Mercifully, no one has died or been killed yet
in Season 4 of Downton Abbey. Even
so the tension is rising. Will Mary find a new man? Will Tom Branson throw in
the towel and emigrate to America? Will Mr. Bates do something stupid to avenge
Anna and thus ruin the one really good thing he has in his life? How will
Isobel Crawley renegotiate her place In the family and in the larger world of
Downton society? What mischief are Barrow and Baxter really up to? Will Mosely
make it in his reduced status? And then the really big questions after the
latest episode: What is Edith going to do? And how far is Rose ready to go?
Rose’s involvement with the Black bandleader,
Mr. Ross, clearly crosses more than one boundary. To an American audience, because of our troubled racial
history, it is the racial dynamic that we notice right away. But, while the
racial angle undoubtedly adds further fuel to an already highly combustible
situation, this is Britain not America, and I think we are meant to see this
relationship (and all relationships at Downton) primarily through the prism of
class.
Dramatically, last night’s episode made that
point loud and clear, I think, through the way it portrayed both Violet’s and
Isobel’s dealings with Peg the gardener, through the sad but comic trials of
the downward-mobile Mr. Mosely (almost reduced to becoming Joseph, but spared
that assault to his dignity by the superlative sensitivity of the Dowager
Countess and Lord Robert), and finally by the snobbery experienced by Mr. and
Mrs. Bates at a local restaurant (humorously turned to their advantage by Lady
Grantham’s intervention on their behalf). All these little vignettes highlight
how social class – a person’s defined social position – dominates everything in
that world and is the primary lens through which all experience is interpreted.
We Americans have a history of trying to not
quite acknowledge class. And, of course, class in America was never quite the pervasively decisive factor
it was in the 1920s Britain portrayed at Downton. Yet, as Lady Edith’s aunt
presciently warned her at the end of the previous episode, some things change
but some other important things stay the same. Downton is a case study not just
in whether Mary and Tom can make the estate a going concern in the modern
economy but in how real people completely caught up in the consciousness of class
can negotiate the complex challenges of a modern world which is gradually
eroding the certainties, securities, and comforts of a world in which the social
boundaries and the behaviors that accompany those boundaries are all always completely
clear to everyone.
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