“Severance,” the Apple TV+ serial a few company whose staff have agreed to “sever” their workaday minds from their regular streams of consciousness, remembering nothing of workplace life at house and vice versa, is a present designed to interrupt my coronary heart.
It’s a serial within the custom of “Misplaced” or the primary season of “True Detective,” or “The X-Recordsdata” farther again — an unspooling thriller with science fiction and maybe supernatural components, thick with clues that time towards a bigger conspiracy or mythology wherein the characters discover themselves caught up. Some types of fandom depart me chilly (I don’t care concerning the Easter eggs on the finish of the umpteenth Marvel film, sorry), however after I fall for this sort of “puzzle field” present I fall arduous — with the information, hard-earned, that the character of those exhibits is to overpromise after which disappoint when the time lastly comes to tug the curtain again.
Possibly “Severance” would be the exception; perhaps the infant goats and lifeless seals popping up within the weirder corners of its workplace dystopia aren’t similar to the polar bear on “Misplaced,” the image of a present whose pleased-with-itself mystifications ran forward of any basic plan.
However moderately than rehash my points with the puzzle-box mannequin (which I final mentioned when writing about “Yellowjackets,” a present that’s sadly misplaced my consideration), I believed I’d attempt to discuss what “Severance” is doing proper now, with out regard to its potential endgame, by providing three attainable solutions to the query, What is that this present really about?
The best reply is that it’s a present concerning the American method of labor, with the severing process a savage twist on work-life stability points, a sci-fi literalization of the thought of particular work identities (and distinct “work associates” and “work spouses”) as options of the trendy workplace. And it’s about work in a method that’s particularly resonant in a post-pandemic panorama the place individuals have been taken out of the workplace for an prolonged interval and discover themselves returning — or contemplating a return, or being pressured right into a return — in a cultural context the place the fundamental strangeness of workplace life has been thrown into aid.
When this side of the present is handiest, “Severance” performs as a surreal companion piece to “The Workplace,” with Jim-Pam-Dwight sitcom dynamics transferred to a a lot weirder aircraft. Right here workplace tchotchkes and departmental rivalries tackle supernatural freight and company is a mysterious and baleful energy moderately than a hapless bunch of fits. When it doesn’t work as properly, it’s as a result of the present slips backward from surrealism right into a extra banal type of company satire. “Severance” relies on the deep weirdness of Lumon Industries, its peculiar rituals and hierarchies and inside company language, to weave dread into the acquainted panorama of computer systems and cubicles and wall-to-wall carpeting.
Then the specifics of the Lumon company lore recommend a second studying of “Severance” — that it’s a present concerning the WASPs.
One in all my operating theories of early-Twenty first-century America is that our cultural conflicts and anxieties are formed, usually unconsciously, by the abdication-cum-disappearance of the particularly Protestant caste that based and dominated America’s elite establishments right down to the Sixties. And at instances “Severance” seems like a dreamlike reckoning with WASP energy and its disappearance.
The authorities of Lumon, the Eagan household, clearly belong to industrial-age moderately than digital-age America: Every thing from the company artwork to the hall-of-presidents figures of the Eagan dynasty to the cumbersome computer systems and ’80s-era vehicles recommend a mixed-up timeline the place the transition to the Twenty first century went considerably otherwise than in our personal. Together with the transition to some type of racial inclusivity: The present’s African American center supervisor is presented, after a promotion, with a personalised set of Lumon art work wherein the corporate’s Victorian-era founder, Kier, is reimagined with black pores and skin. (He’s unsettled by the present.)
The Eagan philosophy, as expounded in official paperwork and company jargon and Kier’s supposed knowledge, is a mash-up of old-America influences, from Benjamin Franklin’s Poor Richard to the Rockefellers and Carnegies to Ford-era managerialism. And it doesn’t look like a coincidence that the present’s two brushes with Christianity — at a church funeral and in a dinner-table dialog a few Lutheran pastor’s views on the souls of severed staff — each characteristic types of Mainline Protestantism.
Think about a world the place the WASP elites shed formal Mainline commitments in favor of a bizarre mix of stoic, pagan and self-help influences, after which endured as a hidden, probably even undead pressure; that’s principally what Lumon Industries conjures.
But it surely additionally conjures an present American establishment that blends business-speak, self-help, peculiar psycho-spiritual jargon and methods of inside management underneath the looming shadow of a departed founder. I’m considering right here of the Church of Scientology, which yields a 3rd studying of “Severance” — that it’s a present about being in a cult.
There have been good documentaries about cults not too long ago, from “Wild Wild Nation” to “The Vow,” however it’s arduous to efficiently dramatize what it’s prefer to be in thrall to such an enterprise, to expertise a cult-world in all its strangeness as one thing inevitable and inescapable.
On this, the idea of severing is dramatically helpful — it’s a literalization of our clichés of brainwashing, one thing that separates characters utterly from the surface world and makes it really feel like their very identities will disappear in the event that they depart the church of Lumon behind.
And there’s an analogous utility to the science-fiction or supernatural component concerned in regardless of the higher-ups at Lumon are doing or looking for, because it makes it clear that this cult is known by its inside circle as one thing greater than only a rip-off or energy play — which is, I think, true to most cults in actual life, nonetheless a lot scamming additionally they do.
As to what the essential component could also be, what the cult is definitely looking for — properly, now we’re again to the present as a puzzle field, and my near-inevitable disappointment, so it’s a very good place for my work self to clock out.
Breviary
Nathan Pinkoski on Richard Nixon’s revenge.
Perry Anderson on how ideas shape history.
Kyle Smith on Gene Hackman’s gift.
Freddie deBoer against Miranda July.
A dialog (with me) about religion, technology and fantasy.
A unbroken argument about the multiverse.
Commercials for Myself
Subsequent Monday, March 3, at 6:30 p.m., I’ll be speaking about my new e book at Columbia College underneath the auspices of the Morningside Institute. You possibly can RSVP for the occasion here.