• Humanity’s most dangerous enemy

    John Pilger is at it again. Who would want to read it? But you can often learn something if you look carefully enough. What Pilger is burbling about for the thousandth time is the sins of America: ‘militarism camouflaged as democracy’, ‘the constitution… replaced by an emerging police state’, and so forth. You might wonder why, with anti-democratic regimes and movements abounding, Pilger is only ever interested in America, America, America (oh, with Israel maybe thrown in now and again). Or why the man avails himself of the democratic rights enjoyed in those parts of the world that tend, according to him, to do America’s bidding. He would say, doubtless, that it is more effective to be a critic of what is close to home. But that has never been a convincing argument. The international left opposed apartheid in South Africa; much of it opposes Israel to the point of obsession. It ain’t just about near and far. There’s something else at work in the sheer imbalance between the vituperation directed at America and its allies and the relative lack of it aimed at those regimes around the world denying rights and freedoms to those they govern.

    The something else at work in Pilger’s thinking – and representative of that part of the left to which he belongs – is revealed by him in a single sentence today:

    The great unmentionable is that humanity’s most dangerous enemy resides across the Atlantic.

    There you go. It’s a most useful criterion for mapping the contemporary left: there are the people like Pilger who think that America is the main enemy; and then there are others on the left who… don’t.

  • National university comparisons

    I don’t know how reliable these university rankings are, but assuming they bear some kind of roughly accurate relation to the real world, there’s a comparative dimension that is interesting in the light of recent observations on this country’s standing in the world. The first Russian university in the list is Lomonosov Moscow State University at 120. The UK has 19 universities ranked higher than this. The population of the UK is less than half that of Russia. Just to round out a certain picture here, the US has 36 universities ranked higher than Lomonosov Moscow State University.

    The point of these comparisons? Let’s just say that the quality of a country’s education and research is something it can reasonably be proud of. (Thanks: RB.)

  • Disliked books, honestly

    On the Guardian books blog there’s a list of the top 10 books people claim to have read but haven’t. Apparently, readers sometimes pretend to have read books so as to appear more intelligent. Can’t understand that. Anyway, I’ve read seven of the 10 books on the list (and I’m telling the truth), but I haven’t read A Passage to India by E.M. Forster, Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien and To Kill A Mocking Bird by Harper Lee. I’ll never read Lord of the Rings. I’m unembarrassed.

    A more interesting list would be of books you have read but didn’t like and are happy to be honest about not having liked, even though a lot of other people like them and indeed praise them to the skies. Here are a dozen books I’ve read and am comfortable in admitting to not having liked.

    John Banville, The Sea
    Charles Baxter, The Feast of Love
    Anita Brookner, A Friend from England (and nearly everything else)
    Jonathan Coe, The House of Sleep
    Ford Madox Ford, The Good Soldier
    Shirley Hazzard, The Great Fire
    Barbara Kingsolver, The Poisonwood Bible
    Michael Ondaatje, Anil’s Ghost
    Joseph O’Neill, Netherland
    Philip Roth, Operation Shylock
    Philip Roth, Sabbath’s Theater
    Carol Shields, Unless

    You got an honest list like that? (Thanks: @bombaylychee)

  • Costs now, costs later, law who knows when?

    In yesterday’s Sunday Times Andrew Sullivan expressed the wish he shares with plenty of other people that Congress should go against the President on the question of a military strike in Syria. He (Andrew) devoutly hopes (£) that Obama loses the vote in Congress. His reasons are at once familiar by now and compelling. As he writes with reference to the so-called ‘Iraq syndrome’:

    It is not a “syndrome” to look both ways before you cross the street when you’ve already been run over by a truck twice in the past 10 years.

    Over and above that, there are other important matters on Obama’s domestic agenda – Obamacare, immigration reform – so why ‘on earth’ is he contemplating military action at all? Andrew’s answer:

    Obama feels strongly – and always has – about the unpunished mass murder of innocents. He read Samantha Power, the new US ambassador to the United Nations, on genocide a long time ago and is pulled in her direction… And the logic of enforcing an international red line against the poison-gassing of scores of children is obviously a powerful one.

    But when all is said and done, apart from the many reasons advising caution, the consideration of democracy clinches it for him: ‘If we are truly committed to democracy, the people should count. It is something of a democratic revolution in Britain and America that this time they will.’

    I can’t quarrel with Andrew’s reasons against. In a series of posts during the last fortnight, as well as in some before that (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7), I have tried to give weight to both sides of the present dilemma: the dangers and potential costs of Western intervention in an already volatile situation; and the concern about the humanitarian norms of international law being set at naught.

    My reservation about Andrew’s conclusion is that, having mentioned this last consideration as being a powerful one, he finishes by ignoring the way in which the people’s democratic will in America and Britain could now lead to precisely that result – setting these humanitarian norms at naught. Present and proximate costs might tell more heavily in the democratic vote than the costs that could be incurred later if Assad’s regime is allowed to get away with murder. Who is to be the guarantor of international humanitarian law? The UN is supposed to play this role but often fails in it. If a concert of democratic nations does not step forward, if the electorates of these countries come to believe that turning their backs on others under tyranny and lethal assault is the prudent course, this could generate serious further costs down the line, constituting a huge setback to the development of international law.

    I cannot resolve the dilemma, but we should be fully aware of what is at stake on both sides of it.

  • Might you and I be the same person?

    It could be you will find this question distressing, but please bear with me. I got it from a list of ‘Dissertations with Titles That Warrant a Double-Take‘. The one that intrigued me most was this:

    I Am You, You Are Me: A Philosophical Explanation of the Possibility That We Are All the Same Person

    Once you start to think about it, you quickly see that you cannot but take it seriously.

    I put it to you first that in a world in which there is a plurality of persons it must be possible that some of these persons are the same as others of them. Why so? Well, because for any putative pair of persons they will turn out to be the same person if there is no significant difference between them. But, you might ask, if there’s no significant difference between them how do they appear to be two persons in the first place so that they can then turn out not to be two persons but the same person? How that happens is that the difference between them is revealed to be an insignificant one. Thus, suppose that someone suggests you are the same person as Simon Jenkins or, more alarming still, Mary Chapin Carpenter. Protest as you might, you won’t have a leg to stand on if both your legs are shown to be the very same legs, and your writing mind or singing voice is shown to be the same mind or voice as that of, respectively, Simon Jenkins or Mary Chapin Carpenter, and if no meaningful difference between you and him or her can be detected. But, but, but, you will reply: the different names are the give-away; if yours is, say, Marmaduke MacDonald or Trudy Nixon, you cannot then be Simon Jenkins or Mary Chapin Carpenter. You will quickly have to concede here, however, that a single individual can take on two names without thereby becoming two different persons.

    The above suffices to establish that in a world with multiple persons, it is possible that some of them are the same persons as other apparent persons, and that there are therefore fewer persons than you would think.

    Could this, though, go to the limit? Could all of us – us persons – be the very same person? That is the most worrying aspect of this issue. Imagine the persons you would least like to be. Now how to live with the conclusion that you are in fact them – and I mean not just one of them but all of them? What a grim world we’d be living in. But I’m happy to be able to reassure you on this score. Assuming there are persons at all, we could not all be the same one. We could not all be the same person, because if we were all the same person none of us could recognize him or herself, or indeed anyone else, as being a person. The very notion of personhood would make no sense. We might be (if ‘we’ is even appropriate in this context) a giant slab of butter, or a land mass, or an ocean, but we could not be individuated as even notionally separate persons who could then turn out to be the same person. To be a person requires the existence of other persons. I require a you and you likewise require a me, or at any rate a someone.

    I conclude that though you and I might be the same person for some values of ‘you’ and ‘I’, we can’t all be the same person, and that is some relief.

  • The UN Security Council as barrier – and the advice of Slavoj Žižek

    It’s not a difficult point to grasp, but opponents of action outside the UN framework not only fail to grasp it; they can barely bring themselves to address it: the point, that is, that if the body to which it falls to do something doesn’t do it, it won’t get done unless someone else takes it on. Speaking at a news conference in St. Petersburg today, Barack Obama laid out the argument:

    I respect those who are concerned about setting precedents of action outside of a U.N. Security Council resolution. I would greatly prefer working through multilateral channels and through the United Nations to get this done.

    But ultimately what I believe in even more deeply, because I think that the security of the world and my particular task looking out for the national security of the United States requires that when there’s a breach this brazen of a norm this important and the international community is paralyzed and frozen and doesn’t act, then that norm begins to unravel.
    …..
    You know, over 1,400 people were gassed. Over 400 of them were children. This is not something we’ve fabricated. This is not something that we are looking – are using as an excuse for military action.
    …..
    But what I also know is, is that there are times where we have to make hard choices if we’re gonna stand up for the things that we care about. And I believe that this is one of those times. And if we end up using the U.N. Security Council not as a means of enforcing international norms and international law but, rather, as a barrier to acting on behalf of international norms and international law, then I think people rightly are going to be pretty skeptical about the system and whether it can work to protect those children that we saw on those videos.

    Pretty sceptical is right. The rest is here.

    A different point of view is that of Slavoj Žižek. For him this is part of a false struggle, a pseudo-struggle, which awaits ‘the radicalisation of the struggle for freedom and democracy into a struggle for social and economic justice’ to ‘save us’ from its grim prospect. And until that day, children…

  • The shield of ‘anti-imperialism’

    Whether it’s worth engaging with the output of Robert Fisk is a question to which the answer is probably no. But this column of his is interesting for the way in which it embodies some standard moves in today’s ‘anti-imperialist’ game. The theme of it is that ‘no one in the Middle East takes America seriously anymore’. In pursuit of that, Fisk refers to ‘our leaders… thinking that they could yet again bamboozle their electorates with their lies and trumperies and tomfooleries’, and goes on: ‘This doesn’t mean that the Syrian regime did not use gas “on its own people” – a phrase we used to use about Saddam when we wanted a war in Iraq’. But then watch how, beyond the irony of those scare-quotes round ‘its own people’, he flattens out the seriousness of the crimes of the Assad regime:

    Obama, who is becoming more and more preacher-like, wants to be the Punisher-in-Chief of the Western World, the Avenger-in-Chief. There is something oddly Roman about him. And the Romans were good at two things. They believed in law and they believed in crucifixion. The US constitution – American “values” and the cruise missile have a faintly similar focus. The lesser races must be civilized and they must be punished…

    You see, it’s not about fundamental human values breached by the gassing of children, among others, and the need to do something about this. No, it’s (heavy with scorn) the lesser races needing to be civilized.

    And then, as a final note, Fisk gives us that… why, Assad may well now last longer than Obama. As if this fact might in some way tell against Obama, a democratically elected leader, or in favour of Assad. It’s contemptible stuff, but illustrative of how a sector of would-be progressive opinion has lost its head and lost its way. (Thanks: RB.)

  • Book fairs and unenvisaged consequences

    Big news or what? I mean the news that Hercule Poirot is due for a revival in a new novel to be written by Sophie Hannah. You can read about this in Italian and Spanish; in French and German and Polish. I even saw the item reported in a newspaper in New Zealand but for which I neglected to save the link and can no longer find it. Here, though, in today’s Times (£), is the report that I like best, because it includes the following historical detail:

    She [Sophie Hannah] became obsessed with Christie at 13, she said. “My dad bought me a copy of The Body in the Library from a second-hand book fair. I loved it, so I said, in that imperious way that only teenagers can: ‘Get me all the others.’ In the next year or year and a half I didn’t read anything else.”

    Not that I’m trying to take the credit. Who knows what the effects of one’s minor actions are going to be? – and the credit is all Soph’s own. It’s just an illustration of the very common phenomenon of unforeseen consequences.

    (Update: New Zealand. Thanks: PB.)

  • Writer’s choice 386: Lynn Shepherd

    Lynn Shepherd studied English at Oxford, and later went back to do a doctorate on the ‘father of the novel’, Samuel Richardson. She had a career in the City and then in PR, and now works as a copywriter for companies. She has published three ‘literary mystery’ novels, inspired respectively by Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, and the lives of the Shelleys. The critically-acclaimed A Treacherous Likeness is published by Corsair in the UK, and by Random House as A Fatal Likeness in the US. Lynn’s Twitter ID is @Lynn_Shepherd. Here she writes about Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.

    Lynn Shepherd on Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

    ‘When I placed my head upon the pillow, I did not sleep… My imagination, unbidden, possessed and guided me… I saw – with shut eyes but acute mental vision – I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together. I saw the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy, half vital motion. Frightful must it be; for supremely frightful would be the effect of any human endeavour to mock the stupendous mechanism of the Creator of the world… On the morrow I announced that I had thought of a story…’

    In her poem ‘The Choice’ Mary Shelley talks of the ‘strange Star’ that had been ‘ascendant at [her] birth’, in a reference to the comet that had then been seen in the skies. Whatever ‘influence on earth’ that particular celestial phenomenon might have exercised, I doubt any novel was ever conceived under a stranger star than her own ‘hideous progeny’, Frankenstein. And how familiar the tale of this tale now is. We are on the banks of Lake Geneva, in the summer of 1816. Wild storms have been raging about the Villa Diodati, and after a night telling ghost stories with Lord Byron, his doctor, and Percy Bysshe Shelley, the young poet who was soon to become her husband, the 18-year-old Mary Godwin has been disturbed by a chilling vision of a scientist destroyed by his own presumptuous ambition. It is a vision which will evolve eventually into Frankenstein, one of the most enduring novels of the 19th century, and the source of a terrifying modern myth. Mary’s account of its inception is so convincing that modern-day researchers have even attempted to date the precise hour of her vision by the appearance of the moon (between two and three in the morning of 16th June, according to one astronomer).

    But is this really how the book came into being? The key point to remember here is that this account comes from a preface to the novel which was not added until 1831, some 15 years after the events described, by which time three of the four witnesses to Mary’s announcement were already dead – Byron of a fever in Greece, Shelley by drowning, and the doctor John William Polidori by his own hand. Who could have come forward to contradict her? Certainly not the one other person present that night: Mary’s step-sister Claire Clairmont, whose affair with Byron was at its height that summer. But what Mary couldn’t possibly have known was that Polidori kept his own account of those weeks at the Diodati – an account not published until 1911 – in which he makes no mention at all of Mary declaring to the company that she had ‘thought of a story’.

    The ‘Frankenstein summer’ plays a central role in my own novel, and it is only one of many tantalizing questions that still persist about Shelley’s book. Indeed, I have just raised one of the most intriguing of them in the very grammar of that last sentence. I called Frankenstein ‘Shelley’s book’, but which Shelley was it? Could a teenage girl, however well-educated, really have produced so powerful a story, especially when nothing she wrote in later life comes anywhere near it? And given that Percy Bysshe Shelley allowed his publisher to believe the book his own, and wrote a preface for it in 1818 which can scarcely be read any other way, surely he is by far the more credible candidate? You can certainly make the case for his authorship – and many people have.

    Clearly we don’t know what early drafts of the book might have since been lost, but the manuscript that survives shows extensive changes and additions in Percy Bysshe Shelley’s hand; nor does the fact that the rest of it is in Mary’s writing prove anything in itself, since it could easily have been a fair copy of an earlier version, or one written to his dictation. The changes we see in the Bodleian Library manuscript show Percy making not just substantial but substantive amendments, sharpening the style and themes of the book in a way that tallies with what we know of his own preoccupations, and even his own history. For example, the horrifying vision of the monster at the window after Elizabeth’s death seems to be an uncanny echo of an episode in Shelley’s own life, long before he met Mary, when he was the victim of an apparent assassination attempt in Wales, and saw his assailant at the window. (Yet another incident in Shelley’s life which is fraught with unanswered questions, and another inspiration for my own novel).

    In her 1831 preface Mary insisted that ‘I certainly did not owe the suggestion of one incident, nor scarcely of one train of feeling, to my husband’, but one might well respond that surely she is protesting too much; in my own view the very least one can say is that Frankenstein was a creative collaboration. How far that extended – at what point ‘collaboration’ might have become ‘joint authorship’ – is a moot point, and one we are never likely to resolve barring the discovery of more documentary evidence. But what we do absolutely know, without question, is that Mary was not the sole and only author of this book.

    The philosophical preoccupations of Frankenstein are certainly Shelleyan (and by that I mean him, not her). The novel’s subtitle is The Modern Prometheus, and Percy Bysshe Shelley later wrote a verse play, Prometheus Unbound, taking the same mythical figure as his central character. The reference to Prometheus in Frankenstein evokes the theme of secret or forbidden knowledge which is picked up in the first pages of the framing narrative, where Walton’s desire to voyage to ‘lands never before imprinted by the foot of man’ prefigures Frankenstein’s attempt to ‘unfold to the world the deepest mysteries of creation’ and ‘pursue nature to her hiding-places’. The difference between them, of course, is that Walton seeks only to discover what is already there; Frankenstein, by deadly contrast, seeks to usurp the divine prerogative and fashion ‘a new species [which] would bless [him] as its creator’.

    Frankenstein certainly generated one new species, a whole new genre of literature which we now call ‘science fiction’, but the text itself is not much possessed by science. There is no attempt to imagine – not even much interest in imagining – how Frankenstein actually makes his monster. The novel concentrates instead on the moral and metaphysical consequences of such an act, and most particularly the responsibilities of the creator to the created, and the ties that bind them together which are ‘only dissoluble by the annihilation of one of [them]’. Indeed the plot is driven by Frankenstein’s attempt to escape, repudiate or destroy those ties, and the power and terror of the novel lies in the fact that the more he struggles to do so, the more inexorably he and his creature begin to change places: the hideous monster becoming through the acquisition of language a ‘sensitive and rational animal’, while the honourable and gifted scientist degenerates into a ‘self-devoted’ monster of egotism who either cannot or will not take responsibility for the murderous consequences of his own hubris. The irony here is incisive: Frankenstein rejects his creation as a ‘monstrous image… endued with the mockery of a soul’, but we perceive only too clearly that, like Adam fashioned in the image of God, this creature is indeed a ‘filthy type’ of its creator, but one where the resemblance lies, in Spenser’s words, ‘not in outward shows, but inward thoughts’.

    Creature and creator alike become at the last outcasts, wandering the frozen northern wastes, and the monster that once pursued Frankenstein becomes in its turn the pursued. It is impossible, for me at least, to ignore the parallels here with Percy Bysshe Shelley – Percy Bysshe Shelley who described himself as ‘an exile & a Pariah’ and ‘an outcast from human society’; Percy Bysshe Shelley who was obsessed by the idea of pursuit from an early age, and whose poetry is pervaded by what his biographer Richard Holmes calls ‘ghostly following figures’ and dark demonic antitypes of the self.

    Frankenstein is not without its (many) defects, and it may be worth pointing out that Percy Bysshe Shelley’s own youthful attempts at fiction are without exception deplorable. In Frankenstein, the insert narrative of Felix and the ‘Arabian’ is over-long, slows the pace, and adds very little; much of the language is ponderous; and the characters of Elizabeth and Frankenstein’s father are little more than ciphers. The monster’s ability to acquire language to such a pitch of eloquence strains belief, and the construction of the plot relies far too heavily on improbable coincidence (as the writer Scott Pack’s publisher’s letter to Mary Shelley wittily observes).

    It is flawed, yes, but it is also forceful and unforgettable; because there are images and ideas here that will stay with you forever. The frozen plains of ice where Frankenstein hunts down his monster and sees ‘the print of his huge step on the white plain’; the creature’s awakening on that dreary November night when it first opens its ‘dull yellow eye’; the monster’s painful coming to consciousness and self-consciousness, and the tale it tells of how its natural ‘ardour for virtue’ and desire for love is corrupted by the treatment it receives, and its brutal rejection by the one man who ought to have ‘render[ed] him happy’. And last, and above all, the way the book captures and articulates for the very first time what has since become perhaps the ultimate terror of the modern age: the power over life itself.

    As a book Frankenstein may falter, but as a myth it is magnificent.

    [All the pieces that have appeared in this series, with the links to them, are listed in the index here.]

  • My cricket books reviewed

    Along the way at The Cordon, Samir Chopra has kindly posted a review of my two Ashes books, Ashes ’97 and Men of Waugh. I draw your attention to Samir’s review because you may want help in remembering the time when Australia used regularly to beat England at cricket; and because I still have copies of these two books available on extremely generous terms.