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Half a Life
V.S. Naipaul
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Half a Life (2001), V. S. Naipaul |
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The publication of V.S. Naipauls Half a Life
coincides with the greatest literary honor of the authors career. After successive
disappointments, Naipaul was finally awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2001.
Coinciding with this major event as it does, Half a
Life becomes involved in questions that are beyond its individual scope. What
has been Naipauls contribution to world literature, and does this new novel advance
that contribution in any way? Does Half a Life
represent a retreading of old ground for Naipaul, or a departure to something new?
Arguably,
Half a Life is Naipauls first novel
in 22 years. Some, including Naipaul himself, may dispute this, but it can be convincingly
argued that A Bend in the River (1979)
is Naipauls last full-length work of fiction. The
Enigma of Arrival, although subtitled A Novel is largely a work of semi-autobiographical
and philosophical reflection, while A Way in the World uses a combination of styles,
including some short fiction pieces, in building up a narrative sequence. Half A Life brings Naipaul back into the arena of
traditional storytelling. Critics agree that the pinnacle of his achievement in this area
is reflected in the scope, detail, comedy and depth of feeling of A House for Mr. Biswas
(1961). A 22-year gap in sustained imaginative writing for a novelist of world stature is
hugely significant, and it increases the burden of expectation that this new novel carries
for Naipaul aficionados and critics.
But,
even more than for his storytelling prowess, Naipaul is famous for his searing,
unforgiving and controversial portraits of formerly colonized societies struggling towards
self-realization in the postcolonial world. Naipaul as storyteller and Naipaul as
political commentator coalesce in some of his most influential works The Mimic Men (1969) and In a Free State (1971).
In the former novel, Naipaul coins the concept of mimicry, as both the
survival technique and enemy of progress in post-colonial societies. In the latter, he
spares neither the formerly colonized nor the ex-colonizer in his portrait of
crosscurrents of self-delusion amid the spiraling chaos of the African Free
State of the title. In both works, he portrays the tragedy of complete isolation,
alienation and fragmented identities of his characters. Self-knowledge is never a
salvation for Naipauls characters Ralph Singh in The Mimic Men may be intellectually aware of the
forces that have shaped him, but that self-knowledge does not shield him from an enforced
withdrawal from life, still a young man, after a disastrous political career on a
Caribbean island.
This
sounds very nihilistic but it is the self-awareness, the constant probing analysis of the
world around him, which makes a character like Ralph Singh interesting. And it is the
depth of such analysis that has been Naipauls contribution to literature. As despairing and vicious as his conclusions may
be, he is profoundly thorough in exploring the social, political, and historical forces to
which his protagonists choose to react in a particular way. Equally, in terms of his own
controversial persona as a political commentator, he shows the thought processes and
reactions that lead to his conclusions. While he may be ultimately dismissive, his
position is always arrived at by an unsparing attention to detail.
Half a Life combines much of
what has defined Naipauls oeuvre his themes and concerns, his talents and his
failings. The story of the young isolated colonial Indian, Willie Chandran, striving to
make sense of his life in London, and thereafter in an African colony, has many resonances
in Naipauls fiction, and is particularly reminiscent of The Mimic Men. The almost melodic cadence of the
precise, harmonious prose is still there the style that has led Naipaul justifiably
to be called the greatest living writer of English prose. The talent for broad
comic sketches and caricature is also very much in evidence not quite the
out-and-out slapstick of the early novels, but a more controlled barbed satire. A dinner
party sequence, which Naipaul read aloud with great relish at the Dublin Writers Festival,
is a magnificent setpiece in this regard. But Naipaul here, as elsewhere, will win no
prizes for sensitivity or political correctness. Not surprisingly, Third World critics
like Edward Said who have traditionally argued against Naipauls position on the
Third World and his caricatures of Third World types are unlikely to be
impressed with his Marcus described as the son of a West Indian West African, named
after a West African revolutionary, whose conversation centers obsessively on the
recessiveness of the Negro gene. It is obvious, however, that Naipaul is fully aware of
the outrageousness of this thinly veiled attack on C.L.R. James, and he is inviting the
reader to laugh along with him, despite their better instincts.
Some
of Naipauls caricature in Half a Life
is intended merely to be funny, but some carries a far greater weight of thematic intent.
Most significant is the portrait of Willie Chandrans father at the beginning of the
novel, a brilliantly sustained picture of self-delusion and the strongest sequence
in the novel. The fathers story about his upbringing and how he chose to fulfil his
destiny encapsulates every criticism Naipaul has ever made of the Third World, and
particularly Indian society, which Naipaul believes emphasizes backward
concepts like tradition and fate. The characterization of the father also encompasses
typically Naipaulian concerns about the tragedy of the absence of possibility to realize
individual potential in such a society. Indeed, Willie Chandrans father is doomed to
failure even as he tries. Naipaul pours authorial scorn on his pathetic attempts to
follow the Mahatmas call and live a life of sacrifice by dropping out of
university without telling anyone, and forcing himself to marry an Untouchable woman by
whom he is revolted.
As an ironic contrast, Naipaul shows this supposedly unsophisticated
and invisible woman as possessing a strong sense of purpose. Naipaul shows a society where
action is futile, cloaked in self-delusion, and where people have no ability to progress.
Most significant about the fathers narration, however, is how convinced he is of the
honesty of his attempts, and the validity of his personal sacrifices. The gap between his
convictions and the reality of his life makes him at once a despicable and a tragic
figure. This kind of duality is often apparent in Naipauls characters, and even in
his descriptions of characters in his non-fiction, where it functions as a questioning of
his own authorial voice.
Doomed
stasis is what Willie Chandran seeks to escape and like Naipaul characters before him,
mere disgust at what he has left behind will not save him. In the great metropolis of
London, he experiences a complete loss of context. Naipaul uses the evocative metaphor of
tourist guides sold in London Underground stations which are meaningless to Willie,
because they require an understanding that the monuments described are linked to important
events. Willie, the colonial, has been denied this cultural knowledge. But he can also
turn his dislocation to his advantage. When he tries out as a writer - his imagination is
a blank page on which he can create a past and contexts that are believable to others
although to Willie they are only a pastiche of disparate impressions built up from
various sources. Again, this is familiar Naipaul territory the colonial has the
power to mask his identity in a myriad of ways and a lack of context can be a powerful
weapon.
Halfway
through the novel, there is a perceptible change. Willie Chandran seems to experience
something not attempted in Naipauls fiction before. He meets Ana, a
Portuguese-African woman, with whom he falls in love and has a pleasurable, satisfying
sexual relationship. When he decides to go to Africa with her, it is a panicked attempt to
escape London, but it does carry a sense of possibility with it. In Africa, however, many
of the old themes come to the fore. Willie keeps his Indian passport and £20 as insurance
against the time he may need to escape, and the local Africans steal these from him in a
sinister wielding of their power. The Portuguese community is as enclosed and
dependent on its own myths as the Indian one which Willie had sought to escape. As Willie
grows away from Ana, he attempts to find freedom in cliched sexual encounters with African
prostitutes. When he finally leaves Ana, it is with the full realization that his life
with her was only another sort of protected half-life, with obvious parallels to the life
his father had lived before him.
There
is a note of hope at the end. Willie Chandran, unlike Ralph Singh, is not content to be at
peace with himself merely by sitting at a desk and analyzing his past. Instead, he
expresses disgust at what he has wasted, and seems to look forward to the unused half of
his life as a new beginning. At the same time, Naipaul cannot convince the reader of what
potential Willie has to become a fully realized man of action - and the uncertainty is still there as to whether
the will for change is enough.
For
a reader coming to Naipaul for the first time, Half A
Life can be fresh and exciting, and it is representative of his style and
ideas. As always, it is beautifully written and some sequences are stunningly powerful and
effective particularly the section set in India. For readers who are used to
Naipaul, and who are used to his ideas and his way of treating them, the fact that he has
developed his themes no further may come as a disappointment.
- Anne Sheridan