On 'The Mind Robber'.  A regurgitation of something originally buried in the middle of an old post.
1. The Review
Just one of the best things ever, this story is a gloriously trippy metafictional journey into Doctor Who's own status as a text.
'Robber' picks up the Troughton era handbook for writers, stamps on it, 
scrawls insulting and anarchistic slogans upon its pages, rips it up and
 sets fire to the pieces. There is no isolated base, no croaky computer,
 no catalgue of disposable characters who are laser-beamed to death, no 
unstable authority figure, no creeping infiltration, no standard fight 
sequence for Jamie, no scene where someone goes into a bonkers tirade 
and storms out of a control centre... instead we have a deeply trippy 
ride through sheer weirdness; a totally unpredictable variation of 
content, style and pace from episode to episode; an intelligently 
created elllision of symbolism and literalism; a classic surreal quest 
narrative drawing on Wizard of Oz and Alice in Wonderland yet beholden to neither.
The Doctor and his friends leave their universe and enter a non-spatial,
 non-temporal buffer zone... and this buffer zone is a world of fiction.
 An empty nothingness until imagination works upon it, it soon fills 
with robots and unicorns and princesses and forests of words.
They've landed in a metaphysical space instead of a physical one, and 
the threats they encounter are metaphysical too - they run the risk of 
being translated into other identities, of losing their faces, of being 
turned into bit players in other people's stories, of being made into 
fiction themselves (which, as this story constantly reminds us by 
constantly saying the opposite, they already are).
They are stalked by the ultimate variety of faceless, functional, baddie
 goons: toy soldiers. As if to swipe at the mechanical nature of so much
 scriptwriting, these goons have got dirty great wind-up keys sticking 
out of their backs. In this story, the ultimate threat is to become the 
functional plaything of the desperate hack writer. The soldiers not only
 hunt our heroes, they also represent what our heroes are threatened 
with (both literally and figuratively): being clockwork cyphers who just
 'go' when the lazy writer winds them up and sets them off.
And this is the central threat, even of the somewhat contrived 
Earth-invasion plot that surfaces towards the end. Mankind would become 
fiction. Ironically enough, via the creative imagination, we'd all be 
stripped of our free will. We'd be crushed inside the pages of a book by
 a domineering Master Brain that controls even the writer with a 
stentorian bark that is channelled through his own mouth. That's what it
 would be like to be a character in someone else's book, or a fact 
pushed around by someone else's editor, or a mortal pushed around by a 
god (which is exactly what a writer looks like from the point-of-view of
 a character).
This is Doctor Who investigating its own nature as part 
imagineering stream-of-consciousness fantasy, part lumbering and 
mechanical genre hack-work. This is Doctor Who investigating its 
own origins in myth and legend, in children's fiction and historical 
romance, in satire and allegory. The Doctor wanders around in a 
pseudo-Narnia. The Doctor solves the kinds of puzzles to be found in 
kid's annuals. The Doctor becomes Perseus. The Doctor co-writes a 
face-off between a succession of heroes and villains who are part 
historical reality and part fictional confabulation (Blackbeard, Cyrano,
 etc). And the Doctor meets Gulliver.
It cannot be an accident that Gulliver is one of the Doctor's own 
antecedents in fiction: a restless traveller who finds himself banked on
 foreign shores where he encounters strange people and uncanny creatures
 representing human foibles and political follies. Swift's story is 
often mistaken for pure escapism for kids, but is packed with the 
bitterest and darkest satirical comments on human politics and 
behaviour... very much like Doctor Who, though ironically enough not for most of the Troughton era up until this point.
Perhaps, above all, the thing to admire most about 'Robber' is that it 
triumphantly makes the best of its behind-the-scenes problems. An extra 
episode needed at the last minute? Just get Derrick to write a new 
Episode 1 featuring only the regular cast! Result? One of the most 
unusual and sinister openings of the show's history. Frazer's got the 
lurgy? No trouble, just write a temporary change of actor into the 
script! Result? One of the most amusing, memorable and strangely 
unsettling events ever depicted by the series.
Now that, we must surely all agree, is the sheerest of sheer class.
2.  The Attempt at Marxist Analysis
It occurs to me that 'The Mind Robber' can also be read as being about 
aliention and reification in the Marxist senses of those words.
The Master of the Land of Fiction is clearly offering the Doctor a job 
when he asks him to take his place. He even refers to it as a 
"responsible position". He (the Master) is clearly the servant or 
employee of the Master Brain. He was also a paid employee of Ensign
 magazine, churning out thousands and thousands of words for them to 
print and sell. In other words, he was (and still is) a worker. He 
toiled to produce a product, was paid a wage and (presumably) watched as
 others pocketed the profits. Whatever the Master Brain (and the power 
it represents) gets out of running the Land of Fiction, the Master 
clearly doesn't see any of the coin.
You can argue about whether writing stories constitutes "socially 
necessary labour" (I'd say that it does, personally... human culture is 
in many ways based on stories and it's pretty clear that we need them in
 order to be fully human... they're part of what the young Marx called 
our "species-being"... which is something that the Land of Fiction 
implies by its very existence) but clearly the Master spends much more 
time than he really needs to churning out all those words. His labour 
creates a surplus which is pocketed by the publishers... or a profit of 
some kind that is taken by the Master Brain.
Moreover, the necessities of the market demanded that he write a certain
 type of story, commercial adventure stories which may not really 
express his full creativity. (Certainly, the story as a whole strongly 
hints at a feeling that trite adventures involving handy swords and 
with-one-bound-he-was-free endings are highly unsatisfactory. It hints 
at this in an ironic and self-aware way, as it must.) Similarly, in the 
Land, the Master tries to construct a story about the Doctor and his 
friends that pleases the power he serves... a story that the Doctor 
resists being a part of, partly by rejecting handy swords.
On Earth, his stories would have risen up to confront him as a vast 
block of printed type, as piles of magazines, as things outside of 
himself or his control... that's what happens when workers make things 
under capitalism. They are not expressions of his creativity exercised 
for its own sake; they are not the produce of an unexploited person and a
 free producer... unless the person happens to be lucky enough to be a 
financially independent artist or something like that. Similarly, the 
work he does in the Land is not an expression of his unalienated 
self-expression. He works for the Master Brain and works to produce the 
effects it desires. (You could almost see the Master Brain as a 
personification - thus a reification, in the Marxist sense - of the 
market itself, which is so often treated or spoken of as a kind of 
infallible god which should be allowed to rule society for our own 
good.)
In short, the Master fits (broadly) the Marxist picture of the worker 
who is alienated from his species-being and from the products of his 
labour.
He is clearly a slave to the Master Brain. As such, he's really as 
menaced by the Land of Fiction as the Doctor. He is confronted by 
products of human intellectual labour in the form of books, characters 
from books, characters from folklore (the telling and retelling of 
legends is a human production as much as anything else), wind-up 
soldiers, etc. In the Land, words (themselves human productions) 
confront humans as things outside of human control, as trees and 
forests. Books - commodities produced by labour - attack and threaten to
 swallow you. If that isn't a way of depicting alienation, of humans 
estranged and menaced by the products of their own labour, then I don't 
know what is.
Capitalism materialises the labour of humans into commodities with 
use-values and exchange values (i.e. books and magazines), thus reifying
 human labour time. The Land of Fiction takes it further, continuing the
 process of reification until the characters (themselves commodities and
 products of labour) are fully materialised, to the point where they 
walk about and speak for themselves. Again, alienation is depicted when 
the product of human labour materialised in the form of the Karkus 
attacks the Doctor and Zoe.
Alienation appears in another way when Zoe and Jamie are "turned into 
fiction" and appear before the Doctor as blank, empty cyphers who get 
stuck in the grooves of their dialogue. They've been alienated from 
their human nature by being made into a commodity (fiction being a 
commodity, remember). They start behaving like stuck records, like 
people on an assembly line suffering from line hypnosis.
All this might seem like a helluva stretch... but you have to bear in 
mind that all the books alluded to, all the legends invoked, all the 
proverbs cited, all the characters who appear in the story... they're 
all products of human labour of one form or another.
 
I enjoyed reading this.
ReplyDelete