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The
Homer of the Cesspit
A
hundred years
ago this year Emile Zola’s remains
were
transferred to the Pantheon
in Paris.
On 4 June
1908, a
horse drawn hearse carrying a coffin containing the six years dead
corpse of novelist Emile Zola was led through the streets of Paris.
Hundreds of police and troops were drafted in to control the huge
hostile crowds. After lying in state overnight, the bones of the
‘maître’ were interred in the Pantheon, the resting place
of the great and good of France. The ceremony was solemn and
dignified, but immediately afterwards violence again broke out with a
determined assassination attempt made upon a certain army officer who
had become a close friend of the dead man. The violent and bitter
sentiments which had accompanied Zola’s life continued after his
death.
Emile
Zola is
principally famous in Britain for his obscenity. Indeed Zola was the
only writer to have his works outlawed in this country in the
nineteenth century. In the parliamentary debate leading to the ban
Samuel Smith, MP for Flintshire commented: “Nothing more diabolical
has ever been written by the pen of man; they are only fit for swine,
and those who read them must turn their minds into cesspools.” Even
in his own country Zola was equally loathed: “No one before him has
ever created such a heap of filth. That is his monument, the
greatness of which no one can contest. Never has a man made such an
effort to vilify humanity, to insult every aspect of beauty and love,
to deny all that is good and decent” wrote Anatole France in 1887.
A casual reading of a selection of Zola’s novels would indeed would
give this impression. Some of the scenes in his books are as bawdy
and shocking as they were when written in the supposedly repressed
nineteenth century. Yet the graphic sex and violence serves a
purpose. For Zola was a man with a social conscience, not a
revolutionary certainly but certainly a radical reformer, which is
reflected in his writings. And it is as a propagandist that Zola must
be primarily of interest to the socialist.
Born in
Paris in
1840 but raised in the small town of Aix en Provence (portrayed as
Plassans in many of his novels), Zola was the son of a civil engineer
of Italian origins. His father died when he was just small and
thereafter the family had little spare money. When he was 18, Zola
moved to Paris. A failure as a student, Zola got a miserable job as a
clerk, which he soon gave up to devote his life to poetry. Zola
attempted to dedicate his life to romantic poetry but found there was
no possibility of earning a living from it – indeed at this point
in his life he was living in a ramshackle garret trapping and eating
sparrows to survive. Instead he turned to journalism from whence he
learned the value of sensationalism and the importance of the
exposé.
Zola
however had not
given up the literary life and within a few years had written his
first novel. His earliest novels were a form of experimentation in
‘materialism’ - demonstrating supposedly ‘scientific’
theories through literature. Madeleine Ferat (the ‘imprinting’
of a woman with first lover) and the racy Thérèse
Raquin (the predetermination of events by innate ‘temperaments’)
date from this time. In fact there was nothing scientific at all
about these novels as the evidence was, as indeed it would be in a
novel, manufactured and the theories mere pseudo-scientific garbage.
The main
product of
Zola’s literary career was the twenty volume Rougon-Macquart cycle,
begun in late 1870 and finished a quarter of a century and 2,500,000
words later. Basically the series was intended as a hatchet job on
Louis Napoleon and his Second Empire as experienced by the
respectable Rougon family and the unmentionable Macquarts. The
collapse of the Empire within a year of the commencement of the cycle
did not however render the works of mere historical interest, because
social and economic conditions did not materially alter under the
Third Republic and thus the Rougon-Macquart became a general
condemnation of contemporary society. The Rougon-Macquart is the
first great family saga in literature but each novel can be read
individually and many readers are not aware that there even is such a
series.
The first
few
volumes were badly received, despite the literary merits of for
instance La Ventre de Paris (“The Belly of Paris” known as The
Fat and the Thin in Britain). Only with L’Assomoir (published
under various titles in Britain, including The
Dram
Shop) in 1876 did fame arrive. This classic tale of the effects
of alcohol was meant as a criticism of the slums (“My novel is
simple enough. It relates the downfall of a working-class family
ruined by its environs”) but struck a cord with the public and
became a perennial hit with the temperance movement. The use of slang
and the real attempt to portray working class life was inspirational
(“If you wish to have the same sources of inspiration as the
ancients, if you wish to rediscover the breadth of the heroic ages,
you must study and depict the common people”) and a real eye
catching novelty.
In 1880
Zola
followed up this success with Nana. With its graphic
depictions of high level prostitution, Nana made Zola not
merely notable but truly notorious. Yet this was a deeply moral book
with a high purpose. A puritan in real life (even his mistress seems
to have been acquired with the sole purpose of reproduction) Zola
uses the book as a warning against vice among the leaders of a
nation, as a cause of military defeat and destruction both personally
and nationally. The intention was to make plain the disgusting
hypocrisy of the regime.
In 1885
came the
most notable of Zola’s books to the modern reader and one which has
pride of place in every worker’s library, the classic Germinal.
Written from 2 April 1884 to 23 January 1885 and originally to be
called Red Harvest, Germinal tells the tale of a strike in the
coal mining area of north east France as seen through the eyes of
Étienne Lantier, an outsider. Very violent and explicit in
places, Germinal brilliantly depicts the effects of the vast
impersonal force that is capitalism and the misery and oppression it
brings to everyday life. Zola made his intention in writing the book
clear: “everything must follow on logically, starting from little
factual details, from the original unhappiness and suffering, the
cause of which is universal, and traceable to the unknown social
factor, the god Capital, crouching in its temple like a fat, glutted
beast, monstrous in satiety; all that taking place not by the desire
of the masters that I show on the stage, but arising from a state of
affairs beyond their control and determined by the age.” As with
other works he did not suggest remedies but regarded his mission as
merely to publicise the problem: “Germinal is a work of pity, and
not a work of revolution”. Long acknowledged as one of the great
classics of French literature, Germinal is the only work of
Zola to be continuously in print in Britain. Interestingly Germinal
was not the best selling of Zola’s novels at the time coming sixth
after Nana, La Terre, La Débâcle, L’Assomoir and
the dreadful Lourdes.
In La
Débâcle of 1892, Zola virtually invented the war
novel as the
earlier La
Bête Humaine had the railway murder story. La
Débâcle was a well-researched story of the
Franco-Prussian war.
Its
treatment of the Communards was, given Zola’s radicalism,
surprisingly negative and very far from objective.
The
following year
saw the conclusion of the cycle and Zola at the height of his
literary fame. A contemporary noted that the publication of a new
Zola was “a boulevard event looked forward to for days previously.
On the mornings of publication huge piles of the yellow-backed
volumes may be seen heaped up on the stalls of booksellers, and by
noon the boulevard is flecked by yellow spots as people hurry along,
each holding in his hand the eagerly purchased volume.”
Zola,
having
completed the Rougon-Macquart, was at a bit of a loss of what to do
next. A series of controversial anti-clerical novels followed.
However he was most famous at this time for his role in the Dreyfus
case. Essentially Dreyfus, an upright but standoffish Jewish army
officer, was made a scapegoat by aristocratic army officers unjustly
accused of espionage. Zola liked a good fight and had an eye for
self-publicity but the Hitchcockian scenario of a man accused of a
crime he had not committed would have appealed to his humanitarian
sentiments. The series of deliberate forgeries and the extensive
cover up by the military revealed the extent of anti-semitism in
France and Zola’s forthright support of an unpopular cause made him
the most hated man in France virtually overnight. The death threats
and persistent mobbing sent Zola into temporary exile but Dreyfus was
ultimately exonerated although Zola never regained his former
popularity.
The
experience
further radicalised Zola, perhaps because of the staunch support
given Zola during the Dreyfus case by the French leftwingers, and
within a few years he became viewed as a socialist. His political
views in this period can be particularly seen in Travail
(work). Based on the Fourierist (utopian socialist) ideas he came
into contact with at the turn of the century, Travail is
Zola’s only work of science fiction and depicts a harmonious
society without government or classes, where free love reigns and
religion has died away. Travail is far from being the French News
From Nowhere however. Zola’s brave new world
originates
in local experiment rather than revolution and is based on the
voluntary (!) cooperation of capital and labour. Unlike earlier
utopian socialist schemes, the Travail commune is based on a
steelworks rather than agriculture but the Fourierist origins are
still rather obvious – the commune is termed the Crècherie,
not much different from Fourier’s five fingered phalanstery.
Zola was
found dead
of carbon monoxide poisoning in his flat in Paris on 29 September
1902. There have been persistent rumours of a deliberately blocked
chimney and the death was certainly odd. If it was murder, demise at
the hands of the anti-Dreyfusards in the cause of justice would have
been no shameful death.
Zola’s
work is
difficult to summarise. Despite the self-applied labels of ‘Realism’
or ‘naturalism’ there is much that is unrealistic and unnatural
about his novels. But art is not a mirror and the ability to create
characters larger than life and the extensive use of allegories and
symbolism inject an epic tone into the drab real life world
comparable with the Coen Brothers films. The melodrama and seemingly
endless descriptive passages are perhaps not much to today’s taste,
but are preferable to the insipid ‘chick lit’ of modern times.
Although some of his work was created purely for entertainment
purposes, Zola’s main aim was to use the form of the novel to raise
awareness of social problems: “My novels have always been written
with a higher aim than merely to amuse. I have so high an opinion of
the novel as a means of expression that I have chosen it as the form
in which to present to the world what I wish to say on the social,
scientific, and psychological problems that occupy the minds of
thinking men” (quoted in EA Vizetelly’s Zola in England).
As such works such as Germinal were greatly successful at the
time, although are perhaps now a little dated. Perhaps the main
lesson to be drawn from Zola is that the best form of propaganda is
that which is not seen as propaganda – a maxim we would all do well
to pay attention to.
KAZ
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