The
Tender Narrator
1.
The
first photograph I ever experienced consciously is a picture of my mother from
before she gave birth to me. Unfortunately, it’s a black-and-white photograph,
which means that many of the details have been lost, turning into nothing but
gray shapes. The light is soft, and rainy, likely a springtime light, and
definitely the kind of light that seeps in through a window, holding the room
in a barely perceptible glow. My mom is sitting beside our old radio, and it’s
the kind with a green eye and two dials—one to regulate the volume, the other
for finding a station. This radio later became my great childhood companion;
from it I learned of the existence of the cosmos. Turning an ebony knob shifted
the delicate feelers of the antennae, and into their purview fell all kinds of
different stations—Warsaw, London, Luxembourg and Paris. Sometimes, however,
the sound would falter, as though between Prague and New York, or Moscow and
Madrid, the antennae’s feelers stumbled onto black holes. Whenever that
happened, it sent shivers down my spine. I believed that through this radio
different solar systems and galaxies were speaking to me, crackling and
warbling and sending me important information, and yet I was unable to decipher
it.
When as
a little girl I would look at that picture, I would feel sure that my mom had
been looking for me when she turned the dial on our radio. Like a sensitive
radar, she penetrated the infinite realms of the cosmos, trying to find out
when I would arrive, and from where. Her haircut and outfit (a big boat neck)
indicate when this picture was taken, namely, in the early sixties. Gazing off
somewhere outside of the frame, the somewhat hunched-over woman sees something
that isn’t available to a person looking at the photo later. As a child, I
imagined that what was happening was that she was gazing into time. There’s
nothing really happening in the picture—it’s a photograph of a state, not a
process. The woman is sad, seemingly lost in thought—seemingly lost.
When I
later asked her about that sadness—which I did on numerous occasions, always
prompting the same response—my mother would say that she was sad because I hadn’t
been born yet, yet she already missed me.
“How can
you miss me when I’m not there yet?” I would ask.
I knew
that you miss someone you’ve lost, that longing is an effect of loss.
“But it
can also work the other way around,” she answered. “Missing a person means
they’re there.”
This
brief exchange, someplace in the countryside in western Poland in the late
sixties, an exchange between my mother and me, her small child, has always remained
in my memory and given me a store of strength that has lasted me my whole life.
For it elevated my existence beyond the ordinary materiality of the world,
beyond chance, beyond cause and effect and the laws of probability. She placed
my existence out of time, in the sweet vicinity of eternity. In my child’s
mind, I understood then that there was more to me than I had ever imagined
before. And that even if I were to say, “I’m lost,” then I’d still be starting
out with the words “I am”—the most important and the strangest set of words in
the world.
And so a
young woman who was never religious—my mother—gave me something once known as a
soul, thereby furnishing me with the world’s greatest tender narrator.
2.
The
world is a fabric we weave daily on the great looms of information,
discussions, films, books, gossip, little anecdotes. Today the purview of these
looms is enormous—thanks to the internet, almost everyone can take place in the
process, taking responsibility and not, lovingly and hatefully, for better and
for worse. When this story changes, so does the world. In this sense, the world
is made of words.
How we
think about the world and—perhaps even more importantly—how we narrate it have
a massive significance, therefore. A thing that happens and is not told ceases
to exist and perishes. This is a fact well known to not only historians, but
also (and perhaps above all) to every stripe of politician and tyrant. He who
has and weaves the story is in charge.
Today
our problem lies—it seems—in the fact that we do not yet have ready narratives
not only for the future, but even for a concrete now, for the ultra-rapid
transformations of today’s world. We lack the language, we lack the points of
view, the metaphors, the myths and new fables. Yet we do see frequent attempts
to harness rusty, anachronistic narratives that cannot fit the future to
imaginaries of the future, no doubt on the assumption that an old something is
better than a new nothing, or trying in this way to deal with the limitations
of our own horizons. In a word, we lack new ways of telling the story of the
world.
We live
in a reality of polyphonic first-person narratives, and we are met from all
sides with polyphonic noise. What I mean by first-person is the kind of tale
that narrowly orbits the self of a teller who more or less directly just writes
about herself and through herself. We have determined that this type of
individualized point of view, this voice from the self, is the most natural,
human and honest, even if it does abstain from a broader perspective. Narrating
in the first person, so conceived, is weaving an absolutely unique pattern, the
only one of its kind; it is having a sense of autonomy as an individual, being
aware of yourself and your fate. Yet it also means building an opposition
between the self and the world, and that opposition can be alienating at times.
I think
that first-person narration is very characteristic of contemporary optics, in
which the individual performs the role of subjective center of the world. Western
civilization is to a great extent founded and reliant upon that very discovery
of the self, which makes up one of our most important measures of reality. Here
man is the lead actor, and his judgment—although it is one among many—is always
taken seriously. Stories woven in first person appear to be among the greatest
discoveries of human civilization; they are read with reverence, bestowed full
confidence. This type of story, when we see the world through the eyes of some
self that is unlike any other, builds a special bond with the narrator, who
asks his listener to put himself in his unique position.
What
first-person narratives have done for literature and in general for human
civilization cannot be overestimated—they have completely reworked the story of
the world, so that it is no longer a place for the operations of heroes and
deities upon whom we can have no influence, but rather a place for people just
like us, with individual histories. It is easy to identify with people who are
just like us, which generates between the story’s narrator and its reader or
listener a new variety of emotional understanding based on empathy. And this,
by its very nature, brings together and eliminates borders; it is very easy to
lose track in a novel of the borders between the narrator’s self and the
reader’s self, and a so-called “absorbing novel” actually counts on that border
being blurred—on the reader, through empathy, becoming the narrator for a
while. Thus literature has become a field for the exchange of experiences, an
agora where everyone can tell of their own fate, or give voice to their alter
ego. It is therefore a democratic space—anyone may speak up, everyone can
create a speaking voice for herself. Never in the history of humanity have so
many people been writers and storytellers. We have only to look at the
statistics to see that this is true.
Whenever
I go to book fairs, I see how many of the books being published in the world
today have to do with precisely this—the authorial self. The expression instinct
may be just as strong as other instincts that protect our lives—and it is most
fully manifested in art. We want to be noticed, we want to feel exceptional.
Narratives of the “I’m going to tell you my story” variety, or “I’m going to
tell you the story of my family,” or even simply, “I’m going to tell you where
I’ve been,” comprise today’s most popular literary genre. This is a large-scale
phenomenon also because nowadays we are universally able to access writing, and
many people attain the ability, once reserved for the few, of expressing
themselves in words and stories. Paradoxically, however, this situation is akin
to a choir made up of soloists only, voices competing for attention, all
traveling similar routes, drowning one another out. We know everything there is
to know about them, we are able to identify with them and experience their
lives as if they were our own. And yet, remarkably often, the readerly
experience is incomplete and disappointing, as it turns out that expressing an
authorial “self” hardly guarantees universality. What we are missing—it would
seem—is the dimension of the story that is the parable. For the hero of the
parable is at once himself, a person living under specific historical and
geographical conditions, yet at the same time he also goes well beyond those
concrete particulars, becoming a kind of Everywhere Everyman. When a reader
follows along with someone’s story written in a novel, he can identify with the
fate of the character described and consider their situation as if it were his
own, while in a parable, he must surrender completely his distinctness and
become the Everyman. In this demanding psychological operation, the parable
universalizes our experience, finding for very different fates a common
denominator. That we have largely lost the parable from view is
a
testament to our current helplessness.
Perhaps
in order not to drown in the multiplicity of titles and last names we began to
divide literature’s leviathan body into genres, which we treat like the various
different categories of sports, with writers as their specially trained
players.
The
general commercialization of the literary market has led to a division into
branches—now there are fairs and festivals of this or that type of literature,
completely separate, creating a clientele of readers eager to hole up with a
crime novel, some fantasy or science fiction. A notable characteristic of this
situation is that what was only supposed to help booksellers and librarians
organize on their shelves the massive quantity of published books, and readers
to orient themselves in the vastness of the offering, became instead abstract
categories not only into which existing works are placed, but also according to
which writers themselves have started writing. Increasingly, genre work is like
a kind of cake mold that produces very similar results, their predictability
considered a virtue, their banality an achievement. The reader knows what to
expect and gets exactly what he wanted.
I have
always intuitively opposed such orders, since they lead to the limiting of
authorial freedom, to a reluctance toward the experimentation and transgression
that is in fact the essential quality of creation in general. And they
completely exclude from the creative process any of the eccentricity without
which art would be lost. A good book does not need to champion its generic
affiliation. The division into genres is the result of the commercialization of
literature as a whole and an effect of treating it as a product for sale with
the whole philosophy of branding and targeting and other, similar inventions of
contemporary capitalism.
Today we
can have the great satisfaction of seeing the emergence of a wholly new way of
telling the world’s story that is purveyed by the on-screen series, the hidden
task of which is to induce in us a trance. Of course this mode of storytelling
has long existed in the myths and Homeric tales, and Heracles, Achilles or
Odysseus are without doubt the first heroes of series. But never before has
this mode taken up so much space or exerted such a powerful influence on the
collective imagination. The first two decades of the twenty-first century are
the unquestionable property of the series. Their influence on the modes of telling
the story of the world (and therefore on our way of understanding that story,
too) is revolutionary.
In
today’s version, the series has not only extended our participation in the
narrative in the temporal sphere, generating its various tempos, offshoots and
aspects, but also introduced its own new orders. Since in many cases its task
is to hold the viewer’s attention for as long as possible—the series narrative
multiplies the threads, interweaving them in the most improbable manner so much
so that when at a loss it even harks back to the old narrative technique, once
compromised by classical opera, of the Deus ex machina. The creation of new
episodes often entails the total, ad-hoc overhaul of the psychology of the
characters, so that they will be better suited to the developing events of the
plot. A character who begins as gentle and reserved winds up vindictive and
violent, a supporting character turns protagonist, while the main character, to
whom we have already grown attached, loses significance or actually completely
disappears, much to our dismay.
The
potential materialization of another season creates the necessity of open
endings in which there is no way that mysterious things called catharsis can
occur or resound fully—catharsis, formerly the experience of the internal
transformation, the fulfillment and satisfaction of having participated in the
action of the tale. Such complication, rather than conclusion—the constant
postponement of the reward that is catharsis—renders the viewer dependent, hypnotizes
her. The fabula interrupta, created long ago, and well known from the stories
of Scheherazade, has now made its bold return in series, altering our
subjectivity and having bizarre psychological effects, tearing us out of our
own lives and hypnotizing us like a stimulant. At the same time, the series
inscribes itself into the new, drawn-out and disordered rhythm of the world,
into its chaotic communication, its instability and fluidity. This
story-telling form is probably the one most creatively searching for a new
formula today.
In that
sense, there is serious work in the series on the narratives of the future, on
reformatting the story so that it suits our new reality.
But
above all, we live in a world of too many contradictory, mutually exclusive
facts, all battling one another tooth and nail.
Our
ancestors believed that access to knowledge would not only bring people
happiness, well-being, health and wealth, but would also create an equal and
just society. What was missing in the world, to their minds, was the ubiquitous
wisdom that would naturally arise from information.
John
Amos Comenius, the great seventeenth-century pedagogue, coined the term
“pansophism,” by which he meant the idea of potential omniscience, universal
knowledge that would contain within it all possible cognition. This was also,
and above all, a dream of information available to everyone. Would not access
to facts about the world transform an illiterate peasant into a reflective
individual conscious of himself and the world? Will not knowledge within easy
reach mean that people will become sensible, that they will direct the progress
of their lives with equanimity and wisdom?
When the
Internet first came about, it seemed that this notion would finally be realized
in a total way. Wikipedia, which I admire and support, might have seemed to
Comenius, like many like-minded philosophers, the fulfillment of the dream of
humanity—now we can create and receive an enormous store of facts being
ceaselessly supplemented and updated that is democratically accessible to just
about every place on Earth.
A dream
fulfilled is often disappointing. It has turned out that we are not capable of
bearing this enormity of information, which instead of uniting, generalizing
and freeing, has differentiated, divided, enclosed in individual little
bubbles, creating a multitude of stories that are incompatible with one another
or even openly hostile toward each other, mutually antagonizing.
Furthermore,
the Internet, completely and unreflectively subject to market processes and
dedicated to monopolists, controls gigantic quantities of data used not at all
pansophically, for the broader access to information, but on the contrary,
serving above all to program the behavior of users, as we learned after the Cambridge
Analytica affair. Instead of hearing the harmony of the world, we have heard a
cacophony of sounds, an unbearable static in which we try, in despair, to pick
up on some quieter melody, even the weakest beat. The famous Shakespeare quote
has never been a better fit than it is for this cacophonous new reality: more
and more often, the Internet is a tale, told by an idiot, full of sound and
fury.
Research
by political scientists unfortunately also contradicts John Amos Comenius’
intuitions, which were based on the conviction that the more universally
available was information about the world, the more politicians would avail
themselves of reason and make considered decisions. But it would appear that
the matter is not at all so simple as that. Information can be overwhelming,
and its complexity and ambiguity give rise to all sorts of defense
mechanisms—from denial to repression, even to escape into the simple principles
of simplifying, ideological, party-line thinking.
The
category of fake news raises new questions about what fiction is. Readers who
have been repeatedly deceived, misinformed or misled have begun to slowly
acquire a specific neurotic idiosyncrasy. The reaction to such exhaustion with
fiction could be the enormous success of non-fiction, which in this great
informational chaos screams over our heads: “I will tell you the truth, nothing
but the truth,” and “My story is based on facts!”
Fiction
has lost the readers’ trust since lying has become a dangerous weapon of mass
destruction, even if it is still a primitive tool. I am often asked this
incredulous question: “Is this thing you wrote really true?” And every time I
feel this question bodes the end of literature.
This
question, innocent from the reader’s point of view, sounds to the writer’s ear
truly apocalyptic. What am I supposed to say? How am I to explain the
ontological status of Hans Castorp, Anna Karenina or Winnie the Pooh?
I
consider this type of readerly curiosity a regression of civilization. It is a
major impairment of our multidimensional ability (concrete, historical, but
also symbolic, mythic) to participate in the chain of events called our lives.
Life is created by events, but it is only when we are able to interpret them,
try to understand them and lend them meaning that they are transformed into
experience. Events are facts, but experience is something inexpressibly
different. It is experience, and not any event, that makes up the material of
our lives. Experience is a fact that has been interpreted and situated in
memory. It also refers to a certain foundation we have in our minds, to a deep
structure of significations upon which we can unfurl our own lives and examine
them fully and carefully. I believe that myth performs the function of that
structure. Everyone knows that myths never really happened but are always going
on. Now they go on not only through the adventures of ancient heroes, but
rather also make their way into the ubiquitous and most popular stories of
contemporary film, games and literature. The lives of the inhabitants of Mount
Olympus have been transferred to Dynasty, and the heroic acts of the heroes are
attended to by Lara Croft.
In this
ardent division into truth and falsehood, the tales of our experience that
literature creates have their own dimension.
I have
never been particularly excited about any straight distinction between fiction
and non-fiction, unless we understand such a distinction to be declarative and
discretionary. In a sea of many definitions of fiction, the one I like the best
is also the oldest, and it comes from Aristotle. Fiction is always a kind of
truth.
I am
also convinced by the distinction between true story and plot made by the
writer and essayist E.M. Forster. He said that when we say, “The king died and
then the queen died,” it’s a story. But when we say, “The king died, and then
the queen died of grief,” that is a plot. Every fictionalization involves a
transition from the question “What happened next?” to an attempt at
understanding it based on our human experience: “Why did it happen that way?”
Literature
begins with that “why,” even if we were to answer that question over and over
with an ordinary “I don’t know.”
Thus
literature poses questions that cannot be answered with the help of Wikipedia,
since it goes beyond just information and events, referring directly to our
experience.
But it
is possible that the novel and literature in general are becoming before our
very eyes something actually quite marginal in comparison with other forms of
narration. That the weight of the image and of new forms of directly
transmitting experience—film, photography, virtual reality—will constitute a
viable alternative to traditional reading. Reading is quite a complicated
psychological and perceptual process. To put it simply: first the most elusive
content is conceptualized and verbalized, transforming into signs and symbols,
and then it is “decoded” back from language into experience. That requires a
certain intellectual competence. And above all it demands attention and focus,
abilities ever rarer in today’s extremely distracting world.
Humanity
has come a long way in its ways of communicating and sharing personal
experience, from orality, relying on the living word and human memory, through
the Gutenberg Revolution, when stories began to be widely mediated by writing
and in this way fixed and codified as well as possible to reproduce without
alteration. The major attainment of this change was that we came to identify
thinking with language, with writing. Today we are facing a revolution on a
similar scale, when experience can be transmitted directly, without recourse to
the printed word.
There is
no longer any need to keep a travel diary when you can simply take pictures and
send those pictures via social networking sites straight into the world, at
once and to all. There is no need to write letters, since it is easier to call.
Why write fat novels, when you can just get into a television series instead?
Instead of going out on the town with friends, it would be better to play a
game. Reach for an autobiography? There’s no point, since I am following the
lives of celebrities on Instagram and know everything about them.
It is
not even the image that is the greatest opponent of text today, as we thought
back in the twentieth century, worrying about the influence of television and
film. It is instead a completely different dimension of the world—acting
directly on our senses.
3.
I don’t
want to sketch an overall vision of crisis in telling stories about the world.
But I’m often troubled by the feeling that there is something missing in the
world―that by experiencing it through glass screens, and through apps, somehow
it becomes unreal, distant, two-dimensional, and strangely non-descript, even
though finding any particular piece of information is astoundingly easy. These
days the worrying words “someone, “something,” “somewhere,” “some time” can
seem riskier than very specific, definite ideas uttered with complete
certainty―such as that “the earth is flat,” “vaccinations kill,” “climate
change is nonsense,” or “democracy is not under threat anywhere in the world.”
“Somewhere” some people are drowning as they try to cross the sea. “Somewhere,”
for “some” time, “some sort of” a war has been going on. In the deluge of
information individual messages lose their contours, dissipate in our memory,
become unreal and vanish.
The
flood of stupidity, cruelty, hate speech and images of violence are desperately
counterbalanced by all sorts of “good news,” but it hasn’t the capacity to rein
in the painful impression, which I find hard to verbalize, that there is
something wrong with the world. Nowadays this feeling, once the sole preserve
of neurotic poets, is like an epidemic of lack of definition, a form of anxiety
oozing from all directions.
Literature
is one of the few spheres that try to keep us close to the hard facts of the
world, because by its very nature it is always psychological, because it
focuses on the internal reasoning and motives of the characters, reveals their
otherwise inaccessible experience to another person, or simply provokes the
reader into a psychological interpretation of their conduct. Only literature is
capable of letting us go deep into the life of another being, understand their
reasons, share their emotions and experience their fate.
A story
always turns circles around meaning. Even if it doesn’t express it directly,
even when it deliberately refuses to seek meaning, and focuses on form, on
experiment, when it stages a formal rebellion, looking for new means of
expression. As we read even the most behavioristically, sparingly written
story, we cannot help asking the questions: “Why is this happening?,” “What
does it mean?,” “What is the point?,” “Where is this leading?” Quite possibly
our minds have evolved toward the story as a process of giving meaning to
millions of stimuli that surround us, and that even when we’re asleep keep on
relentlessly devising their narratives. So the story is a way of organizing an
infinite amount of information within time, establishing its relationship to
the past, the present and the future, revealing its recurrence, and arranging
it in categories of cause and effect. Both the mind and the emotions take part
in this effort.
No
wonder one of the earliest discoveries made by stories was Fate, which apart
from always appearing to people as something terrifying and inhuman, did in
fact introduce order and immutability into everyday reality.
4.
Ladies
and Gentlemen,
A few
years later, the woman in the photograph, my mother, who missed me although I
hadn’t yet been born, was reading me fairy tales.
In one
of them, by Hans Christian Andersen, a teapot that had been thrown on the trash
heap complained about how cruelly it had been treated by people―as soon as its
handle broke off, they had disposed of it. But if they weren’t such demanding
perfectionists it could still have been of use to them. Other broken objects
picked up his tune, and told truly epic stories of their modest little lives as
objects.
As a
child, I listened to these fairy tales with flushed cheeks and tears in my
eyes, because I believed deeply that objects have their own problems and
emotions, as well as a sort of social life, entirely comparable to our human
one. The plates in the dresser could talk to each other, and the spoons, knives
and forks in the drawer formed a sort of a family. Similarly, animals were
mysterious, wise, self-aware creatures with whom we had always been connected
by a spiritual bond and a deep-seated similarity. But rivers, forests and roads
had their existence too―they were living beings that mapped our space and built
a sense of belonging, an enigmatic Raumgeist. The landscape surrounding us was
alive too, and so were the Sun and the Moon, and all the celestial bodies―the
entire visible and invisible world.
When did
I start to have doubts? I’m trying to find the moment in my life when at the
flick of a switch everything became different, less nuanced, simpler. The
world’s whisper fell silent, to be replaced by the din of the city, the murmur
of computers, the thunder of airplanes flying past overhead, and the exhausting
white noise of oceans of information.
At some
point in our lives we start to see the world in pieces, everything separately,
in little bits that are galaxies apart from one another, and the reality in
which we live keeps affirming it: doctors treat us by specialty, taxes have no
connection with snow-plowing the road we drive to work along, our lunch has
nothing to do with an enormous stock farm, or my new top with a shabby factory
somewhere in Asia. Everything is separate from everything else, everything
lives apart, without any connection.
To make
it easier for us to cope with this we are given numbers, name tags, cards,
crude plastic identities that try to reduce us to using one small part of the
whole that we have already ceased to perceive.
The
world is dying, and we are failing to notice. We fail to see that the world is
becoming a collection of things and incidents, a lifeless expanse in which we
move around lost and lonely, tossed here and there by somebody else’s
decisions, constrained by an incomprehensible fate, a sense of being the
plaything of the major forces of history or chance. Our spirituality is either
vanishing or becoming superficial and ritualistic. Or else we are just becoming
the followers of simple forces―physical, social, and economic―that move us
around as if we were zombies. And in such a world we really are zombies.
This is
why I long for that other world, the world of the teapot.
5.
All my
life I’ve been fascinated by the systems of mutual connections and influences
of which we are generally unaware, but which we discover by chance, as
surprising coincidences or convergences of fate, all those bridges, nuts,
bolts, welded joints and connectors that I followed in Flights. I’m fascinated
by associating facts, and by searching for order. At base―as I am convinced―the
writer’s mind is a synthetic mind that doggedly gathers up all the tiny pieces
in an attempt to stick them together again to create a universal whole.
How are
we to write, how are we to structure our story to make it capable of raising
this great, constellation form of the world?
Naturally,
I realize that it is impossible to return to the sort of story about the world
that we know from myths, fables and legends, which, communicated orally, kept
the world in existence. Nowadays the story would have to be far more
multidimensional and complicated; after all, we really do know much more, we’re
aware of the incredible connections between things that seem to be far apart.
Let us
take a close look at a particular moment in the history of the world.
It is
August 3, 1492, the day on which a small caravel named Santa Maria is to set
sail from a quay at the port of Palos in Spain. The ship is commanded by
Christopher Columbus. The sun is shining, there are sailors going to and fro on
the quay, and there are stevedores loading the last crates of provisions on
board. It is hot, but a light breeze from the west saves the families who have
come to say farewell from fainting. Seagulls strut grandly up and down the
loading ramp, closely observing the human activities.
The
moment that we can now see across time led to the death of 56 million of the
almost 60 million native Americans. At the time, they represented about 10
percent of the world’s entire population. The Europeans unwittingly brought
them some lethal gifts―diseases and bacteria to which the indigenous
inhabitants of America had no resistance. On top of that came ruthless
oppression and killing. The extermination continued for years, and changed the
nature of the land. Where beans, corn, potatoes and tomatoes had once grown in
cultivated fields that were irrigated in a sophisticated way, wild vegetation
returned. In just a few years, almost 150 million acres of arable land changed
into jungle.
As it
regenerated, the vegetation consumed vast quantities of carbon dioxide, thus
weakening the greenhouse effect, and that in turn lowered the global
temperature of the Earth.
This is
one of many scientific hypotheses to explain the onset of the minor ice age
that in the late sixteenth century brought a long-term cooling of the climate
in Europe.
The
minor ice age changed the economy of Europe. Over the decades that followed,
the long, frozen winters, cool summers and intense precipitation reduced the
yield of traditional forms of farming. In Western Europe, small family farms
producing food for their own needs proved inefficient. Waves of famine ensued,
and the need to specialize production. England and Holland were worst affected
by the colder climate; as their economies could no longer rely on farming, they
began to develop trade and industry. The threat of storms prompted the Dutch to
dry out the polders and to convert marshy areas and shallow marine zones into
land. The southward shift of the range where cod occur, though catastrophic for
Scandinavia, proved advantageous for England and Holland―it allowed these
countries to start developing into naval and commercial powers. The significant
cooling was particularly acutely felt in the Scandinavian countries. Contact
with Greenland and Iceland broke off, the severe winters reduced the harvests,
and years of famine and shortages set in. So Sweden turned its greedy gaze
southward, embarking on war against Poland (especially as the Baltic Sea had
frozen, making it easy to march an army across it) and getting involved in the
Thirty Years’ War in Europe.
The
efforts of scientists, trying to establish a better understanding of our
reality, show it to be a mutually coherent, densely connected system of
influences. This is no longer just the famous “butterfly effect,” which as we
know involves the way that minimal changes at the start of a process can lead
in the future to tremendous, unpredictable results, but here we have an
infinite number of butterflies and their wings, in constant motion―
a
powerful wave of life that travels through time.
In my
view, the discovery of “the butterfly effect” marks the end of the era of
unswerving faith in our own capacity to be effective, our ability to control,
and by the same token our sense of supremacy in the world. This does not take
away from mankind our power to be a builder, a conqueror and an inventor, yet
it illustrates that reality is more complicated than mankind might ever have
supposed. And that we are nothing but a tiny part of these processes.
We have
more and more proof of the existence of some spectacular, sometimes highly
surprising dependencies on a worldwide scale.
We are
all―people, plants, animals, and objects―immersed in a single space, which is
ruled by the laws of physics. This common space has its shape, and within it
the laws of physics sculpt an infinite number of forms that are incessantly
linked to one another. Our cardiovascular system is like the system of a river
basin, the structure of a leaf is like a human transport system, the motion of
the galaxies is like the whirl of water flowing down our washbasins. Societies
develop in a similar way to colonies of bacteria. The micro and macro scale
show an endless system of similarities.
Our
speech, thinking and creativity are not something abstract, removed from the
world, but a continuation on another level of its endless processes of
transformation.
6.
I keep
wondering if these days it’s possible to find the foundations of a new story
that’s universal, comprehensive, all-inclusive, rooted in nature, full of
contexts and at the same time understandable.
Could
there be a story that would go beyond the uncommunicative prison of one’s own
self, revealing a greater range of reality and showing the mutual connections?
That would be able to keep its distance from the well-trodden, obvious and
unoriginal center point of commonly shared opinions, and manage to look at
things ex-centrically, away from the center?
I am
pleased that literature has miraculously preserved its right to all sorts of
eccentricities, phantasmagoria, provocation, parody and lunacy. I dream of high
viewing points and wide perspectives, where the context goes far beyond what we
might have expected. I dream of a language that is capable of expressing the
vaguest intuition, I dream of a metaphor that surpasses cultural differences,
and finally of a genre that is capacious and transgressive, but that at the
same time the readers will love.
I also
dream of a new kind of narrator―a “fourth-person” one, who is not merely a
grammatical construct of course, but who manages to encompass the perspective
of each of the characters, as well as having the capacity to step beyond the
horizon of each of them, who sees more and has a wider view, and who is able to
ignore time. Oh yes, I think this narrator’s existence is possible.
Have you
ever wondered who the marvelous storyteller is in the Bible who calls out in a
loud voice: “In the beginning was the word”? Who is the narrator who describes
the creation of the world, its first day, when chaos was separated from order,
who follows the serial about the origin of the universe, who knows the thoughts
of God, is aware of his doubts, and with a steady hand sets down on paper the
incredible sentence: “And God saw that it was good”? Who is this, who knows
what God thought?
Leaving
aside all theological doubts, we can regard this figure of a mysterious, tender
narrator as miraculous and significant. This is a point of view, a perspective
from where everything can be seen. Seeing everything means recognizing the
ultimate fact that all things that exist are mutually connected into a single
whole, even if the connections between them are not yet known to us. Seeing
everything also means a completely different kind of responsibility for the
world, because it becomes obvious that every gesture “here” is connected to a
gesture “there,” that a decision taken in one part of the world will have an
effect in another part of it, and that differentiating between “mine” and
“yours” starts to be debatable.
So it
could be best to tell stories honestly in a way that activates a sense of the
whole in the reader’s mind, that sets off the reader’s capacity to unite
fragments into a single design, and to discover entire constellations in the
small particles of events. To tell a story that makes it clear that everyone
and everything is steeped in one common notion, which we painstakingly produce
in our minds with every turn of the planet.
Literature
has the power to do this. We should drop the simplistic categories of highbrow
and lowbrow literature, popular and niche, and take the division into genres
very lightly. We should drop the definition of “national literatures,” knowing
as we do that the universe of literature is a single thing, like the idea of
unus mundus, a common psychological reality in which our human experience is
united. The Author and the Reader perform equivalent roles, the former by dint
of creating, the latter by making a constant interpretation.
Perhaps
we should trust fragments, as it is fragments that create constellations
capable of describing more, and in a more complex way, multi-dimensionally. Our
stories could refer to one another in an infinite way, and their central
characters could enter into relationships with each other.
I think
we have a redefinition ahead of us of what we understand nowadays by the
concept of realism, and a search for a new one that would allow us to go beyond
the limits of our ego and penetrate the glass screen through which we see the
world. Because these days the need for reality is served by the media, social
networking sites, and indirect relationships on the internet. Perhaps what
inevitably lies ahead of us is a sort of neo-surrealism, some rearranged points
of view that won’t be afraid to stand up to a paradox, and will go against the
grain when it comes to the simple order of cause-and-effect. Indeed, our
reality has already become surreal. I am also sure that many stories require
rewriting in our new intellectual contexts, taking their inspiration from new
scientific theories. But I find it equally important to make constant reference
to myth and to the entire human imaginarium. Returning to the compact
structures of mythology could bring a sense of stability within the lack of
specificity in which we are living nowadays. I believe that myths are the building
material for our psyche, and we cannot possibly ignore them (at most we might
be unaware of their influence).
No doubt
a genius will soon appear, capable of constructing an entirely different, as
yet unimaginable narrative in which everything essential will be accommodated.
This method of storytelling is sure to change us; we will drop our old,
constricting perspectives and we will open up to new ones that have in fact
always existed somewhere here, but we have been blind to them.
In
Doctor Faustus Thomas Mann wrote about a composer who devised a new form of
absolute music capable of changing human thinking. But Mann did not describe
what this music would depend on, he merely created the imaginary idea of how it
might sound. Perhaps that is what the role of an artist relies on―giving a
foretaste of something that could exist, and thus causing it to become
imaginable. And being imagined is the first stage of existence.
7.
I write
fiction, but it is never pure fabrication. When I write, I have to feel
everything inside myself. I have to let all the living beings and objects that
appear in the book go through me, everything that is human and beyond human,
everything that is living and not endowed with life. I have to take a close
look at each thing and person, with the greatest solemnity, and personify them
inside myself, personalize them.
That is
what tenderness serves me for―because tenderness is the art of personifying, of
sharing feelings, and thus endlessly discovering similarities. Creating stories
means constantly bringing things to life, giving an existence to all the tiny
pieces of the world that are represented by human experiences, the situations
people have endured and their memories. Tenderness personalizes everything to
which it relates, making it possible to give it a voice, to give it the space
and the time to come into existence, and to be expressed. It is thanks to
tenderness that the teapot starts to talk.
Tenderness
is the most modest form of love. It is the kind of love that does not appear in
the scriptures or the gospels, no one swears by it, no one cites it. It has no
special emblems or symbols, nor does it lead to crime, or prompt envy.
It
appears wherever we take a close and careful look at another being, at
something that is not our “self”.
Tenderness
is spontaneous and disinterested; it goes far beyond empathetic fellow feeling.
Instead it is the conscious, though perhaps slightly melancholy, common sharing
of fate. Tenderness is deep emotional concern about another being, its
fragility, its unique nature, and its lack of immunity to suffering and the
effects of time. Tenderness perceives the bonds that connect us, the
similarities and sameness between us. It is a way of looking that shows the
world as being alive, living, interconnected, cooperating with, and codependent
on itself.
Literature
is built on tenderness toward any being other than ourselves. It is the basic
psychological mechanism of the novel. Thanks to this miraculous tool, the most
sophisticated means of human communication, our experience can travel through
time, reaching those who have not yet been born, but who will one day turn to
what we have written, the stories we told about ourselves and our world.
I have
no idea what their life will be like, or who they will be. I often think about
them with a sense of guilt and shame.
The
climate emergency and the political crisis in which we are now trying to find
our way, and which we are anxious to oppose by saving the world have not come
out of nowhere. We often forget that they are not just the result of a twist of
fate or destiny, but of some very specific moves and decisions―economic,
social, and to do with world outlook (including religious ones). Greed, failure
to respect nature, selfishness, lack of imagination, endless rivalry and lack
of responsibility have reduced the world to the status of an object that can be
cut into pieces, used up and destroyed.
That is
why I believe I must tell stories as if the world were a living, single entity,
constantly forming before our eyes, and as if we were a small and at the same
time powerful part of it.
Translated
by Jennifer Croft and Antonia Lloyd-Jones.
The
Nobel Prize in Literature 2018. Olga Tokarczuk – Nobel Lecture.
Nobel
Lecture: Olga Tokarczuk, Nobel Prize in Literature 2018. Streamed live on December 7, 2019
YouTube
No comments:
Post a Comment