I was going to consign my review of Ken Liu’s 2011 novella
“The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary” to a few concise sentences in my
review of the collection in which I first encountered it, The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories. The story (if it can be
called that), however, incited such a variety of reactions in me, positive and
negative, that I decided to try to work my thoughts out in a little longer
format. An attempt thereat, follows.
“The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary” is a story about
the atrocities Japan committed upon China in WWII. Human experimentation, vivisection, torture, slaughter
of civilians, unlawful imprisonment, rape—the whole eight yards (save genocide)
define the Japanese program in China in the 1930s and 40s. Having lived in China for some time, I can
attest to the fact every year, when Japan holds its ceremony at the monument
honoring soldiers who died in WWII, China (or perhaps just the Chinese
government?), get indignant if not insulted when little to no acknowledgment of
the violence and cruelty leveled against China by those very soldiers are
mentioned. Liu of Chinese descent, the
novella likewise indicates his interest in finding some sense of justice over
the matter.
The main premise of the novella posits a breakthrough in
physics wherein humans from the present are able to go back in time and observe
actual history. A Chinese-American
subsequently proposes to use the technology to allow anyone the opportunity to enter
Chinese history circa 1930s to witness the Japanese atrocities in China, all
with the mind of informing the world of ‘the truth,’ and to some degree force
the Japanese to be more forthcoming regarding their role in events.
If there is anything “The Man Who Ended History” does well,
it is to give perspective into the multiple viewpoints of the situation. Liu having done his research, informing the storyline
are fictional characters whose views are based on actual commentary and
reminiscences from people who lived the events—Chinese, Japanese, and beyond (hence
the subtitle “A Documentary”).
Disbelievers to bystanders, jingoists to truth seekers, all have a place
in the story of the researcher’s quest to make historical reality more universally
known. Knowing how representative the
perspectives are of real-world opinion makes for interesting reading, as well
as a truly human overview to a historical instance.
The core of the novella thus is the desire to have history communicated
as it really happened, and not as convoluted memory, textbook elision, or
secondhand hearsay. And therein lies my issue
with “The Man Who Ended History.” To say
the novella is backwards-looking is accurate; the events are repeated and
replayed through different opinions and from various perspectives in hindsight. Little, if anything, is said of the future. This is key given that, in the words of
speculative fiction scholar Marek Oziewicz, "You
cannot erase the past. You have to deal with it in a constructive way, and that
always involves some form of forgiveness." In the novella, however, I do not believe ‘foregiveness’
is mentioned in any constructive, forward-thinking fashion. With the story so backward-looking, Liu’s
ability to come to some sense of resolution is stunted, and if his view is
representative, then likewise is China’s. Holding common truths is important for humanity’s
overall perspective on history, but at some point acceptance and effort are required
to forgive the unchangeable, regardless if the unchangeable is acknowledged or
not by the offending party. Bottom line,
long-term, perpetual victimhood is damaging on many fronts, and does not help a
society advance beyond the negative historical events it perceives as
unresolved. And yet this novella would
seem to sustain such victimhood.
From another Chinese perspective, Lin Yutang’s major novel Moment in Peking (1942) is a sweeping
epic that tells of the upheaval in China between the start of the 20 th century
and WWII. Japan vilified through a
climax which features the rape and murder of a married virgin, Lin’s sentiment
is understandable considering how fresh the events were at the time of the
novel’s publishing. But Liu, more than a
half-century later, pores over those events with the same perspective, which seems
unconstructive given the time that has passed, and almost certainly not a path
toward resolution.
My last point regarding “The Man Who Ended History” would be
something along the lines of let the person without sin be the first to cast a
stone. Or, significantly more people
died at the hands of Mao Zedong during his decades of rule after WWII than the Japanese’
in WWII. Granted, no human
experimentation or mass rape occurred, nevertheless millions suffered and died slow,
terrible deaths in famine due to Mao’s zealous decision making, not to mention
the unknown number of people killed, imprisoned, and tortured at the hands of
the Red Guard during Mao’s Cultural Revolution.
To my knowledge, the Chinese government has never publicly apologized/acknowledged
this to its population, and for as long as Mao’s portrait hangs on Tiananmen
Gate, I’m not sure it can be expected.
Liu briefly mentions Mao in the novella, but it would be nice to have
the Chinese government set the example with an apology/acknowledgment before
asking the Japanese for the same—even if fictionally. Saving face is a tricky
business, indeed.
I still don’t feel this “review” addresses all my thoughts
on “The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary”.
Seemingly every page sparked note taking, proof of how thought-provoking
the story is. Thus, read for yourself
and form your own opinion.
No comments:
Post a Comment