samedi 3 avril 2010

book review book review

A Response to this article.


dear Papa, thank you for your interesting analysis on this novel!

Though it's been some time since i read the book, and i don't have it here to refresh my memory, here's my take on it.

In your review, you read the novel on 2 or 3 levels. the first is the explicit level of the character novel, of the exploration of relationships and choices from the psychological standpoint of the members of an ordinary Indian family. Then, rather less obviously (I didn't see it, that is) you perceived the plot and characters to be metaphors of India's past and present. You also mention another layer in passing, that of Mistry's own life as reflected in various charaters -- not necessarily in terns of autobiography, maybe also a reflection on the road not travelled -- what might have been, if.

what i remember most vividly in the novel, though, is the portrait of modern Bombay -- oops Mumbai -- in the shadow of the Shiv Sena: "Shiva's Army", a local xenophobic party. their main mottos are, in that order, "Maharashtra to the Maharashtrians" and "India to the Indians". They are, also heavily anti-Muslim and more heavily anti-Pakistan.

All accounts, written or spoken, which i was given of the Sena confirmed this aura of populism, xenophobia, and recourse to threats and violence -- not to mention proud ignorance. They are, though never seen, the villains of the story.

They regularly illustrate their coarse intolerance by releasing idiotic fatwas against such dangerous individuals as an Indian tenniswoman who married a Pakistani cricketeer and Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan -- whose latest film is seditiously pro-tolerance.

but wait-- this is a novel about family isn't it? -- or is it about the political turmoil of Mistry's hometown?

the title says it all. in its obvious double meaning (noun noun and noun verb), it announces at once the topic and Mistry's main axiom: nothing is gained by resentment, hate, division; unity is strength, and it is achieved by tolerance and love. (as you put it so well, Papa, "where there is love, it’s like oil, the social machinery runs smoothly. Where hate reigns, it grinds to a halt, and snaps under the subsequent pressure buildup".)

It seems to me that Mistry establishes a daring but rather convincing parallel between a family (ostensibly an average sample) and a community of over fifteen million. The unlikely bridge between the two is furnished by Yezad's impossibly good-natured boss (i forget his name), a Bombay enthusiast who might have gone as far as to compare the highly cosmopolitan city to a "great multicultural family" (though i lack the references here to stay my point with an accurate quote).

The owner of a thriving sports shop, a self-made-man and an immigrant himself (did his family flee post-partition Pakistan?), he is depicted as eternally grateful to the city who welcomed him in a time of despair and to which, he feels, he owes his successful and happy life.

His raving harangues, to a mildly bemused but sympathetic Yezad, have in them something of the political: but they are the candid politics of open-mindedness, love and heartfelt conviction, as starkly opposed to the Sena's violent and cynical stance. The incarnation of Tolerance and Good Will, his dedication to the Bombay he loves goes ever further -- from lighting up the shop display with seasonal decorations of all religions (Diwali, Eid, Christmas...), to a growing conviction that his real calling lies in the field of politics, concerned as he is by the rise of corruption, cynicism and extremism in the city.
This leads to an interesting sub-plot!

The shop-owner begins to consider applying for election as local representative... but he is not making up his mind quickly enough for Yezad, who at this point is in desperate need of the promotion (and raise) promised him, should his employer's move towards politics materialize. This is where he hatches a dodgy plan involving a pair of accomplices posing as Shiv Sena thugs. They pay the shop a visit under the plausible pretense of asking the owner to change his sign ("Bombay Sports Emporium" ought to read "Mumbai", as everyone knows -- to think otherwise would be quite an ungood crimethink) or pay the Sena an absurdly high ransom. Yezad hopes, in fact is utterly confident, that this little face-to-face with the bad guys "in the flesh" will promptly bring the boss's wavering to a close: he will be convinced, once and for all, to stand for election in order to bring back peace and sanity to his beloved Bombay -- and leave the shop manager's seat free for his loyal subordinate Yezad to sit in... Of course, the plan fails miserably. Rather than being possessed by a righteous fury against the ruffians and hate-mongers of the Sena, the boss immediately yields to the blackmail and entrusts his employee with an envelope containing 25,000 rupees from his own savings, to be given to the imaginary Sainiks on their next visit – leaving a bewildered and guilt-ridden Yezad to pore over this new quandary.

Of course, Yezad has made a simple mistake – he did not realize that his boss would take the threat seriously. But beyond this, it seems, a comment can be made as to how fear and violence are self-amplifying, and the threats of the professional hatemongers, self-fulfilling. The dark forces of division within the great united "family" of Bom... of Mumbai have won the fight, but they have won without any actual involvement from the Sena: this is how frightfully strong they are. while a community needs all the good will and virtue it can get, the “dark side” of hatred has a way of generating its own momentum, like the proverbial piece of dirty gossip which, told once, will spread like wildfire throughout a neighborhood.

The fact that Yezad's plot backfires, coming as it does after he loses several weeks of the family’s money gambling, is also a further comment on what happens when you begin to lose your moral standards, on the individual level as on that of the community: it’s a downward spiral, no good can be hoped to come of it. Again: only love, tolerance and virtue can make things better. Not deceit, lies, etc.

What about the family itself?

Keeping in mind the parallel with the Shiv Sena, the word “estrangement” might be an apt synthesis of the book. While the Sena’s politics are based on xenophobia, fear and hatred of the stranger (immigrants from India and beyond, Muslims and other “others”), there is a similar force at work within the family: a breeder of discord and animosity, Coomy, like the Sena, has little redeeming value in the eye of the author. On the other end we have Nariman. Though the eldest and ostensibly the wisest, Nariman is not much of a patriarch: he is hated, disrespected, represented by Coomy as a source of trouble, financial or otherwise. He is, indeed, a stranger within his family, having but one direct kin (his daughter Roxana. To Jal and Coomy he is only a step-father (accused of killing their real mother, to further embitter their relationship) and Yezad is his son-in-law, who has to put up with the added promiscuity and worry brought by this invalid stranger in his already cramped home.

As in "A Fine Balance", we see -- yep -- a fine balance being destroyed by perverse forces. In the previous novel, it was power, here hate is at work, which easily ravages the subtle happiness of Yezad's household as it does the unlikely peace of the dense metropolis.

As for Yezad's intriguing conversion. At first, we are made to understand -- he himself justifies it thus -- that the temple is, to him, nothing more than an oasis of peace and harmony, a refuge from his work and his own chaotic family. Losing his love for his home, he is literally taking shelter in religion. the two are clearly, in his case, at odds. In keeping with the rest of my analysis, it would appear that religion (in its extreme form of fanaticism) is, for Mistry, too often used against community, as a refuge of self-righteousness, intolerance, and ultimately another vehicle of hatred.

Escape is another social evil, another rejection of the community. Yezad and Rohinton Mistry both entertained the hope of exile to Canada -- only, the latter was successful. Mistry seems, as you say Papa, to regret what he did: running away does not help to hold society together, quite otherwise.

I agree, also, with your vision of Rohinton Mistry as Vilas -- the reader and listener of lives, whose words, passed from one human being far away to another, are so vital to them... a fitting guise for an ostensibly realistic novelist.

But Mistry is also Jehangir, Yezad's youngest son. I have also read Mistry's first book, "Tales from Firozsha Baag", set in the 70s and ostensibly autobiographical. It turns out that the one writing all the short stories, 3 or 4 of which involve a young Jehangir and an old Nariman much reminiscent of the characters of "Family Matters", is Jehangir himself, now aged 28 and recently exiled to Canada. Jehangir, therefore, represents the author as a young boy, and gives an indication as to how he himself perceived Indian society in his own time.

As for “artistry”, I have to say that I did, indeed, feel “Family Matters” to be inferior to “A Fine Balance”– though they both provide fascinating insights into Indian lives... Maybe, among other aspects, I was disappointed by Mistry's lessened respect for secondary characters. I have hinted at how the shop-owner is a gently ridiculous monomaniac. He is nearly a stereotype: not a "full" character, such as Yezad or Nariman, more like an automaton with the role of personifying certain ideas or being used as a narrative subterfuge. Other auxiliary characters are like that: Edul Munshi, for instance, is little more than a joke and a narrative device: his obsession with DIY in spite of his pathological clumsiness is a pretext for smiles as well as the writer's weapon against Coomy.

But I also can't forget that Mistry's prose (both the novel discussed here and the Tales from Firozsha Baag") were a valuable introduction to India, in the days before I left and after I arrived. And it seems to me now, his books are still a truer vision that much of what a foreigner is allowed to see of the country and its people.


dimanche 28 mars 2010

Seek him

Une courte envolee vers le Sud-Est... puis nouveaux paysages montagneux : le Sikkim, petite excroissance Indienne entre le Nepal, la Chine et le Bhoutan. Toujours pleines de grandeur ces vues sur des neiges infinies. Mais celui ci, c'est du gros.
Son nom : Kangchenjunga ; Sa taille : plus de 8500 metre ou 28,160 pieds. D'un poids encore inconnu, ce monstre de l'Himalaya est le troisieme plus haut sommet du monde apres le K2 et l'Everest. Litteralement, il est "les cinq tresor des neiges" avec respectivement cinq sommets lui appartenant. Etrangement destabilisant, depuis notre perchoir de nain, "le perchoir du tigre" tout de meme. Il nous a fallu nous sortir de la couette a 5h petantes de la nuit, pour s'engouffrer dans la jeepo mobilis, arrivee sur la colline des nains a 6h ou nombre de nos compatriotes de petites hauteurs nous attendaient deja. Et puis, la naissance... la lumiere... la revelation... Et ce que vous apercevez sur votre ecran d'ordinateur en grandeur nature, la haut... Prieres et repentir pendant de longues minutes...

dimanche 28 février 2010

La Faune de Thailande


Des elephants dans la rue (avec clignos), des toucans, des aigles, des ibis blancs, des varans d'Asie (ou varans noirs), des singes : macaques a queue longue ("crab-eating macaques", qui volent des sacs), a queue de cochon (qui vont chercher des noix de coco), et des gibbons qui crient a Khao Sok, des crocodiles, des 1000-pattes (rouges qui tuent ou noirs qui tuent pas et qui se roulent en boule), un chat sauvage (en plus de Margo), des araignees : 1. tres grosse, a rayures; 2. araignees-scorpions des grottes; 3. buffalo spider ; etc., des crabes, y compris sur la terre ferme, un iguane attache, des sangsues, des calamars au supermarche, des gros escargots, plusieurs serpents d'on-ne-sait-trop quelle espece, des lezards dans la salle de bain, des chiens, un goose (Gus the Goose), des cochons sauvages et d'autres pas, des bats de base-ball, des moustiques-normaux et des moustiques-tigres, des beaux corbeaux, des oiseaux avec pleins de sons differents (sortes de mainates peut-etre), des coqs (de combat ?), des crapauds, des mini-grenouilles, des chenilles avec des faux yeux, des chats et leurs chatons, des papillons en pagaille, des punaises bleues et rouges, des grosses cigales, des groses fourmis rouges qui pincent et des petites fourmis rouges qui piquent, des vaches, des buffles, des mouches, des canards, des guepes aux longues pattes, des sauterelles grillees, un scorpion mort, quelques cafards et quelques rats...

Et s'il fallait ajouter tout ce qu'on a vu a seulement quelques metres sous la surface de la mer, la liste serait impossiblement longue. heureusement pour vous on a oublie la plupart des noms, mais on est encore ebloui des formes et des couleurs.

mardi 9 février 2010

Mueng-Tam

site Khmer datant du "Onzieme siecle a peu pres, douzieme siecle peut etre"

lundi 25 janvier 2010

Le voyage a ce jour:

Direction la Thailande: a l'aeroport de Calcutta nous nous rendons compte que nos deux passeports sont restes quelque part entre l'hotel et le cyber cafe, a pres de 45 minutes de voiture. Bon... Splendide, "on fait l'aller retour, hein?, on verra bien...", "ok".
Nous engageons un taxi a qui l'on fait tres largement depasser les limitations de vitesse, mais qui prend un plaisir fou a jouer les James Bond a sept heures du mat'. Nous retrouvons les passeports au cyber cafe, etonnant qu'ils soient encore la et intacts. Enfn...
pas le temps de deblaterer de suite. On repart a laeroport. A l'heure, Wouaou, heureusement, on avait prevu large.

Bangkok, Happy New Year. Le feu d'artifice est cache par les gratte ciel mais c'est pas trop grave, on a toujours le son.

Prechuap Khiri Khan, no comment.............

Nous nous embarquons sur un paquebot de fortune ou nous passons une nuit secouee. trois jours de plongee apres quoi nous nous aventurons a Jurassic park dans un parc National riche en foret tropicale et en chutes d'eau. Beaucoup de sangsues egalement. Nous avons aujourd'hui integre une ferme. une ecole de singe dans laquelle on coupe l'herbe et ... cest tout. On joue avec les singes durant nos conges.
Et nous attendons impatiemment Monique (qui a le fromage de chevre et la confiture de figue maison).

a suivre

Constuction d'un toit en feuille de palmes

A la Monkey school. Nous essayons de suivre Nai-Yon, qui construit un toit en feuille de palmes. Nous sommes la pour l'assister parce que coudre de la palme on sait pas faire, et puis l'aiguille, elle est grosse, c'est pas du tricot tout ca, c'est serieux enfin.

mercredi 13 janvier 2010

A la rencontre de...


Au parc naturel de Khao Sok, en arrivant sur les berges sauvages d'un lac artificiel mais d'une beaute veritable, nous decouvrons ce paysage vierge aux odeurs romanesques...
A peine le temps de serrer la patte a Tarzan, que nous nous laissons emoustiller par le cris d'un gibbon venu des hauteurs magestueuses.