This
is what the First City blog had to say about Animal’s People, one of
the six books shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. The Prize was
announced last evening in London. The winner is… well, inconsequential
to this post.
I had commented in defense of the book in their comments section to the piece, but I deleted it for several reasons.
One
is that I think it merits an entire post [long overdue now], and isn’t
meant as a defense as much as it’s about my [selective] views on the
book in the context of these remarks. So here goes…
On befriending Jaanwar [Animal]
“I used to be human once”
is how he starts, hinting with his first words, that a genuine
friendship between you and him is, if not impossible, a questionable
proposition.
Jaanwar walks on all fours. His arse is higher than
his head and he can smell out people who haven’t washed their crotches,
in a crowd.
Jaanwar will have you know at the outset that he
doesn’t value your opinion much. He’ll deliberately mislead you. He’ll
pretend to trust you. He’ll have you buy into the ostensible innocence
of his most outrageous deeds. He’s manipulative and he thinks it’s all
well within his right to be so unreliable, because, after all, he isn’t
human.
Jaanwar’s words are clever because he is clever. Chaalu.
Street smart. You [Eyes] are meant to get beyond this cleverness. He’s
very clear he doesn’t want your middle class friendship. It’s nothing
but a burden to him unless of course it can either a.) help him walk
straight b.) get him laid. At least that’s what he’ll have you know.
He’s
telling you this story because it must be told. Because he has a duty.
Because he has been infected, by the end, by your [Zafar’s] middle
class notion of fairly won justice. So he thinks you will appreciate
this story, because inexplicable as it is, that’s how, according to
him, your world works.
The New York magazine had it spot on,
when they called it “scabrously funny”. Jaanwar is a wily mischief
maker, and he’ll offer no apology for it. He, who shares an unspoken
bond of mutual respect with scorpions, doesn’t care whether you think
he's adopted an appalling trick of glorifying misery – his
scabrousness, his disdain towards you and the many people who’ve
expressed sympathy over ‘that night’ – or whether you feel pity. He is
unmoved. Show him a miracle, not your sympathy or your hand in
meaningless friendship.
He clearly wants to goad you [Eyes] over
your assumption [which may well be a clichéd perception on his part]
that all villains are bastards, and those that they perpetrate their
villainy upon are allowed a meek dignity that comes with acceptance or
then the haloed righteousness that must burn through nothing less than
a raging rebellion. But it is possible, isn’t it, for someone to be
both [in this case – a bit of] a bastard and the survivor of another’s
bastardry.
Bhopal in a poor guise as Khaufpur
The
metaphor was meant to be ‘ill’-disguised. Given that Bhopal does exist,
that IS has spent 14 years writing and editing for the Bhopal Medical Appeal, and that Khaufpur
is Bhopal, it would be unfair to suggest that setting it here is merely
a gimmick designed to milk the most of Indian exotica. That said, the
cover is a seriously unforgivable disaster, and I wouldn’t blame anyone
for feeling this disgust, purely for its lack of visual appeal.
The Booker Prize
I’m
not surprised that Animal hasn’t won the Booker. It is not ‘expansive’
enough in that it does not speak of generic things that are of interest
or relevance to an ‘international audience’ [the definition of which is
at best truly confounding] like American paranoia, sexual angst or
dysfunctional social constructs; it doesn’t creep around sturdy, time
tested pearls from English literature – either Biblical or non… and I’m
sorry cannot draw up any pithy observation about the fifth book.
And
really, it doesn’t matter. The Booker forum has already brought it as
far as it could in aid of what it [the book] set out to do – [get you
past the cloying 1980s development sector imagery of the cover and] be
heard in what it tells you about the deep, alive and spreading roots of
poison that Dow has sown in Bhopal in the words of someone who
continues to live with the repercussions each waking moment long before
and well after we’re done dispensing our opinion on the literary merits
of his voice.
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
On why Jaanwar doesn’t need the Booker Prize
Posted by H at 2:52 PM
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1 comments:
American paranoia? There surely is no such thing. Was that the wind, or was it a terrorist? AHHH TERRORIST. I better play dead.
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