Cormac McCarthy´s The Stonemason and the Ethic of Craftsmanship

The Stonemason (1995), Cormac McCarthy’s first published play, is a sustained meditation on the values of the ethic of craft as opposed to mere work, as well as on the difficult application of such values to reality. On the one hand, craft is represented as the quintessential value; on the other, it...

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Main Author: Federico Bellini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2017-12-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12359
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author Federico Bellini
author_facet Federico Bellini
author_sort Federico Bellini
collection DOAJ
description The Stonemason (1995), Cormac McCarthy’s first published play, is a sustained meditation on the values of the ethic of craft as opposed to mere work, as well as on the difficult application of such values to reality. On the one hand, craft is represented as the quintessential value; on the other, it is measured against the real world in which values have to be constantly renegotiated in order to be useful. In this essay, I analyze how the tension between the ideal of the “craftsman hero,” represented by Papaw, and Ben’s attempt to live up to it traverses The Stonemason through three distinct if intertwined levels. First is the individual level, at which craft is intended as Ben’s personal experience of learning from Papaw how to lay stone upon stone as he struggles to hold his family together. Second is the social level: stonemasonry is one element of the economic system which is the battlefield for the struggle between the effort of the oppressed to improve their position and the ever-renewing ways in which the oppressors defend and exercise their power. Finally, there is the symbolic-mythical level: here stonemasonry is seen as the archetypical craft embodying a view of the world as the product of either a benevolent or an evil God. It is in the tension between the ideal and the reality of craftsmanship as it crosses these three dimensions that one can appreciate the full scope and complexity of McCarthy’s ethic of craft.
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spelling doaj-art-7565add371ca4ddf99d77ff50395d0142025-01-06T09:09:19ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362017-12-0112310.4000/ejas.12359Cormac McCarthy´s The Stonemason and the Ethic of CraftsmanshipFederico BelliniThe Stonemason (1995), Cormac McCarthy’s first published play, is a sustained meditation on the values of the ethic of craft as opposed to mere work, as well as on the difficult application of such values to reality. On the one hand, craft is represented as the quintessential value; on the other, it is measured against the real world in which values have to be constantly renegotiated in order to be useful. In this essay, I analyze how the tension between the ideal of the “craftsman hero,” represented by Papaw, and Ben’s attempt to live up to it traverses The Stonemason through three distinct if intertwined levels. First is the individual level, at which craft is intended as Ben’s personal experience of learning from Papaw how to lay stone upon stone as he struggles to hold his family together. Second is the social level: stonemasonry is one element of the economic system which is the battlefield for the struggle between the effort of the oppressed to improve their position and the ever-renewing ways in which the oppressors defend and exercise their power. Finally, there is the symbolic-mythical level: here stonemasonry is seen as the archetypical craft embodying a view of the world as the product of either a benevolent or an evil God. It is in the tension between the ideal and the reality of craftsmanship as it crosses these three dimensions that one can appreciate the full scope and complexity of McCarthy’s ethic of craft.https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12359laborCormac McCarthyThe Stonemasoncraftsmanshipwork ethic
spellingShingle Federico Bellini
Cormac McCarthy´s The Stonemason and the Ethic of Craftsmanship
European Journal of American Studies
labor
Cormac McCarthy
The Stonemason
craftsmanship
work ethic
title Cormac McCarthy´s The Stonemason and the Ethic of Craftsmanship
title_full Cormac McCarthy´s The Stonemason and the Ethic of Craftsmanship
title_fullStr Cormac McCarthy´s The Stonemason and the Ethic of Craftsmanship
title_full_unstemmed Cormac McCarthy´s The Stonemason and the Ethic of Craftsmanship
title_short Cormac McCarthy´s The Stonemason and the Ethic of Craftsmanship
title_sort cormac mccarthy´s the stonemason and the ethic of craftsmanship
topic labor
Cormac McCarthy
The Stonemason
craftsmanship
work ethic
url https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12359
work_keys_str_mv AT federicobellini cormacmccarthysthestonemasonandtheethicofcraftsmanship