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Is Mr Coetzee dead? His wispy spectre calling back to us from
the afterlife, from the decaying mass of his own body? Or did
he, perhaps, never exist? He certainly spoke at York University
in the UK last year, definitely announced his Australian citizenship
not long after, and this year he published a new book (Diary
of a Bad Year) that followed a third collection of literary
essays (Inner Workings). The fictional diary’s
author – an eminent seventy-two year old South African-born
writer living in Australia and variously notated as ‘JC’,
‘SeÒor C’, ‘Juan’ – is decaying
(he has Parkinson’s) just like the rest of us (who may not
notice it yet), so ‘Why should not our every utterance come
accompanied by a reminder that before too long we will have to
say goodbye to this world?’ Some writers write – as
others read – to affirm their own existence. But JC writes
to confirm his own decay, and those who read Coetzee do so to
have their opinions confirmed or reversed: this is the challenge
of the fictional diary, undertaken as a contribution to a book
of ‘strong opinions’ that a German publisher has asked
JC to contribute to. Diary of a Bad Year continues
the Coetzeean desolation of destroyed opinions as it filters JC’s
through their diary-for-publication form; the reader’s liberal
democratic or anti-totalitarian or culturally relativist consensus;
his secretary Anya’s innocent commentary; and the jealous
scheming of the Monster of the book and its century, Neoliberal
Alan (Anya’s lover, boyfriend).
That the opinions are destined for Germany is important. Germany
is Old Europe, along with France the geostrategically (if not
geopolitically) moral rearguard action against the Anglo-Saxon
new world order of neoliberal democracy. The world order, if there
can be said to be order, is one in which politics has finally
been subsumed by – abandoned to – economics. In the
beginning – our beginning, the book’s beginning –
there was the state, unto which we were born, with assumed voluntary
consent. ‘We are born subject,’ JC writes in the first
of his opinions (‘On the origins of the state’) and
‘Whether the citizen lives or dies is not a concern of the
state. What matters to the state and its records is whether the
citizen is alive or dead.’ Though spoken in the present
tense, that is the past, the previous state of affairs. Today
it is different; ‘The market is where we are, where we find
ourselves…[B]orn into a world we have no hand in choosing.’
The market, too, has little concern for whether we live or die
– in the infinite tense, the infinite sense, where the first
syllable extends across our pondering act of being or
ending, over time. Because the market too records simply
whether the worker – it may call its subject a citizen,
perhaps even a ‘global citizen’ (that is, a freely
movable commodity), but it means worker, or input – the
market too records alive or dead: you cannot draw ‘dead’
out, it sounds absurd, it does not die, it is dead. (Of course,
the market does note if we live on a dollar a day or less. Which
is to say, by the usefulness of our input to the system, whether
we are alive or dead).
Unfortunately Old Europe itself is one of these dead, despite
its fans. This, JC’s diary, is a love letter to Old Europe:
‘there are some of us around to whom the inner life of nineteenth-century
man is not quite dead, not yet’. This is a love letter to
Old Music, in which ‘Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Bruckner, Mahler,
Elgar, Sibelius composed within the bounds of symphonic form a
music of heroic rebirth and/or transfiguration’. And it
is especially a love letter to J.S.Bach, to Tolstoy, to Dostoevsky.
To, ultimately, Russia – or should we say Old Russia or,
simply, Russian literature? Why? Because Mother Russia, ‘setting
before us with such indisputable certainty the standard toward
which any serious novelist must toil’ shows that despite
all the zeroes and ones, the deterministic lie of a neoliberal
theology based on chance and probability, it is still possible
for The Brothers Karamazov’s Ivan to ‘make
me cry in spite of myself’. ‘Far more powerful than
the substance of his argument, which is not strong’ is the
rhetoric: and this power comes even though we know the lie.
Readers know the diary is not Coetzee’s but still it is
hard to resist finding his opinions in it; he is a fine writer.
So what of the new world? A century of genocide over which one
might say the following quandary has presided: ‘Moral theory
has never quite known what to do with numbers. Is killing two
people worse than killing one person, for example?’ The
problem is that in the 1980s and 1990s ‘not-very-bright
graduates of the academy of the humanities in its postmodernist
phase’ learned that ‘suspiciousness is the chief virtue’
and that ‘the ability to argue that nothing is as it seems
to be might get you places’. Hence neoliberalism, where
despite what you see (widening gap between rich and poor,
entrenched poverty, ideological warfare and an unsustainably estranging
elite class) things are getting better (for you do not see the
reality, merely your own perception): Africa is not ‘underdeveloped’
as Fanon could simply write in its bare factuality. No, it is
‘developing’. Global warming is not bad at all: in
fact, warmer climates will be better for everyone (which countries
are poor because they are too temperate, too cold?) So while moral
theory did not know what to do with numbers, postmodern neoliberals
knew what to do with moral theory: amputate it, curtail it, until
it could be counted and equated and sold.
Postmodern and neoliberal should not go together. The former should
be emancipating, and this is why the world is in a state; that
is, confusion. For, taught that nothing existed except as we constructed
it, we thought it did not matter what we constructed, that we
were free (licensed). On the contrary, it matters a great deal.
The freedom offered by postmodernism was the chance to reconstruct:
rebirth, renaissance. But the 1980s, the 1990s, never did that.
It took society apart – Margaret Thatcher’s ‘there
is no society’ – and thought that that was it: the
apogee of humanity, job done, labour (not) working.
For the artist, this conflation of individual freedom (as his
progressive, creative domain from which he could resist) with
economic individualism (as reactionary, conservative) has been
troubling. The romantic freedom of the individual artist was never
meant to enter the ‘economic dimension’. Individualism
was not supposed to be string theory. But: it suited people that
it should be, and so it was only a matter of time. ‘The
datum has to start its life in the individual dimension,’
Alan argues, ‘before it can migrate to the economic.’
In the end, ‘the economic not only sums up the individual,
it transcends it.’ Cut up, divided, repackaged, sold, profited
from and exploited, for the good of all men: this was done to
society, culture, science, medicine, mortgages. In a recent New
Yorker article profiling the chief opponent of President
Putin, the former chess champion Garry Kasparov, David Remnick
writes that ‘In the modern world, the political use of the
tax police or a single, well-publicised incident of mysterious
brutality is far more effective than mass repression and the Gulag.’
The resistance: cut up, divided, crushed. The struggle, the neoliberals
say, Alan says, is that of the jungle: ‘a struggle of all
against all’. The suspicion is against those who claim a
bond of resistance: gatherings of so many people in certain places
(US campuses, Parliament Square in London) shall be banned, outlawed.
Torture shall bring out the truth from the individual against
his fellow individuals: with whom you have no bond. The
group struggle, the social struggle, is a myth: you have no
group, you have no society. (‘What a realization for
someone to come to who was born in Africa, where the mass is the
norm and the solitary the aberration!’) To paraphrase Conrad,
and to memorialise neoliberalism’s victory, ‘we struggle
as we dream – alone’.
So why does this matter to the writer? Why is it troubling? After
all, in his popular image the writer has always struggled alone.
What is new or strange or startling to her? And, Alan asks, ‘If
he really believes in these human rights, why isn’t he out
in the real world fighting for them?’ Of Harold Pinter’s
‘savage attack on Tony Blair for his part in the war in
Iraq,’ JC writes ‘there come times when the outrage
and the shame are so great that all calculation, all prudence,
is overwhelmed and one must act, that is to say, speak’.
It is the praxis of reflection and action, the writer’s
thoughts turned into words to articulate common individuality;
that is, the points at which individuals meet and say Yes, we
stand together. You are wrong. Your wars are wrong. We say this
as individuals together.
For Paulo Freire, the 1970s radical Brazilian educator, ‘There
is not a true word that is not at the same time a praxis. Thus,
to speak a true word is to transform the world’. But ‘to
substitute monologue, slogans, and communiquÈs for dialogue
is to attempt to liberate the oppressed with the instruments of
domestication’. Thus again, no politician need worry about
the white band and ‘Making Poverty History’ transforming
anything so radical as the world order: rather, they neatly domesticate
poverty into a comforting activism (that is, action without reflection)
for the guilty classes. To Make Poverty History is nothing –
history is as ‘we’ (our lords) write it. To Make the
Future Fair, Equitable, and Free from Misery, Oppression and Poverty
is the true challenge, is something else: to imagine it, to design
it, to create it. To know and to make known that the most powerful
force is not ethics or politics but the rhetoric that announces
these things. To know and to make known that with this knowledge
comes great freedom but also the greatest responsibility: freedom
not as licence (freedom to behave as one wishes) but as liberty
(the state of not being imprisoned or enslaved). This is the role
of the writer whose opinions may well be ‘subject to fluctuations
of mood’, who, like the rest of humanity, ‘doodles
on the walls of his cave’.
There may be no ‘systematic, supra-political discourse’,
as JC puts it, nothing outside of the cave. The notion filters
through the pages (twenty-four) and the page (three horizontal
sections) into Anya’s layer: ‘Politics is all around
us, it’s like the air, it’s like pollution. You can’t
fight pollution. Best to ignore it, or just get used to it, adapt.’
Which is what makes the exposÈ all the more urgent and
is why the book is not about opinions, but about the power that
normalises those opinions, so that they are all around us, the
air we breathe.
In this polluted air, the writer must – or can – no
longer be a transcendent individual (individualism is no longer
romantic). On the other hand she must no longer simply be a mouthpiece
for a group-derived orthodoxy (for identity politics or unreflective
oppositionalism, the only thing David Lurie in Disgrace
could see coming as, like JC, he witnessed his old world of nineteenth-century
man’s inner life falling apart). She must become the common
individual, into whom multiple individualities can stand together
again. But more than that, she must die and become a ghost. She
must be dead in (to) the neoliberal system by positing a moral
theory and being a literary authority that cannot be economised,
that decays, that is radioactive, that cannot be measured and
fixed and simply sold. She must haunt the system’s feigned
certainty. She must bring the reader – attempting to identify
her and price her – into her world and spin him in the gyre
until that reader and the reader’s opinions and the reader’s
reception of the author’s opinions and the book’s
opinions fall apart, so that they cannot be repackaged and ‘sub-primed’
(made fraudulent for private gain).
As with all his best work this is what Coetzee does with Diary
of a Bad Year, filtering the opinions through the caricatures
(they are more this than fully developed characters) of the writer,
the neoliberal, and the secretary (they all have opinions,
but of course the reader falls most for the writer’s); and
through the physical and visual filtering device of the horizontally-divided
page. As with Elizabeth Costello and Slow
Man before this, he also uses the decay of the body and of old
age to metaphorise this collapse of certainty, to reintroduce
probability, and to memorialise an older time (that is, to memorialise
the contest that preceded the present state, unto which we have
been mythologically, unquestioningly born). JC thinks about the
magpie in the public garden by his apartment: ‘public, private,
it is no more than a puff of air to him. “It’s a free
world,” he says.’ Ken Loach’s recent film of
the same name for British television showed what a privately free
world means; that it is quite different to a publicly free world.
One day we will hear from Coetzee from the afterlife (something
he explores again here in Diary of a Bad Year
– ‘will those of us who spent our last day in pain
and terror and loneliness without the luxury of loving or being
loved face eternal solitude?’ – as he did in
Elizabeth Costello). Although ghosts are already present
– and indeed, JC talked through Coetzee in York as he orated
extracts of the diary in its earlier form – they are of
course indeterminate. ‘Tread carefully, I said. You may
be seeing less of my inmost depths than you believe.’ Which
is the rejoinder to the new world order: tread recklessly, you
are seeing – in the marketplace – all that you need
to believe.
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Sam
Duerden currently lives and works in Sierra Leone,
implementing
literacy, rights and development projects with a local NGO.
Prior to this he campaigned on Darfur from London, where
he also had short stories and essays published. After studying
English at university he worked as a Website Developer in
Oxford.
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