A Comedy Without Light
Louis-Ferdinand Céline's
Journey to the End of the Night
(
Voyage au bout de la nuit) is
an essential work of absurdist literature - a worthy companion-piece to Albert
Camus's
The Outsider and Samuel Beckett's
Waiting for Godot.
A book that is both savagely funny and monstrously bleak, it takes a long
and critical look at human nature and leaves little room for optimism.
Céline's assessment of humanity is uncompromisingly nihilistic, and
through the barely endurable experiences of the writer's fictional alter
ego, Ferdinand Bardamu, we come to see the world we inhabit as nothing more
than a Hell which mankind has created for itself, out of greed, spite and
stupidity.
Céline's first novel (for which the writer drew heavily on his own
personal experiences), it was published in 1932 and soon became one of the
most influential works of literature of the 20th century, having a significant
impact on writers as diverse as Jean Genet, Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs,
Günter Grass and, of course, Beckett.
Beginning with the horrors of the First World War, which are described in
a colloquial, matter-of-fact way that adds to the stark grotesqueness of
the situation,
Journey to the End of the Night charts mankind's ever
worsening decline towards primal savagery, culminating in the injustices
of the present day. Céline sees the first three decades of the
20th century as the beginning of a continuing, unstoppable process of dehumanisation
and moral decay, driven and accelerated by man's inherent nastiness and unerring capacity
for self-destruction. Political and capitalist forces, the product of
untameble vices such as greed and intolerance, provide the motor for the
engine that is driving man ineluctably towards his eventual extinction. Compelling
and repellent in equal measure, but with a message that is hard to refute,
this is a book that feels harrowingly pertinent for our own time.
After surviving the blood-saturated abattoir that was the stage of the so-called
War to End All Wars, Céline's drifting anti-hero has a brief sortie
in French colonial Africa and finds himself in a tropical nightmare that
strongly evokes Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness. This flagrant
foray into pungent anti-colonial sentiment is followed by the book's most
outrageously satirical passage, set in a rabidly commercialised America that,
in a similar vein to Chaplin's
Modern
Times, shows the human animal being robbed of its last vestiges of
autonomy. In this manic dystopian free-for-all, man is nothing more
than an unthinking component of an infernal machine, our totem to the Great
God Profit.
Céline's one great novel (his subsequent work has nothing like the
literary merit or impact of this one) conjures up a vision of man's collective
failure that evokes and transcends Dante's
Inferno and Milton's
Paradise
Lost. No longer can we attribute our woes to dark Satanic forces.
There is no malevolent fallen angel, no tempter in the garden. We have
brought all this upon ourselves. There is a heart-wrenching poignancy
to the final section of the novel, where the resolve of the central protagonist
to help others as an impoverished doctor in a poor district of Paris is gradually chiselled
away. But by this stage he knows, as we do, that he is tilting at windmills.
To quote the poet Blake, we are born to misery and must accept
that we live in endless night. After wallowing in a swamp of unrelenting
pessimism for the best part of four hundred pages, the narrative closes with
the merest whisper of hope. Bardamu's acceptance of his predicament
- and hence the fate of all mankind - is in itself a sort of redemption.
You can't help wondering, though, if even here Céline is being ironic.
© James Travers 2019
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