Showing posts with label Book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book review. Show all posts

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Review: The Turn of the Screw by Henry James – a very interesting & subtle mystery

What an interesting story. 

Initially, I was growing a bit weary of the slightly discursive parenthetical sentence structure in the first person narration - but I think it works. It's at the half way point that the mystery begins to foment; and - at which point - I think the skilful effect of the dense sentences by Henry James becomes apparent. At that point, we had been in the governess's brain - 'listening' to her internal confusion - sharing the nuances in her suspicion and afterthoughts.

The unreliable narrator is the governess employed at Bly - the country manor - to care for two children placed under her care, Miles and Flora. She is immediately struck by their angelic cherubic beauty and charm, and seems determined to protect them; however, the story takes a menacing and psychologically disturbing turn when she begins to see apparitions. (First one: what we can infer as Peter Quint spends an age starring at the governess from the house’s tower. Moving then, and still without once breaking eye contact. That's quite chilling!)

Side point: it is fascinating that the governess should collapse on the last step of the staircase exactly as Miss Jessel's (the former governess) ghost had done days prior. It suggests a parallel and Jessel (it was alluded) may have had an affair with Quint. I am not sure I can fully appreciate the connection vis-a-vis the present governess; but I'm convinced James drew one. 

What makes this story fascinating is that it is impossible to divine whether the governess is delusional and obsessive. Is she losing her mind? Or are there truly demonic-like apparitions? Were the two children aware of the ghosts all along? Why Quint and Jessel? What was it about them as former employees? I found the governess's behaviour in the final few chapters really quite shocking and mentally disturbing (mind you, I might be the same in such circs). And the ending is just brilliant and cements the ambiguity (the "Peter Quint – you devil!" line and the use of the word "devil" by Henry James is interesting).

Although the language may be unorthodox (at first), it's easy to get used to and there are some interesting literary gems. For example, as regards the residents of Bly Manor, "... I had the fancy of our being almost as lost as a handful of passengers in a great drifting ship. Well, I was, strangely, at the helm!" 

I will definitely re-read this again in the future.

Sunday, July 16, 2023

Review: Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov

Vladimir Nabokov’s ‘Lolita’ is an immensely pleasurable, captivating, and moving novel. I spent a few days reading chunks of the novel, completely gripped, often inhaling in shock or guffawing at Nabokov’s zingers and witticism or shaking my head at its scenes of pitiable sadness. Then, as I approach the conclusion of the novel, I was sad to be ending it. 

Nabokov’s Lolita works rather like a duel with the reader: like a challenge. Rather like the film ‘Law Abiding Citizen’, Gerard Butler’s character is a murdering psychopath; and yet, I was on his side rooting for him. Also, Hannibal Lecter in ‘Silence of the Lambs’. These people are ultimately unhinged and should be repulsive; and yet they possess a certain bewitching charm. Nabokov’s protagonist in Lolita, Humbert Humbert (HH), fits into this curious trademark. 

Nabokov confronts us, the readers, with a disturbing taboo and pushes the boundaries of storytelling. This novel canvasses the uneasy relationship between a middle-aged man and an underage girl through poetic introspection, and an aureate and mellifluous writing style. The middle-aged HH suffers from an overpowering, oppressive agony. Ever since a failed amorous dalliance with a prepubescent girl named Annabel in his distant childhood, he has become fixated on what he calls “nymphets”. Various affairs with actual, what HH calls, “terrestrial women”, and even getting married, scarcely subjugates these urges.

And so, Humbert - in a boarding house trying to finish writing a book - discovers his landlady’s 12-year-old daughter as his veritable apotheosis of nymphet lust and his licentious urges. Her name is Dolores Haze but she conforms to various sobriquets: Dolly, Lo, Lola … and of course, Lolita. This girl will satiate his fantasies … but will Lolita be willing … and how can HH conceal it from her mother and the family? … and, so our protagonist charts various pathways, and has to confront the ultimate tragedy of his decisions.

Prose

For me, I like to think of myself as a logophile; and so, when reading Nabokov, I got to almost luxuriate in the elegant nuances and complexities of the language. What is immediately apparent is the sheer superlative command that Nabokov wields vis-à-vis the English language, and its richness to better express HH’s views. I often found the prose so beautiful that I would re-read paragraphs, and always agog at his amazing feats, implications and insinuations. A certain clarity and subtlety is amplified by Nabokov’s use of demanding but accurate vocabulary. I was very often looking-up new words in the dictionary; and wondering why Nabokov used that exotic word over a more prosaic alternative; and sometimes there wasn’t an adequate alternative. Send me to the dictionary any day to roll a new word around my palate; with a voyeuristic etymological inquiry to its roots (often attesting to a striking discord between the word’s origin and its temporal incarnations). Language isn’t just communication - its an intellectual sensibility, and with Nabokov it is pleasure. HH makes a point of saying:

“not a single obscene term is to be found in the whole work; indeed, the robust philistine who is conditioned by modern conventions into accepting without qualms a lavish array of four-letter words in a banal novel, will be quite shocked by their absence here.”

HH describing his first and initial prototypic love, Annabel, in the most ornate embroidery:

“All at once we were madly, clumsily, shamelessly, agonizingly in love with each other; hopelessly, I should add, because that frenzy of mutual possession might have been assuaged only by our actually imbibing and assimilating every particle of each other’s soul and flesh.”

On a park bench, as HH reads a book, his mouth-watering prose is imbued with the inherent violation of taboos:

“Once a perfect little beauty in a tartan frock, with a clatter put her heavily armed foot near me upon the bench to dip her slim bare arms into me and tighten the strap of her roller skate, and I dissolved in the sun, with my book for fig leaf, as her auburn ringlets fell all over her skinned knee, and the shadow of leaves I shared pulsated and melted on her radiant limb next to my chameleonic cheek.”

The book is filled with first-class one-liners:

“... and spent a fantastic night on the train, imagining in all possible detail the enigmatic nymphet I would coach in French and fondle in Humbertish.”

“Oh, my Lolita, I have only words to play with!” 

“McCoo in wet clothes turned up at the only hotel of green-and-pink Ramsdale with the news that his house had just burned down - possibly, owing to the synchronous conflagration that had been raging all night in my veins”

As regards Lolita, her very presence is a source of near spiritual ecstasy:

“Silently, the seventh-grader enjoyed her green-red-blue comics. She was the loveliest nymphet green-red-blue Priap himself could think up. As I looked on, through prismatic layers of light, dry-lipped, focusing my lust and rocking slightly under my newspaper, I felt that my perception of her, if properly concentrated upon, might be sufficient to have me attain a beggar’s bliss ...”

“All the while I was acutely aware of L.’s nearness and as I spoke I gestured in the merciful dark and took advantage of those invisible gestures of mine to touch her hand, her shoulder and a ballerina of wool and gauze which she played with and kept sticking into my lap; and finally, when I had completely enmeshed my glowing darling in this weave of ethereal caresses, I dared stroke her bare leg along the gooseberry fuzz of her shin, and I chuckled at my own jokes, and trembled, and concealed my tremors, and once or twice felt with my rapid lips the warmth of her hair as I treated her to a quick nuzzling, humorous aside and caressed her plaything.”

Another example, HH is entranced even by her walking:

“Why does the way she walks—a child, mind you, a mere child!—excite me so abominably? Analyze it. A faint suggestion of turned in toes. A kind of wiggly looseness below the knee prolonged to the end of each footfall. The ghost of a drag. Very infantile, infinitely meretricious.”

After finishing ‘Lolita’, I read his essay/lecture on “Good Readers and Good Writers“. In short, he thinks we should separate the fictional world from the real world; “the good reader is one who has imagination, memory, a dictionary, and some artistic sense—which sense I propose to develop in myself and in others whenever I have the chance.” He says we shouldn’t focus on ‘identifying with the character’ (because they exist in the fictive world) and avoid importing our preconceptions onto a book. Very interesting thoughts. They key to good writing is detail (“one should notice and fondle details”) and style - i.e. literary gymnastics are more important than telling a good yarn. I quite like this.

The subject matter

I think approaching this book requires an open mind and a readiness to grapple with uncomfortable themes. Reading comments online, it seems people thought that the book’s eroticism was ‘celebrating’ or normalising paedophilic ‘love’. This is completely wrong. Firstly, Humbert is an unhinged maniac, and self-consciously so. He is completely, utterly, and totally obsessed with Lolita which is certified by his paranoia, delusions, and hallucinations. Nabokov’s linguistic prowess shines throughout the narrative with eloquent prose and exquisite attention to detail. So much so that Nabokov’s paedophile archetype is presented so consummately and accurately that, to me, it was only ever mildly uncomfortable - nothing is ever too abrasive.

But, I think its a testament to the author’s consummate ability to crawl inside the workings of insanity, self-serving narcissism and self-justification. Humbert even fantasises about having children and even grandchildren with Lolita so that he could ravish them too! On the other hand, Humbert is also shown in his saddening reality of ‘dealing’ with a child. For example, Lolita’s sporadic tantrums and chastising of HH, her flirting with other boys, her indifference to Humbert’s efforts to show some affection etc. Nabokov thus weaves a deeper and more textured narrative than at first sight.

Ultimately, for me, I think Nabokov serves a scathing reproach to the idea of paedophilia as a legitimate love. When reading this novel, I was often overcome be the overwhelming sadness in the reality of both characters. In various vignettes, Humbert frolics with little Lolita - even at the back of a parkland; and there is nothing sadder than a full-grown adult reduced to having to cavort with a little child. To the extent that Nabokov can ‘explain’ what the paedophile finds sexually beautiful in the nymphet - in the way they ‘love’ a certain child; it is Nabokov’s talent to make us sympathise with the self-recognised paedophile.

This is definitely a book worthy of re-reading (and hopefully another review). As Nabokov observed: “curiously enough, one cannot read a book: one can only reread it. A good reader, a major reader, an active and creative reader is a rereader”.

Friday, July 14, 2023

Review: Viral: The Search for the Origin of Covid-19 by Alina Chan and Matt Ridley

I've just finished reading 'Viral', and found it jaw-dropping and completely gripping. Rather than a traditional non-fiction, it is written more like an engrossing detective story.

Unlike the 2003 SARS pandemic, we still don't have any conclusive evidence as to the pandemic's origin. It remains 'unknown'. This status quo is both ridiculous and unacceptable. 

When an airplane crashes, there is a determined effort to identify the cause of the catastrophe. The fact that a serious and full investigation into a pandemic that killed millions points to something deeply wrong.

This book takes the reader through the technical data, the virology theory, and the astounding history of random Twitter users - during global lockdowns - dredging and trawling the web for data concerning the covid-19 genome among published journals. It's clear from the book that without these 'internet sleuths' we may never have actually unearthed facts which the authorities were embarrassed into disclosing. Ultimately, this is a serious book which should merit broad government-level consideration, and scientific and political introspection.

Both writers grapple with both theories (natural origin and lab-leak) objectively and with impartiality. The book makes a very convincing case that covid-19 arose because of material held in research laboratories in Wuhan. However, this does not detract from the overall even-handedness of the book. 

Tracing covid

The story unfolds with the unearthing - via Twitter - of reported 'pneumonia' deaths in the Yunnan province in 2012. In some bat-infested mine, some miners had been struck down. So serious was this that it prompted repeated visits by scientists from the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV). These reports were dug-up by the sleuths in doctoral dissertations published in China; but not available on international databases. Afterwards, repeated visits by external authorities to the mines (e.g. WHO, BBC etc.) were hampered by China with make-shift roadblocks etc, and 'minders' being ever-present. It seems likely that these caves may be the true origin of covid. (As with image below, from the book, it seems scientists may not have worn the full PPE protection to-and-from the mines; and so the virus could have hitched a ride on their clothes etc.) 

The book illustrates the inherent problem of dictatorships. The Chinese authorities appeared to have repeatedly and systematically destroyed evidence and data, online database were abruptly and inexplicably taken offline, obfuscatory explanations given, forbidding of investigations, and the punishment of leakers and informants.

Crucially, as the book explains, bats have tended to harbour an abundance of 'zoonotic viruses', via large virus pools in which mutations may be able to jump species. I found it incredible that the WIV - headed by Dr Shi - had already been focused on studying bat viruses for many years and had already finished sequencing the coronavirus genome some years prior. This was never shared with the international community - but only grudgingly disclosed after it was discovered online via the Twitter sleuths.

The Institute was already pursuing the so-called 'gain of function' research on covid-related viruses in order to 'get ahead' of the next pandemic by better understanding viral evolution and what makes it more potent (via the 'furin cleavage site'). What's fascinating is the scientists who were initially surprised by the 'atypical' adaptation of covid-19 from the outset against humans. 

The book is excellent at explaining the idiosyncrasies of covid. Generally speaking, in bats, the coronavirus family is a mild virus which targets their intestines; and yet - in humans - it is remarkably well-adapted and very contagious. In science, a virus involved in a spillover, is extremely unlikely to be highly infectious. This is because the binding receptor will be different between humans and the original animal host. As such, it requires mutations which explains why the first cases involve those in close proximity to animals. These early patients often catch but don't transmit the virus. The receptor-binding domain (RBD) of the spike protein of covid-19 is well adapted to the human AC2 receptor - but not as adapted to other species. Since covid-19 had few earlier mutations, the question is how the virus was immediately suited for human transmission. 

The source of the outbreak being the fish section of the Wuhan wet-market must be dismissed. Furthermore, the Chinese explanation of transmission via frozen food must also be disregarded. The authors point out how ridiculous this explanation is vis-a-vis basic virology (and how the WHO entertained it). The authors take us through the pangolin and civet cats as viral vessels; but the true mystery is the furin cleavage site. 

This aspect of covid-19 does not typically appear in bat coronaviruses. The authors explain what the RBD on the spike proteins are, and how they facilitate viral replication. The point is that it indicates some engineering; because the furin cleavage site is an added bit that doesn't appear in the other coronavirus genomes. Moreover - and this I found shocking - this genetic research was something that the WIV had already been conducting - i.e. inserting into other viruses genetic material etc, as part of its research. 

To my mind, these facts make the lab-leak theory the more probable cause of the pandemic. The authors also cite:

  • Biosafety concerns at the lab.
  • Chinese refusal to share data concerning the earliest human case in Nov 2019.
  • The apparent kick-starting of vaccine developments in China before the outbreak was even declared.
  • The ridiculous level of antagonism and non-cooperation by the Chinese authorities to investigate the origin.
  • The failure to find an infected animals in the Wuhan wet-market.
  • The fact that the world-leading institute (WIV) had nearly 200 bat coronavirus situated in its building in the middle of Wuhan itself. (Who, in their right mind, sticks a virology lab in the middle of a big metropolis?)
  • The inherently risky nature of the research at WIV.
  • The total refusal of the WIV to share its database, taking it offline in late 2019.
  • Western virologists (including Sir Jeremy Farrar and Dr Anthony Fauci) had collaborated with the WIV to shut down debate in the West and label a lab leak a conspiracy theory despite privately expressing reservations against the natural origin theory.
  • Peter Daszak (who had written in the Lancet against the lab-leak theory as a conspiracy; and has since become an embarrassment) had actually applied to the Pentagon, in collaboration with WIV, to do furin cleavage site experiments in bat coronaviruses. 

In the end

Ultimately, we are left with possibility that the US government may have unwittingly funded research into the very lab in Wuhan.

Another disturbing aspect of the pandemic is the widespread censorship of debate; and especially on Twitter and Facebook. I remember Twitter being a forum used by protesters during the Arab Spring; but nowadays it was part of the ossifying and stultifying response from science journals and agencies, most notably, the WHO. 

One of the biggest mysteries in virology of recent decades, was received by scientists and agencies who were anxious not to irritate the Chinese government. And, in some cases, content to collaborate with the Chinese government's obscurantism of the true origins of covid-19 (viz. Daszak).

As the authors point out, this is a brilliant template for how authoritarian regimes and dictatorships can best pivot the Western democracies into compliance. It also raises a serious question of how the Foreign Office is to approach future global crises. How should our universities and scientific journals handle Chinese funding? Why did so many liberals and scientists in the West found themselves secretly impressed by the Chinese authoritarian response to the pandemic. 

Ultimately, 'Viral' is a meticulously-researched book on the origins of covid-19 by intelligent and learned authors. It also raises a fascinating question as to how world governments - and, in particular, scientists - are to navigate China's autocratic closed political instincts which - one would have assumed - should not sit well with the scientific community. 

The feeling of a cover-up of a mistake has probably done much to amplify a sense of mistrust. I think it will take time to get over this pandemic, and I suspect that true catharsis can only prevail once we manage to get to the bottom of its origin. We also need a serious discussion on all scientific research conducted in the name of getting-ahead and which carry enormous risks.

Saturday, July 8, 2023

Review: On Liberty by John Stuart Mill

I've recently finished reading 'On Liberty' by Mill. Every few years I find myself re-reading this book. I profoundly agree with Mill, and spend most of the reading experience either nodding my head in agreement or shaking at some irritation alongside Mill. 

Originally published in 1859, it is an perceptive analysis of the human condition with regards to our thought-process and the way we treat others who stand in opposition to the consensus.

When I first read 'On Liberty', I remember finding the prose rather turgid - if not verbose; but I've now come to really enjoy his literary style. Mill has a lovely literary style - which makes me feel he's speaking and narrating. His otherwise discursive narrative obscures the concision with which his forceful philosophical points are couched. Indeed, so much so, that the book is immensely quotable. This is not a treatise, instead it takes the form of an extended essay and relates to his general utilitarianism ideology. I think its the brevity of 'On Liberty' which imbues it with its enduring aphoristic quality.

Core arguments

Mill argues that people are accustomed to believe that their "feelings are better than reasons" and that tolerance only operates as a prisoner's dilemma type of situation. So natural to humankind is intolerance that its only when the cost of philosophical or political quarrels becomes costly, that a truce of-sorts prevails: "the duty of toleration is admitted with tacit reserves". 

The preservation of liberty entails limits on government action. But, as I write this, I feel some despondency. Our world is radically different to Mill's account - most conspicuously during covid-19. So much so, that reading Mill feels, to me, rather quaint. Today, government is viewed - not with any suspicion - but with an air of an expectation. The expectation of intervening in almost every issue and to 'deal'  with every 'crisis'. Governments are expected to furnish solutions to all aspect of life - even the insoluble one. At least Mill's era involved some inherent realisation as to the limits of government. Nevertheless, Mill writes that "the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others". This outlines his classic harm principle: "his own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant" to exercise power over him.  But, the concept of what amounts to harm, more often than not, is precisely a person's own good (with the difference that today, it is repackaged as the well-being of others).

Nevertheless, as a starting proposition, he argues that people should be able to determine their own lives as it suits their characters. He presents four classic arguments.

1. Firstly, as a result of own non-infallibility, I have no more rational weight to impede the expression of opinions contrary to my own – than they would have to impede my own opinion. That is true of homosexuality, racism, prostitution, transgenderism etc. as being acceptable. As a matter of first principles, a person has no more rational weight for finding it acceptable than someone else holding the contrary. It is simply a point of view which is often held very strongly to such an extent that disagreement is automatically deemed as being 'wrong'. Mill argues that our infallibility ought to make us rein in the stifling of opinions that do not mirror our own - often the regnant orthodoxy. In so doing, Mill argues that humanity would be hurting itself. He says: "they have no authority to decide the question for all mankind, and exclude every other person from the means of judging". He argues eloquently that depriving a counter-position involves humanity losing "the clearer perception and livelier impression of truth".

2. Secondly, we have a duty to form our own opinions on subjects in life. To that extent, it is cowardice to withdraw and recoil from meaningfully acting on our earnest opinions. "People, in less enlightened times, have persecuted opinions now believed to be true", and it makes all the difference between assuming the truth for lack of refutation and not permitting its refutation. 

In my view, Mill touches on a deeply held insecurity often lurking beneath the surface vis-a-vis the censorious; namely, their anxiety about being challenged. Mill argues that a confident opinion ought to involve a "standing invitation to the whole world to prove them unfounded".

Mill rebukes the perceived impiety that may surround some given opinion; i.e. by "preventing the opinion from being heard in its defence, he assumes infallibility". He cites Socrates and the putative impiety of challenging the gods of the state and as the 'corrupter of the youth'. He cites Calvary, and the Sanhedrin putting Christ to death in genuine outrage at his impiety. The greatest harm, he says, is the reasoning that is cowed for fear of heresy. Truth gains more by people who earnestly think for themselves than those who "suffer themselves to think". An atmosphere of mental slavery. Without challenge, opinions morph into a "dead dogma, not a living truth". Its comprehension and rationality will wither, and any heartfelt and earnest conviction becomes a luxury. Elsewhere he argues that an aspect of individuality is originality, otherwise "human life would becomes a stagnant pool". As such, he reminds society that we should encourage people who think differently.

My own university boasts a world renowned status; and yet, last year, Kathleen Stock and Helen Joyce were abused and attempts were made to silence them and prevent fellow students from hearing their opinions. Mill's stagnancy seems fitting.

3. Thirdly, quoting Cicero, "he who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that". By throwing ourselves into the mental position of those who think differently, we may overlook refining the truth. Referring to the Socratic method, he makes clear an obvious point which is that any prevailing orthodoxy is rarely the whole truth. It is via the collision of adverse opinions on which truth is ultimately furnished. He says quite beautifully:

If there are any persons who contest a received opinion ... let us thank them for it, open our minds to listen to them, and rejoice that there is some one to do for us what we otherwise ought.

This line is almost utopian. Have we ever lived in a world in which opinions are vigorously and honestly contested? Our opinions are tribal and held for the sake of vanity or peer-pressure. I really don't think we are a species that can think for itself. As much as I admire and love Mill's book, I increasingly feel that our culture would mock these points and, to that extent, it feels irrelevant to our world. There feels like an ever concentrated set of social and cultural orthodoxies; and against which, diversity and tolerance are regarded with suspicion and hostility. 

4. Finally, Mill cautions us from "stigmatising those who hold the contrary opinion as bad and immoral men". Mill argues that this argument is one-sided; i.e. the side with the comforting majority. The minority cannot attack the prevailing consensus as immoral or wicked etc. Similar to the ad hominem, Mill urges readers to restrain vituperation and such offensive attacks. On the other side, he cautions the minority position.

He argues that the expression of ideas is not without consequence or cost. By insulting a man's mother, I cannot expect or demand no consequences. A person who articulates an unorthodox or heretical view must be mindful of the way they comport themselves. They cannot demand no cost.

The liberty of the individual must be thus far limited; he must not make himself a nuisance to other people.But if he refrains from molesting others in what concerns them, and merely acts according to his own inclination and judgment in things which concern himself, the same reasons which show that opinion should be free, prove also that he should be allowed, without molestation, to carry his opinions into practice at his own cost.

Conclusion

There are some interesting tangential points. Mill seems to adopt a Lockian conceptions of rights which is qualified vis-a-vis children (up to the legal age). Liberty is defined negatively by 'failing to help his brother'. I am quite pleased to see Mill discounted the fanciful notion of the 'social contract' and maintained some, admittedly vague, conception of mutual responsibility between individuals and the community. These sentiments reflect an approach to liberty that deserves its own post. Moreover, there was a fascinating remonstration against Christian precepts which I quite enjoyed and may need to be fleshed out and analysed in more detail in a future post.

Ultimately, this is an excellent work which distills the need to acknowledge the flourishing of individual dignity through the liberty of the individual.

Monday, July 3, 2023

Review: The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells

I really enjoyed reading this classic.

What is incredible is how someone from Victorian England could have contrived such a gripping modern sci-fi. The prodigious story is knotted together through Wells' inspiration, ingenuity and the intensity of his plot. Most of the novel depicts the narrator's anxiety to locate his missing wife, against whom he had been unintentionally separated at the outset. This makes for a pleasing ending. Otherwise, from the unnerving horror of the martians to the depths of human despair; I felt Wells really takes us on wild ride (his favorite word in the novel being 'tumultuous').

My first exposure to The War of the Worlds is the Steven Spielberg and Tom Cruise film which I thought was a terrific film. What is particularly striking is just how faithful that blockbuster was to Well's masterpiece.

Written in the style of a narrated diary, I was drawn to his plight, alienation and weariness. Wells gives us some deep reflections on the broader plight of mankind. For example, I really enjoyed the subtle intuition that the protagonist says to a clergyman - who having survived the initial annihilation - who starts beseeches 'what sins have we done?'. The response:

"You are scared out of your wits! What good is religion if it collapses under calamity? Think of what earthquakes and floods, wars and volcanoes, have done before to men! Did you think God had exempted Weybridge? He is not an insurance agent."

Haha. Love it. One of the most misconceived aspects of the monotheistic religions is the latent assumption that the natural world - from weather conditions to tectonic activity - occurs specifically for and about us, as its subject. But, stepping back, and looking at the natural world and physical laws that govern it; one gets a radically different perspective. Instead, death and suffering is the norm; and a part of everything. Life is a constant struggle of survival, and even stars die. I think Wells taps into a serious misunderstanding people have about death and our perception of ourselves in the world. He is fond of evoking the image of hapless bees and ants being massacred, or rabbits facing a bulldozer, or a rat scurrying. What is the point? I think Well's wants us to pity those suffering who are different from us:

I, who had talked with God, crept out of the house like a rat leaving its hiding place ... Perhaps they also prayed confidently to God. Surely, if we have learned nothing else, this war has taught us pity—pity for those witless souls that suffer our dominion.

Then, I was struck by the convulsions in the story to the moral and psychological effect that the nightmare bears on the individual as well as the masses. The fleeing throngs of people is starkly depicted with an almost Biblical quality. London's population is fleeing northwards along cramped narrow roads amidst an eclectic miscellany of social classes, unanimous in fear, torment & hunger.

There's a cheerless incident involving a desperate man - in the midst of a marching throng - lunging to retrieve a heap of coins he had dropped. He narrowly avoids being crushed under a horse's hoof; only to hear a scream as the wheel passed over the poor creature's back. Thus, back-broken, he is then positioned at the side of the road still clutching his coins. In the film, there is a similar scene involving gunshots for the sake of a car.

Then, there are also the imaginative and inventive analytical details of clinical horror which are fascinating. For instance, incandescent heat-rays, poisonous black smoke, or that the martians are said to inject their 'food' into the blood streams (circumventing a digestive system). Similarly, the martian's reproduction process is some mitosis-like splitting into twos. Then, there is the suggestion that natural selection favoured a steady diminution of the martians nose, teeth, ears etc in favour of the brain. Immediately afterwards, the protagonist even wonders if "the Martians may be descended from beings not unlike ourselves". 

It's also interesting that the martians are eventually slain by the humble Earthly bacteria - and not some machinery or science, human intelligence or strength, or even divine providence. Even in the demise of our foe, humankind is rendered impotent and useless. I find that ending resonates with me. I think it speaks to the reckoning that chance and randomness ultimately bears on our continued existence in the solar system. The harsh reality that we are not in control.

Thursday, June 22, 2023

Review: A Very English Scandal by John Preston

This is a truly engrossing story of the Jeremy Thorpe scandal by John Preston.

This is obviously before my time; and I had only ever come across Jeremy Thorpe via the BBC Desert Island Discs. George Carman QC briefly discussed the Thorpe trial with Sue Lawley (more later). So, other than that, I really had no idea about his life or his intrigues.

I read the book over two days. It is amazing just how shocking I found this book. I would find something astonishing on a page only to be shocked afresh a chapter later. At times, the book is hysterical. I was chuckling quite a lot. We take it for granted just how much the world has changed since the 1970s. At the end, the book concludes with a sense of sadness and pathos towards these real-life characters who were all casualties of some kind.

Jeremy Thorpe appeared to have been a charismatic rising politician of a major party in British politics. But, he was gay and he seemed to have had a relationship with a sweet and 'cherubic' Norman Scott. It's clear from the outset, this is not a relationship of equals. Thorpe was truly gay at a time when homosexuality was illegal and such 'indiscretions' would make an MP vulnerable to blackmail. In this particular case, it resulted in a trial - at the Old Bailey - with Thorpe being charged with conspiracy to murder Scott. Scott was a troubled younger gay guy. He seemed very innocent and vulnerable and had psychological issues. This makes the latter part of the book (the trial) quite sad to read. He never really had a family, and Thorpe seems to have used him. Also, their first sexual encounter strikes me as little more than rape. He was a drifter who could rarely look after himself; and was often medicated or would ply himself with alcohol. He was a poor soul.

I really enjoyed how Preston takes us through the Parliamentary goings-on to decriminalise homosexuality, the Wolfenden Report and in particular the efforts of the Welsh MP Leo Abse. It's fascinating to read the Parliamentary concerns and worries about homosexuality. Then, Preston takes us through the economic and political issues of the day so the story feels anchored to the 1970s reality - from inflation to the strikes etc. 

Then, there is Peter Bessell. He is an important part of the trio. He was a straight colleague of Thorpe; and had very quickly morphed into a very close confidant and friend. He would go to extraordinary lengths to recover compromising letters from Norman and generally clean-up Thorpe's messes. It was never very clear to me what motivated Bessell to go to such lengths. He may have been committed to the Liberal Party and perhaps towards Thorpe's friendship personally - but it doesn't seem normal and can't get my head around it. Even at his extremity, and after Thorpe had betrayed him, he was still concerned for him. Perhaps it was Thorpe's apparent charisma and forceful personality. Thorpe strikes me as a complete narcissist and crafty manipulator. It's the only explanation for why his wife stood by him.

The highlight of Preston's book is the court case (Part 4). We are introduced to George Carman QC who is representing Thorpe; and the judge, Sir Joseph Cantley. Carman had strategically let slip that Thorpe has 'homosexual tendencies' in the trial. Thorpe would never have made such a confession - but it meant that love letters and former lovers would not testify to his past sexual indiscretions in court. Carman also seemed to have framed Scott as a predator who had taken advantage of Thorpe, as opposed to the other way around. 

The judicial summing up by Cantley was so biased as to be ridiculous. The judge described Norman Scott as 'a crook, a fraud, a sponger, a whiner and a parasite' - and then adding '... but of course, he could still be telling the truth'. The complete fouling and besmearing of Norman and Bessell in the court - regardless of their own personal failings and shortcoming - was an appalling treatment. The judge, it seems, was toadying to Thorpe's social standing and prominence etc. Preston points out that Auberon Waugh and Carman were both surprised at the 'restrained' way Peter Taylor QC had defended the case. Preston also cites a 'Dennis Meighan' whose police statement was apparently doctored to remove Thorpe's name. Another mystery concerns Norman's original early letters which were taken by the police and handed to MI5. We are never told what happened to them. All-in-all, the court proceedings leave you with a bitter aftertaste as justice was not done in court.

A fascinating fast-paced story, both hysterical and sad; and very gripping.

Saturday, September 3, 2022

Review: The Madness of Crowds by Douglas Murray

Douglas Murray’s The Madness of Crowds explores the contemporary thread of identity politics which permeates our culture and has come to really dominate it today. The book’s structure explores each aspect in turn; gay, women, race, and trans.

Is this a madness? I think Murray is right. Not in the sense of derangement. But in the sense which he means it, namely with reference to Charles Mackay’s Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds.

In Murray’s interlude on forgiveness, he suggests that the contemporary culture of apologising, repentance, and witch-hunts – which he seems to attribute to social media and a loss of our foundational grand narratives – may have something to do with this mania. 

The tone of this book is calm, reflective, and accommodating. Often, quite thought provoking. I find Murray’s literary style a bit run-of-the-mill. There is wit, butt a note of pessimism throughout (which may be justified). This is a battle that feels has been lost.

Below, as part of this review, I focus on a few elements of the book.

✲✲✲

Intersectionality

At the heart of the postmodern progressive outlook is the concept of intersectionality. The term is reputed to have originated with Crenshaw. She contended that one can examine the multiple ways in which “oppression” can manifest itself through an “intersection” of identities through various strata. That way, society would be more able to weigh the “privilege” against the “disadvantage.”

I think, in a vague way, this feels intuitive (particularly, as an example, in the context of Crenshaw’s court case in which she appeared as counsel). However, I don’t think it makes a lot of sense once the broader implications of the doctrine are carefully examined.

As already mentioned, intersectionality impresses either the “privileged” or the “discriminated against” stamp wholesale to certain groups. The problem is that, by implication, also to all members of that group. Such a framework is intended to account for the perceived discrepancies of the real world, and so it naturally lends itself, in that regard, to a victim-oppressor dynamic. The inherent assumption – through the telescope of intersectionality – is that perceived discrepancies are the causal effect of oppression. That’s a mistake. Oppression may be one explanation, but life tends to offer multi-causal explanations; and it is not clear that broad generalisation really account for individual justice.

One of its most bizarre affectations is the way people are often categorised into an ostensible monolith – such as BAME or LGBTQI+. The reality is that people aren’t nearly as monolithic as we expect (or, rather, would like them to be). Once we start sheepherding people into pens, we assumed that they think the same, and can be treated the same. The lumping together of hundreds of culturally diverse and geographically divergent ethnicities that have nothing in common is absurd and even, perhaps, insulting. They don’t have comparable experiences of racism etc.

The flaw in the use of abbreviations is surely evident in LGBTQI+. Apart from some degree of some overlap in some things – they are probably more different than they are alike. And, as Douglas Murray points out, its fundamentally unclear whether the experiences are sufficiently analogous to warrant such a unit block. 

In America, it has becoming “LGBTQIAPPK” with the other letters signifying queer, intersex, asexual, pansexual, polyamorous and kink. Indeed, the very use of the “+” (plus) shows how clumsy and unmanageable it is. The overarching question is what does it mean to be “LGBTQI+”? As Douglas Murray noted:

LGBT is now one of the groupings which mainstream politicians routinely speak about – and to – as if they actually exist like a racial over ledges community. It is a form of absurdity. Even on its own terms this composition is widely unsustainable and contradictory. Gay men and gay women have almost nothing in common … Neither have very much use for each other, and almost none meet in any communal spaces. 

As everyday common-sense will bear out, nobody actually uses the word “BAME”. Nobody says: “I’ve made a new friend today … he’s BAME”! How ridiculous would that sound? Nobody says: “Arh, yes … our new housemate John is LGBTQI+”. We say “our new housemate John is gay” or trans or whatever. So, we must ask; to whom does this categorisation render most utility? To lump people together and puree them into a soup? As Murray argued, the implicit shortcomings in the framework of intersectionality renders it a fundamental misapprehension of reality. 

There are four arguments that I would also add:

Firstly, there are an infinite number of ways in which a person can be defined as possessing either a “privilege” or “discrimination”. See the ‘Matrix of domination’ graph below. The end point is a competition for the most ways a person can be labelled a “victim”, if only to abnegate the “oppressor” tag. It’s this competition that is driving identity politics. (For example, Asians have sometimes been categorised as “white adjacent”!). So, because of this endless varieties of oppression, it says more about our meta psychology than reflecting reality. And, to the extent that it does reflect reality, I think it succeeds but only at a great deal of oversimplification.

Secondly, as the epithet “white straight male” denotes, our society frames intersectionality against that prism. And yet, the most conspicuous unevenness in our world is probably class. It’s a fuzzy amorphous concept which isn’t liable to a simplified blueprint; and yet I think it exists. Indeed, what about one’s locality and circumstances? In many instances, the poor white straight male is probably worse off than the rich black female lesbian. Also, consider the incongruities of life for a person living in London as opposed to Kabul?

Thirdly, it assumes that oppression (or, even, privilege) advances generally in one direction. But, in actuality, context matters tremendously. So, for example, if you want to go into teaching, the statistics show that it’s better to be a woman. On the other hand, the construction industry is tilted towards men. Assuming such discrepancies are a result of oppression, it would point in different directions. 

Fourthly, while some generalisations of disadvantage may be true, most people don’t fit into such sweeping stereotypes. In fact, to my mind, sweeping generalisations tend to give voice to a prejudice. Much more relevant are the individual’s innate characteristics and experiences which have informed the struggle more than general assumptions. As David Foster Wallace taught us, in his speech This is Water, the essence of education is being able to perceive and appreciate things from a different perspective.

✲✲✲

Additionally, Murray traces the broader intersectionality framework within a traditional Marxist substructure of the bourgeois-proletariat dynamic. The forces of revolutionary proletarianism had rebuffed and forsaken Marxists (except among the third world countries and former colonial states in contrast to the booming developed capitalist economies). Instead, that antagonism is instead wrought through an alternative hierarchy of oppression. This struggle for ‘social justice’ replaces the former proletarian analysis but remains subtlety underlaid by the usual anti-capitalist credo. (In Murray's book, it’s well worth reading the bits about Eurocommunism, Palmiro Togliatti, and Gramaci’s critique of culture as a hegemonic force.)

✲✲✲

Gay

Murray begins this section of the book by recalling his experience when he attended an exhibition of a small viewing of a film called the Voices of the Silenced. Apparently, this film documented the case for gay-to-straight conversion therapy. Murray points out how PinkNews concerted to pressurise the relevant cinema chain to ban its small screening, among the small clutch of guests that actually turned out to view it.

Why would this be important? According to Murray, it illustrates two inherent contradictions in the LGBT movement. Firstly, it’s the evolution of a movement away from the John Stuart Mill line (which it once affirmed). To quote Murray, “it is no business of anyone else what consenting adults get up to in private”; but now, it has morphed into something quite opposite. And, secondly, it illustrates the shift from a Voltaire-ian ‘free speech’ position (at the movement’s infancy) to a stance of aggressive orthodoxy (in its relative ascendancy). 

I think Douglas Murray is essentially correct on both of these contentions. Over time, political groups end up chomping their erstwhile colleagues who aren’t willing to imbibe the new orthodoxy. The net effect is that - as the contrarians are purged from the group - it ends up becoming more-and-more uncompromising and singular.

With reference to Mill’s harm principle, people are now aware that offensiveness - without more - is an insufficient justification for the curtailment of speech. But, if the same concept could be repackaged and reframed as “delegitimising” this-or-that group, then reasoning dictates that some “harm” must indeed have been inflicted. If some statement can be pivoted as ‘hateful’, then it can be rejected on the basis that it may be argued to encourage violence. That seems to be the logic.

Murray cites the Tom Daley and the surrogate baby story, as an example. Some article criticised it (title: ‘who and where is the woman? Is it ideological or make believe?’) and a campaign “Stop Funding Hate” started to pressurise advertisers to change the newspaper’s policy. By annexing that term “Hate” to their campaign, it implied positions to the contrary weren't just bigotry but harmful. The problem here is that journalists ought to be entitled to debate and discuss the complex issues arising in the balancing of the rights of all involved (including the surrogate mother). However, the culture around debating these points means less discussion is possible nowadays.

Furthermore, it’s critical to any healthy debate that two contrasting sides clash freely. Defining the expression of an unwelcoming or irritating opinion as being the condemnation of people is the attempt to control what can be said in the public domain. Free speech becomes not a right, but a privilege; dependent on whether the subject under discussion can lay moral claim to ideas whose negation is purported to “hurt” them. Of course, it’s ridiculous to suggest that ideas “hurt” us. Ideas do not assault, bruise, or injure us. Ideas are either right or wrong, and they should be debated and discussed. Free speech becomes a battle of the regnant cultural cordon sanitaire of approved opinions. But, as Orwell taught us; “if liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.”

Returning to Voices of the Silenced, Murray’s other point relates to a more subtle and broader feeling in society in recent years. This relates to a creeping consensus on LGBTQI+ rights which have ossified into being uncompromising and hard-line. It is also backed by heresy hunts. Namely, scorn and outrage is poured on those who trespass some orthodoxy. People aren’t merely wrong or mistaken; but instead they are evil and morally bankrupt. A culture of fear (and self-censorship) is instilled by having figures in industry and media lose their careers over some peccadillo whose breach impugns one of our orthodoxies.

Another problem that Murray identifies is how being gay has become so politicised; that is has morphed into something different now: 

It suggests that you are only a member of a recognized minority group so long as you accept the specific grievances, political grievances and resulting electoral platforms that other people have worked out for you. Step outside of these lines and you are not a person with the same characteristics you had before but who happens to think differently from some prescribed norm. You have the characteristics taken away from you. So Thiel is no longer gay once he endorses Trump. And Kanye West is no longer black when he does the same thing. This suggests that ‘black’ isn’t a skin colour, or a race – or at least not those things alone. It suggests that ‘black’ – like gay – is in fact a political ideology.

✲✲✲

Women

There are various things that Murray discusses in this section. 

He discusses the rising language of “privilege” at the workplace, and the importance of intersectionality in the “hierarchy” in employment. Murray seems to regard the hopeless attempts at “unconscious bias training” as being based on the fundamental notion that people can be ‘corrected’. I disagree. These training packages are rolled out by big companies to counter the company’s liability should the employee do something discriminatory. At any rate, Murray remarks how such frameworks often conceal a deeper philosophy that people are oblivious to:

Discussion centred on the presumption that almost all relationships in the workplace and elsewhere are centred around the exercise of power. Knowingly or otherwise these women have all imbibed the Foucauldian world view in which power is the most significant prism for understanding human relationships.

There is a fascinating discussion about the ostensible awkwardness that the subject of motherhood has in feminism. If women are equal to men, then how does feminism confront the fact that women bear (and often raise) children? Children exhaust a huge amount of a mother’s energy, time, and emotion. Murray quotes CNBC and The Economist to the effect that having children is a penalty of sorts in our culture. Camille Paglia is quoted as saying the modern career woman involves a denigration of motherhood. I’m not sure I have an opinion, but I found this fascinating.

I would definitely recommend this book.

Monday, August 15, 2022

Review: The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood

For this review, and before plunging into various elements, I thought I’d begin with a brief precis; and then turn to three interesting issues. Firstly, I would like to discuss Margaret Atwood’s literary style. Then, I would like to critique two very interesting facets of the totalitarian in The Handmaid’s Tale; and then, lastly, weigh the novel’s standing as a dystopian fiction.

✲✲✲

Precis

This novel is set in the “near future”. Its protagonist, Offred, is a young “handmaid” who has been seized and corralled by the burgeoning theocratic regime. She is inculcated and reprogrammed with the regnant “ideology” of the androcratic theocracy. She is then designated the chattel of the “Commander” and his wife. 

In this dystopia, as a result of war and toxicity levels, birth rates have dived perilously low. Viable offspring is the preeminent concern. Offred is valued for her ovaries. Everything else is mere ephemera that distracts her from that overriding ‘duty’. She is not allowed to read, wear make-up, or adorn herself in anything beyond monastic nun-like vestments. She is permitted to go shopping once-a-day but, otherwise, must bear the Commander a healthy new-born.

However, Offred wasn’t born into this regime. She preceded it. She has memories of former times as an independent woman with a job, husband and daughter. No indoctrination can allay her mind; her ability to retrieve images of happier times. But, that’s mere memory. Her present existence in the Republic of Gilead is fragile and fugacious. That is the world she must navigate.

✲✲✲

Literary style

Generally speaking, I quite enjoyed Atwood’s prose. Although, throughout the novel, via the first person, we are made to think that Offred ‘speaks’ to us. In reality, that voice is both Offred and Atwood. Atwood’s ability as a wordsmith is quite evident. However, there are occasional moments in which, for me, Atwood may be trying too hard to strike a profound philosophical note; though, as I say, these are mere occasional. 

I do place a very high premium on a novelist’s aesthetic craft and decorative prose over-and-above traditional elements of the novel, such as the plot. So, I suspect ‘conventional’ readers may recoil at Atwood’s lack of ‘traditional’ punctuation conveying speech, or the occasional concatenation of short sentences in her descriptive prose, etc. A further criticism may be its bathos and its seemingly flimsy conventional beginning, middle and end.

These criticisms, though, must be weighed against the structure of the novel which is essentially a transcript of audio recordings. Since the oral recordings were essentially Offred’s nuncupative testament, it goes without saying that the vocal inflections and modulations of the human voice were not suited to being codified into traditional prose by Professor Pieixoto. The discursive manner of human discourse can’t be fully systematised into formal prose. Indeed, it is probably Atwood’s intention – through her words on the page – to share an insight into such a dystopian experience; as opposed to a conventional story.

As I mentioned, Atwood is a witty wordsmith. The following lines were interesting:

We are being looked at, assessed, whispered about; we can feel it, like tiny ants running on our bare skins.

Now there’s a space to be filled, in the too-warm air of my room, and a time also; a space-time, between here and now and there and then, punctuated by dinner. The arrival of the tray, carried up the stairs as if for an invalid. An invalid, one who has been invalidated. No valid passport. No exit.

Late afternoon, the sky hazy, the sunlight diffuse but heavy and everywhere, like bronze dust. I glide with Ofglen along the sidewalk; the pair of us, and in front of us another pair, and across the street another. We must look good from a distance: picturesque, like Dutch milkmaids on a wallpaper frieze, like a shelf full of period-costume ceramic salt and pepper shakers, like a flotilla of swans or anything that repeats itself with at least minimum grace and without variation. Soothing to the eye, the eyes, the Eyes, for that’s who this show is for. We’re off to the Prayvaganza, to demonstrate how obedient and pious we are.

The “ants running on our bare skin” is evocative. The shades of meaning in the term “invalid” attests to Atwood’s wit, and her similes are quite forceful. I think the “flotilla of swans” is a stirring suggestive contrast. 

However, there are certain discordant lines in the novel that don’t quite mesh for me. The attempt is made to strike a profound philosophical note but which, for one reason or another, seem flat. I cite two examples:

The minimalist life. Pleasure is an egg. Blessings that can be counted, on the fingers of one hand. But possibly this is how I am expected to react. If I have an egg, what more can I want?

I appreciate that the veiled metaphor of an egg, which in the world of Gilead, relates to the singular primacy of philoprogeniture. But, this childbearing analogy – in the context of a breakfast at a table – is rendered otiose by the fact that Offred doesn’t really believe her Handmaid ‘purpose’ is her only source of pleasure. Offred strives to give birth as a matter of prudence and practicality as opposed to a sincere ideological commitment. The rhetorical question “what more can I want” can only resonate within the mind of a completely brainwashed Handmaid. But that is not Offred. She sees through the patriarchal fascist system and hasn’t fully imbibed its chilling precepts. She has her own mind. So, the above passage doesn’t quite seem to work with Offred and feels rather strained.

Additionally, later on, Offred says:

I keep on going with this sad and hungry and sordid, this limping and mutilated story, because after all I want you to hear it, as I will hear yours too if I ever get the chance, if I meet you or if you escape, in the future or in Heaven or in prison or underground, some other place. What they have in common is that they’re not here. By telling you anything at all I’m at least believing in you, I believe you’re there, I believe you into being. Because I’m telling you this story I will your existence. I tell, therefore you are.

This allusion to Descartes doesn’t seem to make any sense. In the novel, Offred has never evinced any consideration to philosophical debates. It doesn’t seem at all relevant. Indeed, the mere act of reading a novel wouldn’t necessarily imply anything.

✲✲✲

The totalitarian

There are many aspects of the novel which throb to the totalitarian rhythm. It’s replete with the usual signatures of fascism; the book burnings, control via a cashless society, mob panic and crowd psychology, hangings, schizoid personality, paranoia, and so on. However, in this review, I shall focus on two interesting elements.

In The Handmaid’s Tale, Aunt Lydia, in particular, repeatedly invokes an inspiring and utopian-esque vision of the future for women. For example, she says:

The women will live in harmony together, all in one family; you will be like daughters to them, and when the population level is up to scratch again we’ll no longer have to transfer you from one house to another because there will be enough to go round.

This rehearsal of the glorious sunlight future is an enduring aspect of such brutal regimes. It’s also prevalent in Orwell’s dystopian novels (which I plan to review in due course). 

For me, the above quote underlies a sense of pathos. In the French Revolution, the most poignant observation by Robespierre related to the question of what it would take to accomplish the Revolution’s utmost aim of a virtuous society. In his private notations in his “Catechism”, he realised that the revolution was never going to succeed. Even at the outset of his leadership of the Committee of Public Safety, his realisation was that the struggle itself was never going to burgeon the Jacobin promised land. In other words, the struggle itself was perpetual. It was interminable. The struggle was its own end. The excerpted passage below contains the essential aspects of Robespierre’s catechism to that effect;

What is our aim?
It is the use of the Constitution for the benefit of the people.
[...]
The people – what other obstacle is there to their instruction?
Their destitution.
When then will the people be educated?
When they have enough bread to eat, when the rich and the government stop bribing treacherous pens and tongues to deceive them, and instead identify their own interests with those of the people.
When will this be?
Never.

In The Handmaid’s Tale, Aunt Lydia’s invocation of the revolution’s ‘noble’ ends is merely the insecurity of the revolution. It’s her attempt to wrestle with the horrifying knowledge that it’s all for absolutely nothing.

✲✲✲

Another interesting aspect of totalitarianism is the role of history and memory.

In George Orwell’s 1984, there is a long wistful discussion between Winston Smith and a ‘prole’ at a pub. In the passage excerpted below, Winston Smith is agonising over acquiring some handle over history, a grip over the truth;

‘You are very much older than I am,’ said Winston. ‘You must have been a grown man before I was born. You can remember what it was like in the old days, before the Revolution. People of my age don’t really know anything about those times. We can only read about them in books, and what it says in the books may not be true. I should like your opinion on that. The history books say that life before the Revolution was completely different from what it is now. There was the most terrible oppression, injustice, poverty worse than anything we can imagine. Here in London, the great mass of the people never had enough to eat from birth to death. Half of them hadn’t even boots on their feet. They worked twelve hours a day, they left school at nine, they slept ten in a room. And at the same time there were a very few people, only a few thousands -- the capitalists, they were called -- who were rich and powerful. They owned everything that there was to own. They lived in great gorgeous houses with thirty servants, they rode about in motor-cars and four-horse carriages, they drank champagne, they wore top hats’

In The Handmaid’s Tale, as Offred watches a marriage ceremony, she laments the approaching eclipse of tangible memories and perspective. She says:

The marriages are of course arranged. These girls haven’t been allowed to be alone with a man for years; for however many years we’ve all been doing this. Are they old enough to remember anything of the time before, playing baseball, in jeans and sneakers, riding their bicycles? Reading books, all by themselves? Even though some of them are no more than fourteen – start them soon is the policy, there’s not a moment to be lost – still they’ll remember. And the ones after them will, for three or four or five years; but after that they won’t

In a nutshell, having a sense of history and a cultural repository of memory empowers people. It endows society with a sense of perspective. It gives a frame of reference to compare and contrast. It accords a kind of intuition – an Aanschauung, as Germans would say – about the world and the regime.

I intend to exhaust this subject in a forthcoming post on 1984; but, presently, and briefly, I think my generation has suffered a significant deterioration in general historical awareness and understanding. Speaking from personal observation, I have noticed an almost generational decline in the awareness of Britain’s broader historical context and tradition. As an example, the kind of rich cultural and historical knowledge that my own grandparents had was deep and striking. They knew a lot more about a plethora of cities, dates, peoples, countries, battles; and all without wikipedia. It really puts my generation to shame.

According to Niall Ferguson, in surveys among university history students, they couldn’t name a single 19th century British Prime Minister; or that school leavers were unable to name the British Monarch during the Spanish Armada. Recently, I read that two-thirds of millennials were unaware of what Auschwitz was! (Washington Post)

This historical ignorance must be linked to a sense of cultural and political disintegration. Such societies must be ripe for totalitarianism because they have no sense of historical direction or perspective. Of course, we are not that bad; but it is worth noting that Orwell was inspired by his experiences in the Spanish Civil War. Stalinist communists would be re-writing historical events for their propaganda and planting untrue accounts claiming credit for other loyalist forces. Indeed, Stalin was quite famous for having ‘eliminated’ various figures from historical narratives.

As illustrated in The Handmaid’s Tale, without a resilient understanding of our traditional liberties and heritage, tyrants would be able to rewrite the past to shape the future.

✲✲✲

Dystopia or science fiction

When people wade through a dystopian novel, I think they read with a view of comparing the dejected cheerless two-dimensional environs of the literary landscape against the tangible and palpable real-world around us. 

To my mind, Atwood’s novel unfurls a critical problem inherent in dystopian fiction. The problem is not the sheer extremity or the total barking madness of the totalitarian. It is that we never grasp how we have come to be nested in such a howling barren wilderness. 

In The Handmaid’s Tale, the broader social commentary pivots on the intimate and personal account of Offred. The horrors of her world is her proximate reality, and, to that extent, we are deprived of much deeper and more multifarious layers of perception and understanding. For example, all the broader dimensions of The Republic of Gilead emerge from Offred’s discussions with the Commander; and these are sparse and terse. We are apprised of a military coup d’état, the execution of the President of the United States and most of the US Congress. Then, the Constitution was suspended. And that is more-or-less it, as regards the government.

The problem is that the attendant barbarism and inhumanity of totalitarian regimes do not emerge at once, or spontaneously, like a thunderbolt. They are marked by a series of gradual changes in society, bit-by-bit. This is illustrated in the ubiquitous, and thankfully apocryphal, metaphor of the boiling frog. It is said that if you lower a frog into a pot of boiling water, it will jump out immediately to escape. However, if placed in a pot of lukewarm or cool water but in which the temperature is slowly raised; it will boil to death.

Thus, if a dystopia is to serve a practical meaningful purpose, it must surely pose a reflective cultural mirror cautioning us: ‘this is a possible alternative reality’. As forceful and as didactic as Atwood’s reality is in illuminating the heart-sickening depravity and horror of evil governments and societies; we must have some idea as to how such waywardness came about. A dystopia is not merely an admonition; it’s a call to action.

Consider Adolf Hitler. He became leader of the Nazi Party which, at the outset, was just one of many radical German groupuscules that were ultra-nationalistic, anti-democratic with latent residual resentments and anger as regards Germany’s malaise and, especially, against Jews. Discounting pro tem Hitler’s Munich putsch, what is interesting is how gradually Hitler consolidated power within the Weimar government. He was never popular with the masses and lost the 1932 Reich Presidency vote to Paul von Hindenburg (Hitler’s much smaller tally of 36% against Hindenburg’s 53%). Hindenburg, for a multitude of misguided reasons, offered Hitler a Cabinet seat (reflecting the Reichstag’s Parliamentary system). Hitler refused cooperation and demanded nothing short of the Chancellorship. This risky strategy worked and Hitler was then appointed Chancellor in 1933. The following year, Hindenburg died, aged eighty-six; and, on that very day, Hitler fused the Chancellorship and the Presidency into a single authority: the Führer, within the machinery of government.

The above discussion doesn’t even broach the cultural antisemitism of the 19th century (coterminous with the Dreyfus affair in France, for example) and the Nazi party’s flammable antisemitism. So, as an illustration, there were ubiquitous rumours during WWI that German Jews within the military had eschewed battle and were even profiteering from it. So much so, the Prussian government carried out “Judenzählung” (“Jew count”) to establish the proportion of Jews to non-Jews on the frontlines. Afterwards, similarly, the “Dolchstosslegende” assigned moral blame for Germany’s defeat and subsequent humiliation on the ostensible disloyalty of Jewish Bolsheviks within German society.

In contrast, apropos The Handmaid’s Tale, we are never really told why, or how, this sulphuric level of cruelty and debasing inhumanity towards women ever emerged. It is simply taken for granted.

For example, what is the balanced reader supposed to think of the pathetic character of Luke, Offred’s erstwhile husband? He seems, at best, oblivious; and, at worst, tacitly acquiescent of the regime. When Offred’s mother seems to have disappeared and her home was burgled, he appears to coldly counter her impulse to call the police. Similarly, when Offred fumes over women’s loss of property rights and their inability to work, Luke placidly reassures her that he’ll “always take care of” her. Or the fact that he wishes to make love on the very day she lost her job. This, we are made to think, in the absence of any other context or explanation, is what Atwood intends to represent the average “well-intentioned” male. This is either comically ridiculous or utterly insulting to men who have both the faculty of empathy as well as mothers, aunts, girlfriends, wives and daughters on whom to empathise. 

As I say, the broader problem in the dystopia – and to which I have alluded – is that one is expected to entertain the premise that our contemporary society actually view women as mere objects whose sole purpose is procreation and to which they may be regularly and ceremoniously raped. With pre-WWII Germany, there were pre-existing convulsions prior to the bitter recrudescence of antisemitism which accompanied the crash of 1929 and the reparations of Versailles. Not helped by the fact that, harking back to Renaissance Florence, Jewry had been associated with banking and money-lending (arising from prohibitions in the Old Testament against Christians charging usury on loans to other Christians). 

In our world, in contrast, as Steven Pinker explained in The Better Angels of Our Nature, our postmodern society has been getting much better, with greater secularism, more humanism, greater emphasis on rights of minorities to which feminism has undergone several “waves”. Indeed, according to the Russel Sage, women have been outpacing men in education standards (Russel Sage Foundation). This is important because the education of women is inversely proportional to the childbearing fertility rates across the world. Thus, there is really no comparison with fascism and totalitarianism. Whereas, Jews had propaganda campaigns against them, curfews and travel restrictions imposed, required wearing of insignia of abasement, the boycott of Jewish-owned businesses etc… and that’s well before any Jews were sent to the camps.

Nevertheless, there is a presumed undertone that there are sufficient tracts of modern society where either ‘conservative’ or sufficiently religious (or some other presumably anti-abortion specimens) are endemically or inherently misogynistic. Furthermore, it is also presumed that these misogynists aren’t merely the grumbling lonely types: but are either actively or contentedly acquiescent in the imposition of barbaric slavery on womenfolk. 

This may sound risible but that is more-or-less the contrived background which Atwood sets in her novel to make the plot and characters come alive. Since this novel is set, not in hundreds-of-years in the future, but within our own lifetime, I find it almost impossible to accept it as any dystopia.

✲✲✲

On a different note, the Commander’s rationalisation of the inhumanity and slavery of women – which is presumably reflective of the ideology of Gilead – is like listening to a mentally-deficient child complaining. It is completely devoid of any reason or perspective. I genuinely don’t quite understand what Atwood’s Commander’s grumble on womanhood is meant to convey. For example, at one point, he says:

The main problem was with the men. There was nothing for them anymore … There was nothing for them to do with women … I’m not talking about sex, he says. That was part of it, the sex was too easy. Anyone could just buy it. There was nothing to work for. We have the stats from that time. You know what they were complaining about the most? Inability to feel. Men were turning off on sex, even. They were turning off on marriage.

In the above passage, which is reflective of his general tone, the Commander contends that “there was nothing for them to do with women”. What on Earth is this supposed to mean? It’s like an eight-year-old child, arms crossed, grumpily declaring “I don’t like girls because they don’t want to play with me”. 

We are not informed what he means when remarking that they had “nothing to do with women”? What about shopping? Going to the theatre? Playing games, like chess? Watching cinema films? Smiling and laughing together? Companionship? Friendship? Raising a family? Going to church? None of this is accounted for and this is problematic because the Commander does likes to chat, laugh and play games with Offred. So, clearly, he cannot genuinely endorse such a crude, reductionistic, and monochromatic view of women. Moreover, to the extent that the Commander may be justified; how does that even address or vindicate the tyranny? How does it account for the denial of human dignity, human liberty, freedom of conscience, the propagation of slavery, the death penalty, the ritualised ceremonial predation of rape, the gruesome “particicutions”, the banishing of “unwomen” to “colonies”, and all the various horrors of Gilead! It really doesn’t make any sense. 

I think this detachment impedes the object of a dystopian novel which, as I mentioned earlier, is a call to action. It should rouse our sense of complacency. However, The Handmaid’s Tale feels remote from our contemporary reality. Thus, in spite of observed phenomena of group psychology and conformity, the idea that totalitarian slavery, abject misogyny and systematic rape would be visited on an entire continent out-of-thin-air leaves a hollowness at the heart of the dystopian novel.

Thursday, June 2, 2022

Test

This novel is a creature of its time. It does not translate so effortlessly to a twenty-first century audience. But, it's certainly fun and witty; and it goes some way to rehabilitating Waugh. Given this is his first novel, I am intrigued to review his later works. 

There are no heros in this novel. Pennyfeather is the canvas of novel's characters' villainy, pretensions, and deficiencies. He is ridiculously naive and credulous; and projects Waugh’s satire and caricature. Pennyfeather fills the novel with his wit and chuckles. That wit is sometimes undercut by an enduring sense of tragedy (Lord Tangent’s death, as an example). 

Waugh's BBC interview depicts a somewhat stout if not cantankerous old bean; but I think he's most famously known as a very religious Catholic. Thus, the novel is quite surprising. Waugh is full of the joie de vivre and lampoons 1920s British society for its hypocrisy and hollowness of ideals and values.

It is interesting that his novel was dedicated to his contemporary Sir Harold Acton. Researching this chap a bit, it seems that he was a famous gay member of the Hypocrites Club; and that he may have had an affair with Evelyn Waugh. If so, it makes the book dedication very sweet. Its a fascinating aspect of Waugh before his later religiosity. (On the subject of religion, in Decline and Fall, Grimes hints at the interface of the religious instinct and sexual repression — a very interesting observation.)

At the end of the novel, there is an enigmatic allegory between life and riding a great wheel at a park. I have not been quite sure what Waugh was hoping to convey. Pennyfeather ends up where he started. Captain Grimes appears to have two resurrections. Is Waugh arguing that life is roundabout and circular?


-----

Decline and Fall by Evelyn Waugh

(Penguin Books 2012)

Please find below the updated HTML content with the requested `id` attributes added to the `

` tags: ``` html

Earlier this year, I went to the Courtauld Gallery to see a special exhibition of the masterpieces from the Oskar Reinhart Collection (of Winterthur, near Zurich). 

It was a wonderful show - full of exciting paintings which had never been seen in England before.

Oskar Reinhart was born from a wealthy Winterthur family who ran a leading international trading company. More interested in art than business, he began collecting seriously in 1919. He eventually had to step back from the firm to devote himself fully to building his collection. This included impressionists and Renaissance works. He built a gallery which he then bequeathed to the Swiss Confederation, which opened to the public in 1970.

Rating: 4/5 ★★★★☆

✲✲✲

Still Life with Three Salmon Steaks by Francisco de Goya

Wow. Breathtaking. 

This painting was part of a group of twelve still lifes painted by Francisco de Goya.

Painted during the Peninsular War - within the Napoleonic Wars - against Napoleon’s France.  According to the gallery:

Still life must have seemed a neutral subject matter at a time of censorship and political upheaval. However, the raw realism of these salmon steaks, isolated from any context, their flesh rendered in blood red, suggests the brutality of war. 

✲✲✲

Man with Delusions of Military Rank by Théodore Géricault

A powerful and rueful painting.

This man is suffering from a mental illness.

Théodore Géricault was a painter of French Romanticism. This painting was created as part of a series of portraits (which were never exhibited during his lifetime) of patients in an asylum, around 1822.

It’s a touching and empathetic painting - his small cap, hospital tag, v. gaunt cheeks, and an anxious & distressed look.

Laura Cumming, in her review “The week in art: Goya to Impressionism; Linder: Danger Came Smiling – review” (Guardian, Feb 2025), wrote an eloquent encomium about this painting which I enjoyed reading:

There are not many portraits you wait all your adult life to see, but so it is with A Man Suffering from Delusions of Military Rank, painted by Théodore Géricault some time after The Raft of the Medusa in 1819. This shattering image of a man with no name is in Britain for the first time, loaned by a small Swiss museum a dozen miles outside Zurich.

To see it with your own eyes is to have a sense of who this man might really be, whether the title seems right, and why Géricault painted him in the first place: all of them unresolved mysteries.

The man is gaunt and elderly and sunk in anxiety, or suspicion. He looks away from us towards some other world. He is dressed – or dressed up, perhaps by somebody else? – in white shirt, black gilet and cloth sash over one shoulder. Around his neck hangs what looks to modern eyes like a dog tag, numbered 121, and on his head is a tattered hat with red piping and ```