TOPICS: The meaning of the ‘Oval’ Office

David Arzouman

The precedent for oval rooms in American affairs of state can be traced to George Washington. He modified chambers in the President’s House in Philadelphia with bowed ends so that guests at formal receptions could all stand equidistant to the president. It was a symbolic expression of democracy. While the current Oval Office goes back to President Franklin Roosevelt, the White House’s first Oval Office was occupied by William Howard Taft in 1909. He avoided the rectangular room used by Theodore Roosevelt, relocated the presidential office to a central position in the West Wing, and opted for the oval.

The repositioning of the president’s office signified the central position of the presidency. But here’s the funny thing about ovals, or, in geometric terms, ellipses: Unlike circles, which are defined by a single centre, ovals are defined by two key points, each, appropriately, called a “focus.” A focal point is a two-way juncture — a spot not only of radiance, but also convergence, the position that “takes the heat.” Leaders often deserve the glare of public criticism. They project their light onto the candidates whose every action is a petition to their anonymous authority. The candidates reflect that focused light back as their own. The electorate, seeing hope and power as uniquely beyond themselves, get caught in a spell of their own making. Everything seems to revolve around the president.

But the seat of power, the Oval Office, has that other, unseen focal point, as if to indicate a room with two “centres” of responsibility. Could that be our spot in the room? Democracy, after all, is self-government. When the spell of the campaign is inevitably broken, we awake to learn anew the lesson of projecting all hopes and responsibilities, and the cost of not taking our position. Democracy is a work in progress. Its imperfections mirror our blind spots. The same presidential house in Philadelphia that employed the beautiful symbolism of democracy also had slave quarters. Can we be certain that contemporary life has transcended any remaining counterfeits and abuses of freedom? And if not, then can we be certain that such abuses are not fertilising the roots of our overgrown difficulties?

Perhaps there is wisdom in calling it the Oval Office. The word “ellipse” derives from a Greek root meaning “defect” and “falling short,” as in not being a perfect circle. “Oval” comes from the Latin ovum, “egg,” — birth and new beginnings, a place where our greatest aspirations might hatch and take wings. President-elect Obama will soon occupy the desk at one of the Oval Office’s focal points. He campaigned emphasising the word “we.”

Like all presidents, he will need our help. We, too, must exercise rightful government, even in the privacy of our daily thoughts and actions. By doing so, we make the move along with the new president, confident there is also a spot reserved for the American people in the room with two centres.