Tuesday, February 19, 2013

One Does Not Simply Walk Into Pagford

Well, that title may be a little too light-hearted for what I have in mind. Let’s forget about hilarious little jpgs of Boromir. Let’s instead think about Mordor--really think about what Mordor is like and what it would have meant for the Shire, Gondor, and everyone else if Sauron had triumphed. Got that picture in your head now?

Tolkien was playing a lot of games simultaneously, not least of which was inventing a world in which to use the languages he had created--but one of his more unsubtle purposes was to wage an epic war between wood and metal, between agriculture and industry. Gandalf’s wooden staff defends a pastoral land of wholesomeness and harmony against a misbegotten, misshapen factory of death that mindlessly consumes trees and creatures in the manufacture of destruction and for the good of no one but the sole proprietor at the top. Tolkien's veneer of Norse saga of Good versus Evil barely disguises his vision of an idyllic, agrarian Britain crushed and crunched and utterly consumed by the mechanized monster of industrialization (and he definitely didn’t want to disguise it--the Scouring of the Shire coda amplifies it for anyone who had been distracted by all the shiny things). His horror is the same as that of William Blake’s at the dark, Satanic mills that so befoul and profane England’s green and pleasant land, as that of George Orwell’s at the colorless ashes of daily life in Airstrip One (or in Wigan).

That dark devastation was spreading over the land in the lifetimes of those three writers who cried out at its successive victories in the Industrial Revolution, the Enclosures, the Highland Clearances, the World Wars, and each new method of industrializing aspects of life previously unimaginable as being mechanized or standardized. Now, here at the dawn of the 21st century, we indubitably live in the world that Blake, Tolkien, Orwell, and many others saw as essentially the end of humanity. A new kind of creature, some sort of Uruk-hai, must evolve to live in this Factory, this land of interchangeable parts, of the uselessness of the individual, of electricity and petrol, of consumption and destruction.

Someone has written a novel depicting this new world--not a warning of its coming, but a portrait of life in Mordor. That person would be J. K. Rowling.

Her first adult novel, The Casual Vacancy, was reviewed and discussed by people who wanted her to succeed and people who wanted her to stumble, but apparently not by anyone who could see and hear what was right in front of them. Whether the novel is “good” or not, I cannot say--it was certainly difficult to read because it is so grim--but I closed it with no doubt about what Rowling was saying. She could not have spoken more clearly:

Pagford and the Fields are Mordor Triumphant. The industrial era has rendered--and I do mean rendered--everyone’s lives meaningless. People whose grandparents were agricultural laborers now live on public assistance in the Fields, a community of junkies and thieves, and Rowling deftly makes clear the complicated thoroughness of the severing of human life from meaningful activity that has turned these people into society’s garbage. The good burghers of Pagford, though, the people whose ancestors were shopkeepers and teachers, are also brutalized by modernity. (We cannot infer whether Rowling herself romanticizes an arcadian British past of honest yeoman farmers and jolly merchants and publicans, though if she does, it is a small sin compared with wilful blindness to the ghastly cost of rendering those people redundant.) The monstrous pettiness of the villagers is almost as horrifying as the savagery of the Fields, perhaps more so. The small scope that the modern world of consumer capitalism, the Siamese twin of industrialization, offers for personal agency creates a village of grasping, desperate, snarling meanness--meanness in both senses. Pagford is a town of Dursleys and Pettigrews come alive in our own world, and without the distance and the conventions of a world of magic and epic events, it is an ugly sight.

J. R. R. Tolkien created a beautiful allegory of the human spirit wresting, with great courage and at great cost, a world of integrity and connectedness from the talons of mechanized destruction; J. K. Rowling has shown us, without the veil of metaphor, a Britain that lies, bleak and soulless, at the dark base of Barad-dur. The Casual Vacancy is a horror novel.



 
 

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Saving the Universe

If I could only live at the pitch that is near madness
When everything is as it was in my childhood
Violent, vivid, and of infinite possibility:
That the sun and the moon broke over my head.
--Richard Eberhart, 20th century American Poet

If Frodo doesn’t get that ring to Mount Doom, it will be the end of Middle-Earth!! If the X-Men don’t defeat Magneto, all Earth will be enslaved to his will!! If Picard doesn’t convince Q that mankind has value, he’ll destroy all humanity!! If the Doctor doesn’t stop Davros, all of space and time will cease to exist!!

The highest of high stakes usually drive the tales we love. Epic, heart-lifting stories demand epic settings--we don’t long for the telling of the stirring saga of the struggle of Nicholas, Son of David, to get his homework done on Tuesday night. You’d think the High-Stakes Story would become a dull cliche (And we can all think of the times we’ve groaned at things like Armageddon or risible Bond villain Max Zorin. What are we going to do tonight, Brain? The same thing we do every night, Pinky--try to take over the WORLD! Mine is an evil laugh!!), but apparently we have a boundless not only tolerance but appetite for life-or-death challenges.

Some of that appetite is physiological. Military personnel and journalists can come back from war zones turned into adrenaline/dopamine junkies. Our bodies put the high in “high stakes.” Physically, mentally, and emotionally, we feel good when we are pressured to respond to extremely demanding stimuli. And when those stimuli are fictional, we don’t even have the negative aspects of stress and anxiety to take the edge off--just the thrill of having saved the world! Call of Duty? Nazi Zombies? Oh, yeah!!

The real problem, though, is the problem of civilization. For many people, life is made up of two intractable situations: everyday life can be mastered, but the stakes are low (Nicholas is in fact going to get that homework done on Tuesday night. And Wednesday night. And Thursday night. And next week. And next year.) and humanity’s larger problems carry very high stakes, but they cannot be mastered (I personally can’t stop global warming. Or save the whales. Or end economic injustice. Or reform factory farming. Or stop human trafficking.). Both of these situations are depressing--the scope of our personal lives can seem small and tedious, and the gap between our understanding of vitally important crises and our ability to address them is anguishing. All of a sudden, hopping on a rocket and trying to deflect an asteroid before it hits the Earth looks like a relief--at last a problem I can solve! Yippee-kai-yay!

That said, I am not trying to dismiss the romance of Saving the Universe as escapism for people who are discouraged by reality. On the contrary, I think many of us would in fact be willing to walk into Mordor, and long for the chance to be that heroic, to show our quality. And, in our adult lives where heroism is so abstract and the colors are muted and the unicorns and glitter can be hard to find, tales where the stakes are no less than all of space and time let us become again our mad, mad child selves, burning in the fire of infinite possibility, with the sun and moon breaking over our heads.