THE DISCOURSES OF TORTURE
In the third act of his tragedy Troades, Seneca the Younger departs significantly from Euripides’ version of the myth to stage a gripping clash between Ulysses and Andromache over the fate of Andromache's son, Astyanax. He has been sentenced to death by the Greeks: fearing this outcome Andromache has already hidden him in the tomb of her dead husband, Hector. To discover Astyanax's whereabouts, Ulysses threatens Andromache with physical torture, before subjecting her to psychological torture as he plots the destruction of her dead husband Hector's tomb. In this paper, I will discuss how this scene reflects long-standing traditions in rhetoric surrounding torture, each character advancing a position that would be very familiar to a contemporary Roman audience, and that moreover through the war of wills and words Seneca raises profound questions about the role of torture in his society.
Each character plays opposing roles, and channels opposing narratives: Ulysses founds his behaviour on the belief that torture necessarily reveals the truth, while Andromache strives to define herself as the persevering victim of tyrannical torture. I argue that the Troades channels the form of a controuersia to explicitly set these distinct rhetorical discourses in opposition. Although opposing viewpoints are a common feature of the rhetorical controuersiae recorded by Seneca's father, the other Lucius Annaeus Seneca, he includes no declamations that directly address the ambiguities around torture.Footnote 1 In the Troades, these perspectives on torture are closely probed.
We find each of these discourses, on torture's truth and on tyrannical torture, within Seneca's own prose works and other texts of the Early Imperial period, where they form part of wider considerations on the nature of power. However, in these texts the juxtaposition or interaction of the discourses is carefully avoided, if both are featured; for instance, Valerius Maximus introduces them at separate points whole books apart.Footnote 2 In the Troades, these two discourses clash, as Ulysses and Andromache confront each other. The Troades may thus suggest a more nuanced response among the Roman elite to the changing dynamics of state power than other contemporary texts, a response that takes advantage of the distancing effect of the setting of the Trojan War to pose difficult questions about torture.Footnote 3 In Ulysses’ recourse to psychological duress, which evolves out of the failure of his threats of physical torture to overcome Andromache's resistance, we are offered a broader definition of torture than we might expect from an ancient text.Footnote 4 Seneca poses questions about the efficacy, motivation and justification of torture that resonate with us today.
Scholarship on this scene has followed broader patterns of research on Seneca's Troades to focus on Seneca's continuity and breaks with the earlier literary tradition. Sabine Föllinger has shown how Seneca's Ulysses develops and surpasses the Euripidean Odysseus in cruelty and deviousness, while Ulrich Schmitzer presented Seneca's Ulysses as the culmination of negative Roman literary treatments of the character.Footnote 5 For Anthony Boyle, Seneca's Ulysses at first defies mythic expectation, only to acknowledge it and conform to his ‘inscribed’ self.Footnote 6 George Harrison has argued that criticism of a duplicitous Ulysses in the fragmentary Roman tragedians, alongside the incarnations in Greek tragedy and Augustan epic to which Boyle refers, shapes Seneca's depiction.Footnote 7 The debts Seneca's Andromache owes to Ovid and Virgil have been stressed by Elaine Fantham and Andrew Zissos, both of them emphasizing that this intertextuality informs a psychologically complex picture.Footnote 8 Such readings, dependent on these characters’ earlier appearances in tragedy and epic, have the side-effect of limiting the horizons of the questions the Troades tackles to the boundaries of these genres. But I will show that both Andromache's and Ulysses’ speeches engage closely with declamation, a genre prevalent in Seneca's day and influential upon his writings and a genre which repeatedly touches on the issue of torture.Footnote 9 Seneca's own prose texts also often invoke torture, but only torture for punishment.Footnote 10 Acknowledging the role that the dialogue between torture and declamation plays in the scene means that both Ulysses and Andromache emerge as far more sophisticated characters than previously recognized.
One question that should be discussed is whether a Roman audience would accept the scene as accurately depicting the contemporary realities of the military interrogation of a prisoner. Comparing Ulysses’ behaviour with references to military interrogation by writers such as Josephus, Frontinus, Livy and Caesar would suggest that the scene does not. Andromache is a captiua, as she states in the preceding scene (508): she is not yet a slave belonging to the personal property of any of the Greek generals, but rather part of the unallotted praeda.Footnote 11 Yet Ulysses first starts by treating this captive with relative politeness (addressing her by name, 533) as he requests her to hand over Astyanax, and tries to convince her of the justice of his cause, including begging her pardon (ueniam dabis, 546) for thinking it necessary. Within Seneca's contemporary Roman setting, it would have been typical to question enemy captives who were believed to have pertinent military intelligence under physical torture.Footnote 12 Torture of captives for intelligence, then, was somewhat analogous to torture of slaves in law-courts, where concerns about their fidelity were allayed by the power of physical torture to produce truth.Footnote 13 But Ulysses is both initially respectful towards Andromache and backs away from physical torture.Footnote 14
There is a disjunction between the dramatic situation, a general interrogating a captive, and the tone struck by both Ulysses and Andromache in their discourse. The rhetoric they each channel, and their manner of confrontation, is suggestive of a controuersia, even if they are meeting in a fictional extra-legal military interrogation, not within an imaginary courtroom.Footnote 15 Even if we are not in ‘Sophistopolis’ during this scene, the arguments offered by Andromache and Ulysses, through intertextual resonances, resemble different colores inspired by those of declamatory scenarios, justifying their behaviour.Footnote 16 Andromache presents herself as torta a tyranno pro filio (‘a woman tortured by a tyrant for her son's sake’), while Ulysses is describing her as though she were hostis rei publicae quae torquenda est donec conscium indicet (‘an enemy of the state who must be tortured until she gives up her conspirator’).Footnote 17
ULYSSES’ THREATS OF PHYSICAL TORTURE
After Ulysses makes his extensive opening case emphasizing the importance of finding Astyanax, outlining the nascent threat to Greek security posed by the Trojan prince as well as the religious pronouncements of Calchas concerning the decrees of Fate, Andromache responds by feigning ignorance of where Astyanax is. Ulysses then decries Andromache's trust in her ability to hide the truth, coacta dices sponte quod fari abnuis | stulta est fides celare quod prodas statim (586–7), and he threatens physical torture. He is adamant that pain (dolor) will unearth the truth of Astyanax's whereabouts:Footnote 18
Through beatings, fire, and every torture, pain will force you to unwillingly divulge whatever you are hiding and will tear the secrets buried deep within your heart: compulsion usually is stronger than loyalty.
The mention of necessitas here has been connected by Caviglia and Boyle to the concept of Ἀνάγκη, or Fate, in Greek tragedy, but Keulen seems to come closer when he gives the gloss ‘constraint imposed by external circumstances’ (OLD s.v. 3).Footnote 20 However, what has been overlooked is that the word frequently occurs within discussions of torture's link to truth in rhetorical handbooks.Footnote 21 Ulysses’ espousal of physical torture should be set against a backdrop of a rhetorical tradition of discussions about the connection between torture and truth, but the rhetorical texts which contain such arguments either imply or explicitly offer counterarguments denying any such connection.Footnote 22 These rhetorical texts are not supporting one side of the debate, but are instead suggesting prepared lines of argument which the orator can flesh out with further details according to whether they are supporting or attacking the evidence from torture.Footnote 23 Using an argument from one side of the debate, Ulysses endorses the connection of physical torture with truth, leaving the counterarguments unmentioned.
Yet Ulysses does not act on his threats of physical torture. Before discussing how Ulysses switches to a sophisticated psychological torture, we should assess what in Andromache's words and behaviour causes him to avoid following through on his threats.
ANDROMACHE AND TORTURING TYRANTS
Though she is now a captiua, Seneca retains the traits that feature so prominently in Andromache's Iliadic incarnation, her dignity and her devotion to husband and son. Seneca makes it difficult to see how Andromache the princess and Andromache the captive are qualitatively different, aside from her misfortune.Footnote 24 This continuity works in tandem with Andromache's own presentation of her situation through her interrogation by Ulysses, for the language of Andromache's determination to endure the threatened tortures engages with a very different rhetorical tradition from Ulysses’ rhetoric. Andromache draws on the narrative that torture is the hallmark of the tyrant:
Set forth the flames, the wounds and the terrible techniques of evil pain, hunger and thirst and every kind of scourge, and the hot iron thrust onto burning flesh, the blight of the dark prison, and whatever the angry conqueror dares in his fear. A courageous mother does not give way to fear.
Both Ulysses and Andromache describe methods of torture but, while the former concerns himself with torture as a means of extracting truth, the latter views it as a method of exerting power (586). Andromache's words focus on the bodily effects of the tortures (uulnera, uisceribus ustis, caeci carceris, luem) rather than on the instruments of torture as Ulysses does. She recasts the issue of torture from a search for the truth to an outrageous expression of dominance, and Ulysses as the realization of a tyrant acting with uis, superbia, libido and crudelitas, the hallmarks of the stock figure of the tyrant developed in the rhetoric and historiography of the Late Republic.Footnote 26
In his prose works, Seneca repeatedly makes this link between tyrants and torture. In the De ira, Seneca compares the cruel behaviour of the Persian kings with Caligula. Seneca stresses the status of Caligula's victims. The tyrant refuses to acknowledge that anybody should be exempted from torture (Sen. Dial. 5.19.1):
ceciderat flagellis senatores: ipse effecit ut dici posset ‘solet fieri’. torserat per omnia quae in rerum natura tristissima sunt, fidiculis, talaribus, eculeo, igne, uultu suo.
He flogged senators: he made it so that it could be said that it was normal. He tortured using the most wretched tools in existence: with ‘the strings’, ‘the sandals’, the rack, fire, with his own gaze.
As he personifies Ira surrounded by torture devices, Seneca argues that torture is the ultimate expression of anger.Footnote 27
The dating of both the De ira and the Troades is uncertain—a date in the 40s or early 50s could be given to either—and therefore we cannot know which came first.Footnote 28 However, regardless of priority, Andromache's words quidquid audet uictor iratus timens (586) channels the connection between audacia, torture and the rhetorical figure of the tyrant, with the Senecan twist, thematized in the De ira, that all of these are linked to anger. Rather than uictor iratus referring to a Ulysses frustrated at the difficulty of his task, as Kingery suggests, or, as Keulen argues, to the Greeks angered at their delay, the term reflects how Andromache and Ulysses are speaking at cross-purposes.Footnote 29 Since Ulysses pointedly stated that he was a representative of all the Greeks (525–6), Andromache's singular uictor corresponds poorly with either Ulysses or the Greeks but almost exactly with the abstracted tyrant of the rhetorical tradition.
Since she recasts Ulysses as a tyrannical torturer, by analogy Andromache transforms her own role from a captive hiding information to the heroic resister of a tyrant.Footnote 30 The victims of tyrannical torture are a particular interest of early imperial declamation.Footnote 31 The situation that Andromache seeks to create, of a woman defying a tyrannical torturer, has striking parallels with a controuersia (Controu. 2.5) from the collection of Seneca's father. The fictional case debated is of a woman who was once tortured by a tyrant in order to force her to divulge the truth about the plot her husband was planning. She did not break, but the ordeal left her barren. After five years her husband divorces her for her failure to have children; she sues him for ingratitude. Many of the declaimers describe the tortures in graphic detail, emphasizing the woman's mira patientia (2.5.6), including Arellius Fuscus (Sen. Controu. 2.5.4):
explicatur crudelitatis aduersus infelicem feminam adparatus et illa instrumenta uirorum quoque animos ipso uisu frangentia ad excutiendam muliebris pectoris conscientiam proponuntur.
The equipment of cruelty is arrayed against the unlucky woman, and those tools, the mere sight of which breaks the spirits even of men, are set out to pluck the secret from the woman's breast.
As Caviglia notes, the usage of propono by Andromache to introduce her list of tortures chimes with its use in this passage for the instrumenta of torture.Footnote 32 There is also considerable overlap between the instrumenta of torture referred to by each text.Footnote 33 However, such correlation should be treated with caution, since Ulysses’ and Andromache's lists of tortures are commonplace throughout Roman literature.Footnote 34 Yet the structural parallels between Controu. 2.5 and the situation in the Troades, as Andromache presents it, are compelling. In both, practising torture is firmly aligned with masculinity and suffering it with femininity, but multiple declaimers in Controu. 2.5 state that such feminine endurance of torture is unexpected.Footnote 35 Each of them too tests loyalty to spouse and womb: Andromache's defiance under threat of torture is aimed at protecting her child, but then saves her husband's memory at the cost of Astyanax's life; the nameless woman saves her husband through her silence under torture, but in doing so loses any chance of a child.
There are some noticeable differences. Andromache does not suffer physical torture. Andromache's volubility contrasts with the woman's lack of speech: none of the declaimers gives the woman words during the torture. Triarius stresses her silence: aiebat tyrannus: ‘indica; nulla tua culpa est’: <tacet.> caeditur: tacet; uritur: tacet, ‘The tyrant spoke: “Reveal him; there's no blame for you”: <she's silent.> She's beaten: she's silent. She's burnt: she's silent’ (Controu. 2.5.8). The declaimers explicitly gender this: Cestius Pius, addressing her husband, remarks that one thing he will not be able to criticize in his wife is chattiness.Footnote 36 Instead, Andromache's exclamations find an analogue with the series of male philosophers who confront Greek tyrants in Valerius Maximus’ exempla of patientia (3.3.ext.2–5). Unlike the uxor of Controu. 2.5, these philosophers do speak, but their words turn the tables on their torturers, such as by falsely naming close allies of the tyrant's friends as their accomplices. In the confrontation between Anaxarchus and the tyrant Nicocreon, there is a reciprocity between the tortures and the fierce words of the tortured Anaxarchus (Val. Max. 3.3.ext.4):
talis patientiae aemulus Anaxarchus, cum a tyranno Cypriorum Nicocreonte torqueretur, nec ulla ui inhiberi posset quo minus eum amarissimorum maledictorum uerberibus inuicem ipse torqueret …
Anaxarchus rivalled such endurance. When he was being tortured by the Cypriot tyrant Nicocreon, he could not be prevented by any violence from lashing Nicocreon back with blows from the bitterest curses …
Unlike these exempla, the threatened physical torture is not realized in the Troades. This somewhat resembles Valerius Maximus’ Roman examples of patientia (3.3.1–2), where Mucius Scaevola and Pompeius subject themselves to physical pain, demonstrating their powers of endurance and thus the pointlessness of subjecting them to torture. Andromache's words before torture strive to place her within the tradition of patientia under torture exemplified by Controu. 2.5 and Valerius Maximus. Andromache seeks to show, by anticipatory words rather than by the anticipatory action of Scaevola or Pompeius, that she has the ability to resist torture. For Kaster, the patientia which Valerius Maximus praises is a form of potestas, which shows a paradoxical control of the situation.Footnote 37 In Controu. 2.5, the woman's endurance is described as a victory by Albucius Silius, uicerat saeuitiam patientia (2.5.9). Andromache's speech channels this tradition to achieve effects both on herself and on Ulysses. Her focus on the effects of torture is a kind of praemeditatio malorum futurorum: by imagining the tortures she steels herself for them.Footnote 38 Assuming the role of the tortured exemplum of patientia, Andromache strives to strip Ulysses of his confidence in physical torture.
ULYSSES, TORTURE AND THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH
Andromache's heroic words seem to overcome Ulysses’ threats and his faith in the ability of physical torture to break her. Ulysses brands her contumax.Footnote 39 Yet Ulysses does not abandon his underlying faith in a truth to be uncovered from within Andromache. Just as an unusual Andromache arises from their confrontation, so Ulysses defies expectations:
Now summon up your craftiness, my mind, your lies, your tricks, now be wholly Ulysses: the truth is never lost.
This Ulysses displays an unwavering commitment to the discovery of the truth even as he resorts to ‘craftiness, lies and tricks’. Many commentators focus on the intertextual and metatextual self-identification totum Vlixem, and ignore the second colon, but the statement ueritas numquam perit is hardly what we expect from Ulysses, and is a dramatic break from the character's incarnation in previous texts.Footnote 40 At this hinge in the Ulysses–Andromache exchange, after which Ulysses will have the upper hand, Ulysses self-identifies as the master of lies familiar from the Odyssean tradition. The characteristic versatility of πολύτροπος Odysseus facilitates different presentations of his association with trickery in subsequent incarnations in the tradition.Footnote 41 There is a distinct shift from the largely neutral, even positive, evaluations of Odysseus’ dishonesty found in epic to far more negative appraisals in Greek tragedy.Footnote 42 In Sophocles’ Philoctetes, Odysseus impresses upon Neoptolemus the need for deception as they attempt to bear off Philoctetes’ bow and quiver (Soph. Phil. 79–82). For the Sophoclean Odysseus, the ends of victory justify the means of lies.Footnote 43 Odysseus also abrogates responsibility for his task, both to the army and the sons of Atreus (Phil. 1293–4) and to the gods (Phil. 989–90). This shows similarities with the Senecan Ulysses, who justifies his demand for Astyanax both as an order from the Greek army and as a divine command from the fata (524–8).Footnote 44 But in a new twist on this character, by having the archetype of deception in tragedy charged with eliciting information from a lying Andromache, Seneca creates the paradox of a Ulysses so devoted to the unearthing of the truth that he requires his greatest faculties of falsehood for his task.Footnote 45
Thus we move to the second stage of Ulysses’ interrogation, in which he uses psychological rather than physical torture.Footnote 46 Andromache continues to maintain the pretence that Astyanax is dead (594–604), but her body betrays her: not through the physical torture that Ulysses has threatened but rather through her anxious body language.Footnote 47 Ulysses spots that it is at odds with Andromache's claims of having nothing left to fear.Footnote 48 He acts to confirm his suspicions by discussing the fate that awaited Astyanax and by sending out his soldiers to search for the boy, and so deliberately stoking Andromache's fears, iterabo metum (626). I find unconvincing the interpretation that bene est, tenetur (630) is a pretence by Ulysses that Astyanax has been found alive.Footnote 49 It seems more likely to be referring to Andromache in soliloquy: ‘all's well, I've got her now’.Footnote 50 What we see from Ulysses’ avowal to be totum Vlixem onwards is a Ulysses who takes total control of the situation.
BREAKING ANDROMACHE
Ulysses’ stratagem for coercing Andromache consists of playing Andromache's devotion to her deceased husband Hector against her love for her son. Ulysses threatens, since the boy is apparently dead according to Andromache, to pull down Hector's tomb, claiming that Calchas offered this as an alternative satisfaction for the fata (634–41). The audience know this to be a fabrication, as Calchas’ speech earlier made no mention of this. But given that Andromache lacks this knowledge, Ulysses knows that he has crafted a dilemma for her of choosing between preserving her husband's memory and saving her child's life. What Ulysses does not know, and Andromache does, is that if the tomb is levelled Astyanax will perish as it collapses on top of him. But rather than decrying the false dilemma or using it to read Andromache as a good or bad mother, what needs reiterating is that Ulysses inflicts extreme mental duress on her during his interrogation.Footnote 51
Ulysses intensifies two fears in Andromache (animum distrahit geminus timor, ‘a two-fold fear tears my mind apart’, 642): rather than a physical eculeus, Ulysses subjects Andromache to a rack that her own emotions create.Footnote 52 Earlier in her confrontation with Ulysses, Andromache only needed to maintain her composure in the face of Ulysses’ threatened harm to herself.Footnote 53 She already stated to the chorus prior to the encounter with Ulysses that it was only Astyanax's continued existence that kept her from suicide; she said she feared for her son, not for herself (418–23). By adding another threat to something sacred (sacer, 483) to Andromache, her husband's tomb, Ulysses forces Andromache, in deciding whom to save (statue quem poenae extrahas, 657), to choose who will suffer. This makes Andromache feel culpable: she becomes angry and frustrated at herself (ingrata, 658; erras, 659). She rages at Ulysses and the Greeks, which influences the soldiers (668–78), but Ulysses correctly interprets this as indicative of the powerlessness she feels (furorque cassus feminae, 679). He repeats his earlier orders to tear down the tomb (679–80). Andromache implores Ulysses to kill her instead (680) and believes that she sees Hector arriving to attack the Greeks (681–4).Footnote 54 Ulysses’ only response is to reissue his order (685).
Finally, Andromache asks herself if she will be the cause of the destruction of herself, her son and her husband (quid agis? ruina mater et gnatum et uirum | prosternis una? 686–7). Andromache wonders if she can appease the Greeks (forsitan Danaos | prece placare poteris (687–8): she supplicates Ulysses (691–2), begging for pity (miserere matris, 694, repeated at 703) and praying for the future happiness of Ulysses’ wife, father and son (698–702). In this last speech, something in Andromache breaks: when Ulysses orders her again to produce Astyanax, she acquiesces. Insidiously, Ulysses’ psychological coercion not only exacerbates Andromache's mental turmoil but deprives her of her dignity.Footnote 55 And Andromache changes from recognizing Ulysses as the sole agent of her suffering to holding herself to be complicit in her own torture, through her forced participation in an impossible choice.Footnote 56 The coercion destroys her last semblance of pride, as she instructs Astyanax to beg for mercy (708–17), which she pretends is no humiliation (nec turpe puta quidquid miseros Fortuna iubet, 710–11).Footnote 57 She herself pleads with Ulysses (760–2) for some last moments of grieving with Astyanax (766–85, 787–812), before Ulysses brings them, and the scene, to an end (812–13).
Although earlier in the scene threats of physical torture proved ineffective against Andromache whilst they were targeted at her, Ulysses’ psychological torture succeeds because it imperils those for whom she is resisting, makes her feel simultaneously complicit and powerless, and humiliates her. The same verb, eruere, is used by Ulysses of his threat to extract the truth from Andromache's body (580), in his orders to the soldiers to seize Astyanax (629), and in his intention to level Hector's tomb (685).Footnote 58 dolor does tear out the arcana from Andromache's heart, as Ulysses predicted earlier (579), even if this dolor is the psychological trauma of choosing between betraying husband or son and, in the process, losing her own sense of self, rather than the physical pain Ulysses envisioned at the start of his interrogation.Footnote 59
JUSTIFYING TORTURE
We have seen that Ulysses is a skilled and adaptable torturer. What I will turn to now are the justifications Ulysses uses for pursuing Astyanax's whereabouts. Ulysses initially uses two justifications, the political, ensuring peace (529) by preventing a future war with a resurgent Troy led by Astyanax, and the religious, claiming that the Fates demand it (528).Footnote 60 Commentators tend to privilege the former and ignore the latter: Fantham remarks ‘so it is political after all’; for Caviglia, ‘a queste argomentazioni “ufficiali” Ulisse ne fa seguire un'altra, quelle che più gli si addice, la necessità politica’.Footnote 61 In this they echo Andromache's own opinion (uatem et insontes deos | praetendis? hoc est pectoris facinus tui, ‘Do you hide behind the prophet and the guiltless gods? This crime is the product of your mind’, 753–4).Footnote 62 The text does not give us enough to tell whether Ulysses’ religious conviction is genuine.Footnote 63 But it is worth considering whether a Senecan audience would have found it as rhetorically implausible as some modern literary critics do.Footnote 64 Ulysses’ words, at least, suggest that he sees the gods’ will and Greek interests as aligned, since he elaborates on Calchas’ prophecy. Although Calchas said that the fates demanded Astyanax's death because Polyxena's blood was not noble enough (366–7), Ulysses states that the threat to Greek peace (529–33) was referred to by Calchas: augur haec Calchas canit (533). Ulysses seems to read between the lines of Calchas’ prophecy to imbue it with political meaning: significant, perhaps, is that Ulysses refers to Calchas as an augur, and again in the next line.Footnote 65 Augury was at the heart of the intersection of Roman religion and politics, and one of the key elements of the Roman religious apparatus that was co-opted by Augustus.Footnote 66 Ulysses voices an identification of religious and political concerns in ideological terms that resemble those of the Republic and the Early Empire.Footnote 67
The view that the state's interests align with those of the gods is also found throughout Seneca's De clementia. Early in the dialogue, Seneca imagines the declaration Nero can make (Clem. 1.1.2):
‘egone ex omnibus mortalibus placui electusque sum, qui in terris deorum uice fungerer? ego uitae necisque gentibus arbiter … haec tot milia gladiorum, quae pax mea comprimit, ad nutum meum stringentur …’
‘Have I not out of all mortals pleased the gods and been chosen by them to act in their stead on earth? I hold the power of life and death over nations … at my nod all these thousands of swords, which my peace restrains, will be unsheathed …’
Divine will and destiny are responsible for Nero as emperor.Footnote 68 At the same time, his person ensures the security and safety of his subjects (pax mea). The emperor's security is identified with the state's security: if Nero should die, ‘this calamity would mean the destruction of Roman peace, this would leave the success of such a great people in ruins’, hic casus Romanae pacis exitium erit, hic tanti fortunam populi in ruinas aget (Clem. 1.4.2).Footnote 69 In the figure of the emperor, then, Seneca aligns the divine will and national security.Footnote 70 Within the rhetorical climate inhabited by the contemporary Senecan audience, Ulysses’ double justification of fata and pax could not just be compatible but inextricably linked.
Ulysses also offers another justification: parenthood. Ulysses describes his fears for the future of his son and for other Greek children when he is confronted with Andromache's stubborn refusal to give up her child, even under threat of physical torture:
This same affection, in which you stubbornly continue, cautions the Greeks to think of their own little children. After such a long war, after ten years, I would be less afraid of the anxieties that Calchas evokes, if I feared for myself: but you prepare war for Telemachus.
Here Ulysses seems to offer a consequentialist position, which differs from his earlier justifications of political and religious necessity: the suffering of Andromache and Astyanax counts for less than the future suffering of all the Greek mothers and children who would be involved in a future war.Footnote 71 And, as Fantham points out, Ulysses’ love and concern for his own son parallels Andromache's for hers.Footnote 72 Ulysses suggests that he has endured the suffering of one Trojan War so that his son may not have to face another; Andromache is prepared to undergo torture to keep her child from harm. His understanding of the desperate lengths to which a parent would go helps him see through Andromache's deception:
What are you doing, Ulysses? The Greeks will trust you, but whom are you trusting? A parent. Would any parent feign such a thing and not shudder at the omen of a hateful death?
Ulysses does not speak of the mater but he speaks twice of the parens, which embraces his own experience of fatherhood.Footnote 73 Ulysses’ parenthood acts as motivation for his psychological torture of another parent: he uses Andromache's love for Astyanax against her, out of his own love for his son; his identity as parent enables him to exploit Andromache's maternal identity.Footnote 74 However, knowing that parenthood can be a tool in the torture of another because of one's own experience of parenthood conflicts with Scarry's argument that ‘in converting the other person's pain into his own power, the torturer experiences the entire occurrence from the nonvulnerable end of the weapon’.Footnote 75 Scarry's position that ‘[f]or the torturers, the sheer and simple fact of human agony is made invisible, and the moral fact of inflicting that agony is made neutral by the feigned urgency and significance of the question’ is not wholly wrong when applied to Ulysses: he is not directly able to feel the pain which he puts Andromache through as he threatens the tomb.Footnote 76 But it is his recognition of the pain she would be prepared to endure as a parent that enables him to break Andromache. Seneca's Ulysses suggests that torturers are capable of empathy with the victims they torture. In fact, their degree of success may be predicated on the degree to which they can identify with the tortured.
In the De clementia, Seneca contends that using excessive torture to punish dehumanizes torturers.Footnote 77 So it is striking that, in order to craft an effective torture against Andromache, Ulysses relies on his empathy with her, on his recognition of her as a fellow human being with a rich inner life, and on the emotional vulnerabilities that he shares with her. Ulysses presents a far more nuanced picture of a torturer than we see in the De clementia or the De ira.
WHAT TORTURE REVEALS
Both Pagán and Lawrence, in their work on Controu. 2.5 and Valerius Maximus respectively, have shown that rhetoric in the Early Imperial period was articulating concerns about torture.Footnote 78 Long-standing principles surrounding torture were being undermined by the growing number of maiestas trials, and it is against the backdrop of rising anxieties among the aristocratic class under Tiberius that we need to read discussions of torture in Seneca the Elder and Valerius Maximus, anxieties which continued under Caligula and Claudius, and were thus relevant for the Troades too.Footnote 79
Maiestas trials were exceptional in that they allowed for torture to be used on free men, apart from senators, even though Roman citizens had legal immunity to torture in the Republic and the Early Principate, and also for slaves to be tortured to produce evidence against their masters.Footnote 80 The crime of perduellio, or treason, had gradually merged over time with that of maiestas, the offence of diminishing ‘the majesty of the Roman people’.Footnote 81 Ulpian's account of the lex Iulia maiestatis authored by Julius Caesar retains both of these elements: quod aduersus populum Romanum uel aduersus securitatem eius committitur, ‘that which is committed against the Roman people or against their security’, Dig. 48.4.1. National security had been a plausible principle for suspension of normal legal procedure since the Republic: Sallust's Cato argues (Cat. 52.2–4) that, since Rome's safety is in danger, the Catilinarian conspirators already captured must be executed rather than given the option of exile under the Porcian law. During the Principate, along with the identification of emperor and state, instances of torture became increasingly institutionalized within law. In the context of maiestas trials, the torturers would not be interrogating slaves but Roman citizens like themselves: inflicting pain not upon property but upon persons. An ideology instantiating their actions as totally justified and necessary would be important. Rather than slaves who were defined on ideological lines as unlike them, their victims would be uncannily similar to themselves: Romans, citizens, freeborn, elite, masters, sons, fathers. It would be far easier for interrogators to empathize with such interrogatees. Such empathy might have been unsettling, but it might also have been a powerful tool for the torturer to use against the tortured.
In the Troades, the anxieties that Controu. 2.5 and Valerius Maximus imply about torture become explicit. If Controu. 2.5 and Valerius Maximus perhaps suggest one response of the contemporary elite, namely that of suggesting torture's inefficacy to reduce its growing use against them, in the Troades we have a different and more nuanced response. Two separate rhetorical traditions have been juxtaposed by Seneca, voiced by two exceptional figures, the tortured Andromache who can transform her position of powerlessness owing to gender, status and trauma into a heroic resistance that almost succeeds, and the torturing Ulysses, who can justify the righteousness of his actions as a search for truth and whose eventual success relies on empathy with the woman he tortures. Tragedy is under no obligation to provide a resolution, nor to harmonize discordant notes into a unity: Andromache's and Ulysses’ views on torture can be held in suspense.Footnote 82
Even though Ulysses is successful, Seneca is not necessarily supporting the position that torture works. First, there is no vindication of the argument debated by rhetoricians that the application of physical pain must inevitably result in the truth. Instead, Ulysses succeeds through psychological hurt, an approach which falls outside of the contemporary discourse around torture.Footnote 83 However, the power that fictional enactments of torture possess is in the mirror they hold up to the prevailing culture, and in the tensions that the self-reflection exposes between ideological illusions and the nature of reality. In our own time, a majority of story-telling media endorse a connection between torture and truth.Footnote 84 Yet the documented evidence points to this being a myth. Torture may perhaps result in some truth that is of use, but we know often it does not, and there is typically no way to distinguish fact from falsehood.Footnote 85 Don Dzagulones, a US army interrogator in the Vietnam War, ‘could not recall a single incident in which torture was used to a positive end’.Footnote 86 John W. Schiemann uses game theory to show that the circumstances in which torture could produce something of value are almost impossibly unlikely.Footnote 87 Only in a culture in which the use of torture is rising can such a myth have potency.
Both the Troades and our contemporary media feature torturers as ‘administ[ering] … pain [that] is righteous and even necessary … intrinsic to the restoration of social and political order, the saving of “innocent” lives’.Footnote 88 The circumstances in which Jack Bauer tortures in 24 have, in fact, caused many to think that the ticking time-bomb situation is typical enough to justify the sanctioning of torture, whereas it is actually a fantastic and almost impossible occurrence.Footnote 89 So too Astyanax is the ‘ticking bomb’ of the Troades: Ulysses presents it as a certainty that the man he will grow into not only will be devoted to revenging Troy but also will be able to rebuild Troy into an existential threat to all the Greeks. Ulysses makes this claim surrounded by Troy's ashes, to a small child desperately clinging to his mother.
Perhaps what is most to be gained by focussing on the role of torture in this scene is that it points us to a deeper question. Rather than merely adding to the debate around whether torture works or whether torture is ever morally justifiable, the text tests the assumption that we can entertain either of these questions separately. The simultaneous presentation by two different voices of the same torture as, on the one hand, justifiable and, on the other, evil highlights the cognitive dissonance required for the Roman citizen. In the Troades, Seneca suggests that one way in which this dissonance is accomplished, namely this effective separation of the efficacy and of the morality of torture, is by thinking solely about efficacy in relation to the Other and solely about morality in relation to the Self. Ulysses assesses at first whether torture, and then what kind of torture, will effectively deliver results when used against Andromache, a paradigmatic figure of the Other, as a foreign female captive enemy, a conspirator against Greek interests and security. Yet Ulysses’ empathy with Andromache, which is what enables him to devise his successful torture, shows how fragile this separation is. As soon as the tortured subject becomes someone with whom the torturer can empathize, the harder it becomes to abstract and separate the questions of efficacy and morality. Such brittleness shows in Ulysses’ conflicted responses to Andromache's desire to grieve for her son (762–5, 785–6). Ulysses’ wish misereri tui | utinam liceret (762–3) captures the torturer's bind between the dehumanizing effects of his actions and the empathetic instincts of his humanity.