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The Indoctrination Game: Alan Turing as Gay Martyr

By Walter Donway

January 22, 2015

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It is true that Alan Turing, the brilliant mathematician who helped to crack the German Enigma code, a crucial step in the Allied victory over the Nazis in WWII, was homosexual. And it is true that only half-a-decade after the Allied victory, which he helped to speed, Turing was tried for “gross indecency”—homosexual activity—convicted, and forced to undergo “chemical castration” as an alternative to prison. And it is true, as the British belatedly realized, all the way up to the office of the prime minister and Queen Elizabeth II, that never has so great a benefactor, who saved so many lives, been treated so shabbily by his countrymen.

The result is a movie that swept me into its world, kept me in agony about its (well-known) outcome, and left me in tears in the darkened theater.

This is a “made for cinema story,” and this season’s biggest box-office hit, “The Imitation Game” (Oscar nominations across the board) takes full advantage of that. The result is a movie that swept me into its world, kept me in agony about its (well-known) outcome, and left me in tears in the darkened theater. The Alan Turing of “The Imitation Game” is a hero, even if we are honest about his motives. Was he driven above all by patriotism, an obsession with saving his country and its men at arms? By the premises of the movie, and the psychology of great scientific discovery—the way genius in mathematics manifests itself—the answer is no. The Enigma code was the toughest puzzle then going and breaking it the most exhilarating challenge to mathematics, to pure intellect. Turing is a hero by virtue of his dedication to his values, his highest goals, which were to probe the secrets of nature by means of mathematics. And that in no sense imputes his patriotism.

“The Imitation Game” is a great story about a heroic era in British life, and life of the free world, and to tell it in all its glory is the job of books (Alan Turing: The Enigma, by Andrew Hodges) and film (Graham Moore’s screenplay based on the book). But Alan Turing’s life, the work at Bletchley Park that broke Enigma, the other people in Turing’s life, and his shocking treatment by his countrymen also are history. And not obscure history; some relatives and colleagues of Turing are still alive and many histories have been written about every aspect of the work at Bletchley Park.

It is not on record, at least not obviously, that Andrew Hodges is gay, or an advocate for gays, but his first book, With Downcast Gays: Aspects of Homosexual Self-Oppression, was published six years before his book on Turing. His only other book is on number theory. But even Hodges has criticized the movie for a distorted emphasis on Turing’s homosexual conflicts. (Note: Spoilers ahead)

And so the question: Is the movie, “The Imitation Game,” justified in the name of artistic license in turning the life of Alan Turing into a morality play about a great gay martyr? Because that is what this movie is. Its three grand “movements” are Turing’s years at boarding school, where he falls in love with an older boy, Christopher, who dies; Turing’s years at Bletchley, where he proposes marriage to the only woman on his team in an agony of conflict over his homosexuality; and Turing’s postwar years, where he is convicted for “gross indecency” and accepts chemical castration in preference to incarceration, but then commits suicide. It is undoubtedly true that in the second and major “movement” of the movie—the race to crack Enigma and the obstacles of official skepticism, the race against war deaths, and the cheering triumphant success—is dramatic gold. But in each movement, the movie’s continuing and uniting theme, the thread and the payoff—the explanatory power and the emotional culmination—are Turing’s martyrdom for his homosexuality.

Well, was that the story? Is it a true bill?

The best answer to that is to ask: To what extent did the movie makers have to depart from the truth of Turing’s life–his personality, his achievement, his actions and choices, and his fate—to carry off “The Imitation Game” as a tale of homosexual tragedy? The answer is: They had to play very fast and loose with the truth, as historians present it, to distort the narrative at every turn into one of homosexual martyrdom.

For example, arguably, the true hero of the film is “Christopher,” the crude, ramshackle first prototype of the computer created by Turing and his colleagues to reverse-process the Enigma signals and read them—and so seize the key to the plans of Hitler’s high command right to the end of the war. “Christopher” was the boy upon whom Turing supposedly had a crush in boarding school.

But in truth the machine was not called “Christopher.” That is used to imply that Turing’s boyhood love provided the drive and determination to crack Enigma. Later, faced with prison, Turing weeps that he cannot be separated from the computer, from Christopher. But the machine was called the “bombe,” the name given by the three Polish cryptographers who, as early as 1932, cracked Enigma by building a decoding machine, which they gave to the British. (By WWII, however, the Germans had greatly increased the complexity of Enigma, essentially an electro-mechanical machine for creating multi-alphabetic substitution codes by random turns of rotors with the alphabet on each one.) The successful Bletchley version was called “Victory.”

In the film, Turing is portrayed as socially frozen and inept, and, in fact, depicted as having Asperger’s Syndrome, on the autism spectrum: socially inept, remote, humorless. This greatly enforces the suggestion of social isolation supposedly linked to his homosexuality; he is portrayed as a stuttering, stumbling, blushing social basket case. Is this legitimate film making, in the name of explaining his homosexuality? Because colleagues who knew him reported regularly and consistently that, although in some ways eccentric, Turing had many friends, a sense of humor, and a good working relationship with colleagues. After being graduated from Oxford with a first in mathematics, Turing got himself over to America, to a Ph.D  program at Princeton University, where he became deeply involved in experimental work and earned the doctorate. Leaving Oxford and the colleagues and friends he knew there to move to America does not suggest emotional problems with adapting to new settings and new people.

Movie scenes about Turing’s school days and his friend, Christopher, and their relationship, are rejected by those who knew Turing. And yet, they are essential in building up the image of the lonely, rejected little boy with a different sexual orientation. One wonders how much Turing, as an ardent Marathoner and long-distance bicyclist, and in all photographs a very husky young man, was pushed around by other students.

The detective in the film who arrests Turing in 1951 on suspicion of being a Soviet spy is a fiction. No such detective, no suspicion of spying, no interview where Turing tells his real story. Turing was arrested in 1952 for “gross indecency” after a robbery at his house that implicated a young man who was his lover.

Turing did agree to take a drug to induce chemical castration, but it did not make him weak or unable to think, although it had other biological effects; in fact, it turned him to investigation of mathematical biology to understand what was happening to him. His response was robust, indomitable, and unperturbed—the real Turing—though I do not for one moment want to downplay the almost unbelievable treatment of Turing just a few short years after the war in which he was a national hero (and awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1945 by King George VI).

Miss Clarke’s visit to him, during his probation and “treatment,” emphasizing the sexual element, again, simply never occurred, according to historians. Although the two did keep in touch, after the war.

Oh, and none of that stuff with Stewart Menzies of the British Intelligence Service is known, in any record, to have occurred during the war. And so, there was no intelligence service manipulation of Turing. And that severe and awful Commander Denniston, making life hell for the sensitive and brilliant Turing? No record that they every interacted. Turing, already a name in mathematics, was always respected and considered one of the best code-breakers at Bletchley.

Oh, and that colleague of Turing’s who was a Soviet spy? Writing in the Guardian, British historian Alex von Tunzelmann is irate at this subplot, which implies that Turing was blackmailed into not exposing John Cairncross as a spy lest Cairncross expose Turing’s homosexuality. She writes: “This is wholly imaginary and deeply offensive–for concealing a spy would have been an extremely serious matter. Were the makers of The Imitation Game intending to accuse Alan Turing, one of Britain’s greatest war heroes, of cowardice and treason? Creative license is one thing, but slandering a great man’s reputation–while buying into the nasty 1950s prejudice that gay men automatically constituted a security risk–is quite another.” But hey, it fits into the homosexual martyr theme, right?

Tunzelmann draws a broad and painful conclusion: “Historically, The Imitation Game is as much of a garbled mess as a heap of unbroken code. For its appalling suggestion that Alan Turing might have covered up for a Soviet spy, it must be sent straight to the bottom of the class.”

The movie represents Turing as almost breaking down under stress of the conviction and grotesque legal “remedy” of injections with a synthetic estrogen to reduce his libido. The movie then ends and down the screen rolls the postscript that Turing committed suicide. Was it clear (certainly not to me) that Turing’s death came a year after the treatments had ceased? And that Turing is reported by those who knew him at the time to have taken his conviction and treatment “with good humour”? And did not lose his job, pushing ahead with research even on the mathematical biology of his “treatment”? And showed no signs of depression in the weeks before his death and died leaving a careful list of tasks he would complete when returning to his office?

Turing did die of cyanide poisoning, but his colleague, a philosophy professor, reported he was using the cyanide in some of his work and that evidence cited by the coroner was more consistent with death by inhalation than death by ingestion.

And so where are we left? If an artist, a novelist, or film maker, wishes to borrow and build upon the achievements and fame of a real historical person, such as Alan Turing, is there then “artistic license” to make up events, major psychological and personality traits, and important relationships that never existed—and that the record states did not exist—for the sake of art? Do the demands of art supersede respect for the reputation of real historical persons? Can we make up the story and yet stand on the shoulders of the real man—and end our film, as does “The Imitation Game”—with a recitation of real historical events that suit our theme—such as the royal pardon granted to Turing in 2013 by Queen Elizabeth?

If you are going to make it up, why make it up about Alan Turing? Not that it matters, now, but I wonder if the “real” Alan Turing would appreciate the depiction of his life as a melodrama of homosexual tragedy?

Is playing fast and loose with history, and the facts of the life of a man—in this case, a hero—justified in the name of propaganda?

And is playing fast and loose with history, and the facts of the life of a man—in this case, a hero—justified in the name of propaganda? Is portraying the life of the real Alan Turing, his colleagues, and his achievements no different than creating a beautiful, moving, and important fiction like “Brokeback Mountain?” You can make it all up?  Because you wish to steal Turing’s personal greatness, achievement, and role in history for use in your propaganda? For a cause that you feel somehow makes it all “true”?

Not if you  believe, as I do, in protecting freedom of adult sexual choices,  if you cry for the real Alan Turing, but are troubled by the distortion of history, and the perversion of art, to fuel propaganda.
 

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Walter Donway
Walter Donway
9 years ago

Fantastic film. I simply throbbed to the suspense and by the end was in tears. If it were fiction and presented as fiction, I would have not whisper of criticism. Because, yes, emphasizing the homosexual element added a fierce poignancy to the drama as a whole.

But the “inaccuracies” are actually sweeping historical distortions, one implying treason, and text running down the film at the very end failed to say: “This film is not about the real Alan Turing. Almost every important incident and conflict is made up. The role played by homosexuality in Turing’s life is hugely inflated. To the real Alan Turing: sorry for stealing your life, we needed it.” I think your initial quote captures perfectly the kind of man Turing was, what motivated him, and the true driving force of genius.

Have Your Say
Have Your Say
9 years ago

The Russian side does not come across as treason though. Alan quickly DOES tell British intelligence. And before he does, it comes across as saving his friend, rather than saving his own ass, or being afraid to come out of the closet. Given that gays are imprisoned and (chemically) castrated, the gayness adds to the tension. It’s a cardinal Aristotelian screenwriting rule: Increase the jeopardy.

plusaf
plusaf
9 years ago
Reply to  Have Your Say

and not one comment pointing out the ‘inaccuracies’ in the movie Noah?
😀

Walter Donway
Walter Donway
9 years ago

But, of course, the whole spy/treason incident is totally made up; something Turing never did in any way. So were the soldiers breaking into the lab. So was the tyrannical commander. I can’t wait till a movie of Ayn Rand’s struggle comes out and, although portraying her as brilliant and hardworking, a heroine fighting for ideals, there is a scene where she is desperate to finish Atlas, and bring it to the world, but is running out of money. She steals her best friend Dagny’s jewelry, blaming it on Dagny’s maid, who goes to jail, but vowing to pay it back when Atlas succeeds. As she writes one night, we focus in on her face, tense, agonized; and she says to herself: “For the world, for mankind…and for you, Dagny, I must succeed.” Adds some real tension to her struggle to finish the novel, which becomes no only an intellectual battle but a battle to redeem her personal honor. Alas, by the time Atlas is written and succeeds, Dagny’s has died. The final scene is Ayn Rand alone, visiting her grave; she kneels, digs a shallow hole, and buries the jewelry on the grave. She bows a moment, and is heard to say, “Rest in peace, Dagny; you will live forever, now–and so will the world…” John Aglialoro missed a good bet, there.

Have Your Say
Have Your Say
9 years ago
Reply to  Walter Donway

The comparison does not fly. That’s way out of character for Rand…”She steals her best friend Dagny’s jewelry, blaming it on Dagny’s maid, who goes to jail”??? For Turing to be shown not good at flirting, or NOT outing a spy because he is a friend, is not even bad. You can make up things that are IN character. That’s the way to use your poetic license.

Walter Donway
Walter Donway
9 years ago
Reply to  Have Your Say

I see you have devised a rule. You can make up things about a historical character if they are IN character. A British historian comments that for Turing to conceal his discovery of a Soviet spy is wildly out of character, suggesting the intention to indulge a little discreet treason, until he thinks his girlfriend is at risk, but you don’t see it that way. My view remains that when you tell a story of a man’s life, you tell it as it was; if you wish to let your imagine loose, you make up your own story. You don’t take advantage of the reader’s reaction of “Wow, incredible, this really happened!” when it did not happen at all. Fiction is more important than history because it presents life as it might and ought to be. To present history as it might and ought to have been, without telling the readers you are rewriting history, violates good faith with the audience. But I am just repeating myself, aren’t I.

Have Your Say
Have Your Say
9 years ago
Reply to  Walter Donway

Okay, fair point. But then, let’s not call them movies. Documentaries and re-enactments can be exciting. Mayday is far more exciting than Hollywood disaster movies. Let’s just do those w.r.t. famous people and heroes and never ever a movie. I can live with this rule.

alexander
alexander
9 years ago

There is a difference between artistic license and propaganda. This movie is clearly the later.

Arthur
Arthur
3 years ago

For a non-Brit man who is Belgian, I have hardly ever saw a movie with this much of Prapaganda. The movie literaly says “We won the war” and by “We” they mean GB and not the Allies including Russia. For god sake Brits and French, understand that the Nazis lost mostly because of the hard loss of the Russian army. Nearly 35 millions of Russian soldiers gave their life to end the war. Then the USA quickly came by the end of it just to get a part of the cake which was already cooked. Getting all the west under their own economical arangement and mostly taking all the technologies they could find in Germany. Because unless everyone seems to forget, Germany was far more advanced than the UK and the USA at that time, The USA found out that Russia was going to get their hands on all those techs and they thought that they must quickly get to Berlin before them. The Russian were the first to enter Berlin and that is not for nothing. The Americans still believe they saved us, the british believes their inteligence ended the war, and everybody forgets about the Russian, even worse everyone hates them and the propaganda continues even today. It is ridiculus. Here in my small city in southern Belgium, we have a day in the year when we remmember the great loss of a miss bombardment done by the americans on our city. They were at rush to get to Berlin before the Russian and did not hesitate to bombared cytizens. My grand mother never forgot and she is still there to tell me those horrible storries. The americans soldiers were very kind tho. As in all the wars, mans suffer the smart stupid ass at the head. As far as I know she still have hard feelings for anything related to Germany. It is understandable for all those who lived in the time of nazis. If at all England has to teach anything to the world, it would be that it doesn’t make anything to be smart. Or to think yourself as smart, which is the most stupid thing I have ever seen in humanity. If someone find you smart it’s fine, but if you find yourself smart you are in deep s***. GB have proved that applying ones inteligence to usurpate and hurt others for ones profit is the greatest idiocy and ignorance. They took all they could all over the world because of this stupid superiority complexe. With this movie they insult all the gentlemans and ladies of GB who rather remain silent towards all the misstakes our European countries have made in the past. And sadly continues to do, hopefully not as much as we used to.

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