
In the light of the Other’s habit of superintendently defining one’s body, it conglomerates the jurisdiction of gaze with power relations. And as it does not escape Foucault’s notice “power relations have an immediate hold upon it; they invest it, mark it, train it, torture it, force it to carry out tasks, to perform ceremonies, to emit signs” (Foucault, 1997.p.63).
The body that is enslaved to the gaze and judgment of other individuals, its conscience is stubbornly under their surveillance to shape its own morality. Carving out their beings in the grips of a judging look ushers the three of characters in the labyrinths of objectifications. This happens while the comfort of their solitude is totally shattered and in consequence they grapple with conflict of freedom.
The characters find themselves subject to the look of the Other. As they are conscious of the presence of someone else, another consciousness, who is watching and scrutinizing them, their individuality is tampered and flirted with what Sartre calls being-for-others. As he claims in Being and Nothingness “the Other as a look”, enforces the subjects to experience their “inapprehensible being-for-others in the form of a possession. . . . the Other's look fashions [their] body in its nakedness, causes it to be born, sculptures it, produces it as it is, sees it as [they] shall never see it” (p. 364). INEZ’s words give credit to the Other’s look that can harness the subject’s individuality in a volley of abuse: “And why shouldn't you ‘tame’ me?” (Sartre, 1989.p.55)
As pointed out earlier, the unstable power relations have given rise to individual’s freedom where he can defy or act on his own from the power relation. Naturally, “power relations are not equivalent to a physical determination where there is no choice available” (Boileau, 2004.p.81). Individuals within the realm of power relations settle upon enlisting the game, or withdrawing from it. “Once within the relation, individuals continue to have the possibility of reasoned choice and refusal” (Boileau, 2004.p.82).As it goes, the power relations cannot subsist on reluctant participants.
4. Conclusion
Sartre claims that people relate to themselves and to one another through either looking or being looked at. When they give false images of themselves, they assume to be no more than the objects of their own look or confine themselves up in their own subjectivity.
The power that Look exerts on the body becomes visible to the naked eye through the particular discipline to which the body is exposed and henceforth inclined. By tailoring a particular use of the body for a certain atmosphere, the gaze casts its net of power over one’s individuality, freedom and judgment to fix and define them on its whim.
A final recapitulation binds all the above-mentioned claims together. Accordingly appearing as atomized and alienated individuals “annihilating each other through their Look” (Boileau, 1998, p. 219; Boileau, 2004, p. 78); Garcin, Estelle and Inez can’t follow an ethics of authentic existence lending credence to the idea of false reciprocity.

Keywords

سارتر، ژ. (بی‌تا). در بسته. ترجمۀ‏ ناصر غیاثی.برگرفته از
http://ketabnak.com/comment.php?dlid
پیر، ه. (1356). ژان پل سارتر. ترجمۀ احمد میرعلائی و ابوالحسن نجفی. تهران: زمان.
Boileau, Kevin. (1998, May). Genuine reciprocity and group authenticity: Foucauldean developments of Sartre’s social ontology. (Doctoral dissertation). Albuquerque: The University of New Mexico. Retrieved December 11, 2014, from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. <http://search.proquest.com/docview/304469475/fulltextPDF/460B1F93E4554AC9PQ/1?accountid=27274>
Boileau, Kevin. (2004). How Foucault can improve Sartre's theory of authentic political community. Sartre Studies International. 10(2), 77-91. Retrieved November 13, 2014, from JSTOR. doi: 10.2307/23512877 < http://www.jstor.org/stable/23512877>
Brodersen, Elizabeth, and Rubin, Dan. (Eds.). (2011). Words on plays: Insight into the play, the playwright, and the production No Exit. American Conservatory Theater. Retrieved October 15, 2014, from http://www.act-sf.org/content/dam/act/education_department/words_on_plays/No%20Exit%20Words%20on%20Plays%20(2011).pdf
Brown, Mark Raymond. (2004). Worlds apart? Sartre, Foucault, and the question of freedom. (Doctoral dissertation).Ottawa: University of Ottawa. Retrieved December 8, 2014, from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses.
Brunner, Kathleen Marie. (1997). The hermeneutic of the look and the face of the Other in the philosophy and literature of Jean-Paul Sartre. (Doctoral dissertation). Ann Arbor: UMI Microform. Retrieved December 12, 2014, from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses.
Burt, Daniel S. (2008). The Drama 100: A ranking of the greatest plays of all time. New York: Facts On File, Inc. Retrieved May 17, 2014, from BookFi.
Dobson, Andrew. (1993). Jean-Paul Sartre and the politics of reason: A theory of history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Retrieved February 2, 2015, from Googlebooks.
Foucault, Michel. (1997). Discipline and punish: The birth of the prison (Alan Sheridan, Trans.). New York: Vintage Books. Retrieved November 23, 2014, from BookFi.
Foucault, Michel. (1980). Power/knowledgeselected interviews and other writings 1972-1977. (Colin Gordon, Leo Marshall, John Mepham, and Kate Sopernew, Trans.). Colin Gordon. (Ed.). New York: Pantheon Books. Retrieved October 14, 2014, from BookZZ.
Gordon, Lois. (2005). No exit and waiting for Godot: Performances in contrast. In Thomas Fahy and Kimball King (Ed.), Captive audience: Prison and captivity in contemporary theater. (pp. 167–189).New York: Taylor & Francis e-Library. Retrieved November 13, 2014, from BookFi.
Grootenboer, Hanneke. (2012). Treasuring the gaze: Intimate vision in late eighteenth-century eye miniatures. London: The University of Chicago Press. Retrieved January 14, 2015, from Googlebooks.
Howells, Christina. (Ed.). (2006). Thecambridge companion to Sartre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Retrieved October 23, 2014, from BookFi.
Leak, Andrew. (2006). Jean-Paul Sartre. – (Critical lives). London: Reaktion Books Ltd. Retrieved October 23, 2014, from BookZZ.
Linsenbard, Gail. (2010). Starting with Sartre. London: Continuum International Publishing Group. Retrieved November 13, 2014, from BookZZ.
Loeb, Ernst. (2003). Sartre's No Exit and Brecht's The Good Woman of Setzuan: A comparison. University of Washington, 283-291. Retrieved November 13, 2014, from EBSCO Publishing
Moran, Dermot. (2002). Introduction to phenomenology.London and New York: Taylor & Francis e-Library. Retrieved February 1, 2015, from Bokos.
O'Neil, Patrick M. (Ed.). (2004). Great world writers: Twentieth century. Tarrytown: Marshall Cavendish Corporation. Retrieved December 16, 2014, from Googlebooks. <https:// books.google.com/ books?isbn= 0761474692>
Priest, Stephen. (Ed.). (2001). Jean-Paul Sartre: Basic writings. London: Routledge. Retrieved October 23, 2014, from BookZZ.
Sartre, Jean-Paul. Being and nothingness: An essay in phenomenological ontology. (Hazel E. Barnes, Trans.). University of Colorado. Retrieved December 9, 2014, from Bokos.
Sartre, Jean-Paul. (1989). No Exit and three other plays. (Stuart Gilbert, Trans.). New York: Vintage Books-Random House, Inc. Retrieved September 26, 2014, from BookZZ.
Solomon, Robert C. (2006). Dark feelings, grim thoughts: Experience and reflection in Camus and Sartre. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Inc. Retrieved October 23, 2014, from BookZZ.
Volf, Miroslav, and Katerberg, William Henry. (Eds.). (2004). The future of hope: Christian tradition amid modernity and postmodernity. Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. Retrieved January 14, 2015, from Googlebooks.
Wang, Zhenping. (2012). Undefined man: Sartrean reading of American novelist Walker Percy’s The moviegoer. Intercultural Communication Studies, XXI(2), 138–156. Retrieved October 15, 2014, from uri.edu. http://www.uri.edu/iaics/content/2012v21n3/11Wang.pdf
CAPTCHA Image