OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
What ‘The Crown’ Teaches Us About Power and How
to Wield It
Dec. 16,
2023
By Arianne
Chernock
Dr.
Chernock is a professor of history at Boston University.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/16/opinion/the-crown-royal-family.html?searchResultPosition=2
The final
six episodes of “The Crown” were released this week, bringing Peter Morgan’s
engrossing saga of the Windsors — bookended by the marriages of Elizabeth and
Philip in 1947 and Charles and Camilla in 2005 — to an end. The Netflix series
had all the appeal of a classic prime-time soap, and sure enough, tens of
millions of people have tuned in, escaping reality to dwell for an hour in a
bubble of fashion, money, gossip, intrigue and betrayal.
To many,
escape is the whole point of royal watching — which is why royal mania is so
often dismissed as a frivolous distraction. The royals are no longer as
powerful as when they oversaw the rise of modern Britain and its empire. But
the world of the Windsors is still intimately, and sometimes painfully,
connected to our own. In that sense, the saga of the royal family, as captured
in “The Crown,” offers supreme lessons in resilience, demonstrating that even
the most traditional leaders can change with the times, relinquishing old roles
to find new ways of exerting power and influence.
It may be
easy to look at the monarchy today and assume its role is almost entirely
ceremonial, but kings and queens — and their extended families — still exert
tremendous social influence, especially as exemplars of morality. That was a
role that King George III and his advisers pioneered way back in the 18th
century when, to maintain their relevance, the royal family was expected to
establish standards of proper behavior and stand by them. For better and worse,
that expectation persists.
In the most
favorable instances, royals have used this soft power to engage in cultural
repair and provide moral leadership. Queen Victoria, for example, served as the
first patron of the British Red Cross, helping to reform the kind of care
received by those injured during conflicts. On the eve of World War II, King
George VI met with Franklin D. Roosevelt in Hyde Park, N.Y. In eating hot dogs
together, the king and president telegraphed Anglo-American solidarity in the
face of rising fascism.
Over time,
such stories have helped us understand that the actions of the royals affect
not just their world but also our own, which may explain both our perpetual
curiosity about the family and the intensity of our emotions as we litigate
their choices. Many prestige cable shows have insightfully examined the
dynamics of a marriage — take Tony and Carmela Soprano — but when “The Crown”
dissects Charles and Diana’s doomed marriage, it is re-enacting a pivotal
moment in history that informed how many modern couples think about marital
obligation and what we owe our partners and ourselves.
The final
season of “The Crown” — and, in many ways, the modern story of the Windsors —
has been haunted by the ghost of Diana, a figure who perhaps understood this
dynamic between perception and obligation better than anyone. We may remember
Diana first for her outfits and her sudden renown, but she went on to do
humanitarian work that benefited people with AIDS, spoke openly about her
bulimia, pursued solutions to homelessness and campaigned for land mine removal
in Bosnia and Angola.
In
different but no less powerful ways, King Charles III is currently trying to
use his influence to help mitigate the impact of climate change. At the core of
these efforts is an acknowledgment that, whatever their political role, royals
can, and should, have consequence. But their actions also reflect a
recognizable human urge to shape the world around us and take control of our
circumstances. That’s why we can see so much of ourselves in the royals when
they strive for control — and often fail to achieve it.
Of course,
the royals can still seem clueless and out of touch. Take their halting and
awkward attempts to reckon with the role their ancestors played in shoring up a
brutal empire. Centuries ago, monarchs funded the slave trade and Queen
Victoria and her descendants provided symbolic glue for the British Empire and
Commonwealth realms. The royal family is still tethered to that imperial past.
The Prince and Princess of Wales, William and Kate, received significant public
criticism during a 2022 royal tour of the Caribbean when some suggested they
failed to adopt a sufficiently apologetic stance toward Britain’s colonial
past. King Charles fared better on his recent visit to Kenya by acknowledging
Britain’s violent response to the Mau Mau uprising in the 1950s. Even so, the
royals are navigating what the British journalist Afua Hirsch described last
year as “a clamoring chorus of global trauma” led by “those colonized in the
name of the British crown.”
But what
history teaches us — and “The Crown” artfully conveys — is that the royal
family can embrace change when forced to. The show has always been most
successful when it’s not just penetrating the royal bubble but puncturing it.
Yes, we’ve followed the Windsors, but we’ve also entered the homes of the
grieving mining families of Aberfan following the sudden collapse of a colliery
spoil tip. We’ve observed the Bahamian-born valet Sydney Johnson lovingly care
for the exiled Duke of Windsor. And in the final seasons we’ve watched the
Egyptian businessman Mohamed al-Fayed and his son Dodi make tragic efforts to
recast themselves as British elites. The exploits of the monarch are never just
about the monarch. They are also, inevitably, about us. When the queen
encounters her subjects, she often comes away changed. Though it could still be
improved and modernized, the monarchy we see now, under King Charles, is a far
cry from the one in 1947 captured on “The Crown” when it began.
We might
thrill to be escorted inside Balmoral Castle and Buckingham Palace, where we
keep close company with Queen Elizabeth II and her restless brood. There’s
certainly pleasure in listening in to the imagined private conversations of a
queen so famously tight-lipped that her unofficial mantra was reportedly “Never
complain, never explain.” But all of these stories, from the young Elizabeth to
Charles and Diana to William and Harry, have reverberated precisely because
they offer more than simply voyeuristic escapism. They help us understand our
world a little better — and the way that we have shaped the royals’ rarefied
realm.
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