It’s an
understatement to say that the past decades of liberalization and
globalization are receiving today strong push back from major
conservative fronts in the Western World. A large portion of
Americans would like to build a wall separating them from Mexico.
Animosity against Otherness is open and aggressive, and in some
cases, even supported by large organizations. Strong nationalist
movements are springing up (and re-springing up) in many European and
American countries. And the world’s greatest social and political
experiment (aka the European Union) has taken its biggest blow: the
UK voting to exit. Extrapolating upon these ideas in often
successful and occasionally pretentious fashion is John Lanchester’s
The Wall
(2019).
A British
novel that feels very British, The
Wall tells of a young man
conscripted to join the ranks of thousands of people who, for a
mandatory two year stint, man the Wall. A concrete structure
extending around the perimeter of the British Isles, Kavanagh stands
guard every day, watching for invaders, and safe guarding a
regimented regime. The story starting in classic, new-soldier
fashion (meet the fellow cadets, form relationships, deal with the
tough captain, get tested, etc.), Kavanaugh’s tale eventually takes
a hard left turn, one that sends everything into the wildly unknown,
and a turn on which Lanchester’s underlying political statement,
rests.
The pieces
distinct in their stance, The
Wall is clearly a political
novel commenting on the state of the world today. (Funny that
Lanchester had enough time after the Brexit vote to write a novel and
publish it, and still
Brexit hasn’t happened.) Lanchester wisely avoids playing the pity
card, i.e. characterizing the invaders as poor immigrants just
looking for a bite to eat, and the native Brits as blood thirsty,
(unintending) totalitarians. Instead, the whole world is portrayed
as broken down and in disarray, the Wall just one component. Dog eat
dog, Britons’ choice to build a wall is one of the contributing
factors to the wider breakdown of society.
Where real
world data points to the fact that the majority of the
socio-political drama in the world today is the result of Westerners
with limited education and little contact with people foreign to
their local culture are the root cause of the fear, Lanchester sticks
problems , something which Lanchester, rather unconvincingly portrays
as rabid guilt among the older generation of Brits. Kavanaugh’s
parents, for example, are portrayed as hollow and minimally
communicative as they try to work through the guilt of having voted
away their connection to the greater world.
In the
end, The Wall
is a novel angry about Brexit, as well as the real and proverbial
walls that separate people and cultures rather than give them a
chance to harmonize. Feeling like a Christopher Priest or Brian
Aldiss offering, it extrapolates well, has its metaphors in proper
place, but does make a bold assumption that the next generation would
regret the decisions leading to such extreme measures—clearly
pointing a figure at the British demographic who voted for Brexit. I
doubt the people would point the finger at themselves when such a
complex situation would have many other places to point fingers. For
me, the novel should have been more abstract—nameless country,
nameless character, nameless, etc. This would have made the novel
more universal, not to mention left it less open to criticism about
the realities its tying to parallel.
No comments:
Post a Comment