ICSA E-Newsletter
Vol. 4, No. 2
June
2005
The Grammatical Fiction: Totalism,
Solipsism, and the Dispensing of Existence in
Modern Literature
Abstract
Two well-known literary novels of the twentieth
century captured the essence of life under a
totalitarian regime: Arthur Koestler’s
Darkness at Noon and George Orwell’s
Nineteen Eighty-Four. In this study I will
examine other fictional literary works of high
quality that capture the same or similar
experiences of members of totalist groups. This
study does not pretend to be all-inclusive, and
merely includes works that came to my attention
that are of particular interest or artistic
merit. Only works in English or English
translation are considered. By comparing
Koestler’s and Orwell’s novels to One Man’s
Bible by Gao Xinjiang, Three Continents
by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Oyster by Janette
Turner Hospital, and Heavenly Deception by
Maggie Brooks, similarities are demonstrated
among the totalitarian leaders presented in the
first three books and the cult leaders depicted
in the latter three. At the end of the essay, I
explore these themes with reference to Joseph
Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. A list of
alternative titles of interest is included
following the bibliography.
In Arthur Koestler’s classic
novel Darkness at Noon, the prisoner N. S.
Rubashov, once a highly placed Soviet official
and well-respected revolutionary, finds himself
imprisoned at the hands of the man he thinks of
as Number One—Josef Stalin, though the latter is
never named. Through a carefully staged
indoctrination process using two different
inquisitors, Rubashov, knowing that his execution
will soon follow, is finally induced to sign a
confession to crimes of which he is largely
innocent. He comes to believe that confessing is
the right thing to do for the Party and his
country, which he believes is more important than
his mere self—in other words, more important than
the first person singular he once derided as a
“grammatical fiction.”
During the final days of his
imprisonment following his confession, Rubashov
realizes that he has been relieved of his group
identity, and all that now remains to him is his
barely acknowledged individual self. Koestler
writes:
He
was a man who had lost his shadow, released from
every bond. He had followed every thought to its
last conclusion and acted in accordance with it
to the very end; the hours which remained to him
belonged to that silent partner, whose realm
started just where logical thought ended. He had
christened it the ‘grammatical fiction’ with that
shamefacedness about the first person singular
which the Party had inculcated in its disciples.
(Koestler, p. 201)
When Rubashov was still a
rising star in the Party, he liked to dismiss the
idea that the individual self exists as an entity
apart from the Party or Number One, viewing the
self as nothing more than an artificial
convention of language. To Rubashov, only the
Party (at that point totally controlled by Number
One) and its historical destiny truly exist. It
is from this attitude that the totalist trait
known as “dispensing of existence,” as described
by Robert J. Lifton in his 1961 study, Thought
Reform and the Psychology of Totalism,
derives its justification. Of that trait, Lifton
wrote: “Existence comes to depend upon creed (I
believe, therefore I am), upon submission (I
obey, therefore I am) and beyond these, upon a
sense of total merger with the ideological
movement” (Lifton, 1989, p. 434). Although
Rubashov is still alive (albeit not for long)
when he muses disparagingly about the
“grammatical fiction,” he has effectively already
ceased to exist, even in his own mind.
In another classic novel,
George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four,
Winston Smith, who has been arrested for
“thoughtcrimes” against the state of Oceania and
against the Party headed by Big Brother, is
ultimately coerced into accepting that there can
be no reality other than the one currently
prescribed by the Party. At one point before his
ultimate conversion, Smith insists that the past
is an objective reality whose existence is
validated through memory. He pleads to the
inquisitor O’Brien, “It is outside oneself. How
can you control memory? You have not controlled
mine!” To which O’Brien replies,
On
the contrary, you have not controlled it.
… You are here because you have failed in
humility, in self-discipline. You would not make
the act of submission which is the price of
sanity. You preferred to be a lunatic, a minority
of one. (Orwell, p. 214)
Thus, O’Brien is in effect
asserting that any failure of a person’s
perceived reality to conform to the reality
endorsed by the Party is nothing more than a
moral failure, a mere lack of self-discipline.
Both Koestler’s and Orwell’s
novels were first published in the 1940s, when
two horrifying totalitarian regimes—those of
Hitler and Stalin—bestrode the world. Darkness
at Noon and Nineteen Eighty-Four are
perhaps the best novels in English or English
translation to capture what it is like to live
under totalism, and to give insight into the
inherently twisted logic that makes totalism
possible. Totalism aspires to nothing less than
to recreate the world in its own image. Whenever
perceived reality differs from the prescribed
view, it is the perceiver who must surely be at
fault. In his study of brainwashing in China,
Lifton calls this process of denial “doctrine
over person” (Lifton, 1989, p. 430).
In my search for
high-quality literary novels that describe life
under a totalitarian regime, I was unable to find
anything in English that treats life under the
Nazi regime from the standpoint of a participant
or an enfranchised citizen. Of course, there are
probably memoirs that treat this topic, but for
the purposes of my study, I have confined my
search to works of fiction.
I did, however, come across
an excellent novel that describes the life of
citizens in China during the Great Cultural
Revolution—Gao Xingjian’s One Man’s Bible.
This novel, by the Nobel Prize-winning author of
Soul Mountain, captures with great beauty
and sadness the insanity that convulsed a whole
nation during those few years.
One Man’s Bible opens
with a famous artist, formerly from China but now
living in the West, looking out from his hotel
room in Hong Kong, where he is staying with his
German lover, Marguerite. He is stirred to
remember the tumultuous years he endured before
he escaped to the West, and the novel flips back
and forth between those memories and his present
life. Gao uses the third person to recount his
character’s memories of the past; but, in an
unusual stylistic twist, he uses the second
person when describing the character’s
present. During his reveries, the protagonist
remembers times when he was able to escape being
imprisoned or killed only by participating in the
swirling tides of violent reform. Musing on it
now, he declares, “The justice you seek is this
joker, and you slaughter for this joker. So you
must shout this joker’s slogans and, losing your
own voice, learn to parrot words; hence you are
recreated, your memories erased” (Gao, p. 168).
Later, the protagonist imagines himself
addressing Mao in his bathrobe, saying,
You really lived fully as a human being, and it
must be admitted that you possessed
individuality, that you really were a Superman.
You succeeded in dominating China, and your ghost
still hovered over more than one billion Chinese.
Your influence was so powerful that it spread to
all parts of the world, and it was pointless to
deny this.
What he wanted to tell Mao
was, ‘You made every single person speak your
words.’” (Gao, pp. 404‑405)
This latter passage reveals
the essence of totalism: The totalist leader is
the Superman, and he alone is permitted to
possess individuality. In the totalist world,
only the leader truly exists; everyone else, to
the extent that he or she is a less-than-perfect
reflection of the totalist leader, is in danger
of being relegated to nonexistence. The life of a
totalist leader may thus be likened to that of a
person who lives in a Hall of Mirrors; wherever
he looks, he demands to see his own reflection
staring back. His goal is to recreate the world
in his own image, and he can brook no deviance.
The Oxford English
Dictionary, Second Edition (1989), defines
solipsism as “the view or theory that self is
the only object of real knowledge or the only
thing really existent.” A totalist leader is an
example of solipsism personified, for his goal is
to render all the world into the image of the
only thing he trusts—himself. As far as he is
concerned, nothing else exists.
Luckily, leaders of
religious cults are not in positions of absolute
power comparable to those commanded by Hitler,
Stalin, or Mao, though this is not due to any
lack of ambition. The ideological claims of Jim
Jones, Herf Applewhite, or Shoko Asahara are no
less extreme than those made by Gao’s Superman,
Orwell’s Big Brother, or Koestler’s Number One.
All ultimately demonstrated through their actions
that, as far as they were concerned, only their
own existence mattered; if they themselves must
pass away, then so must those who recreated
themselves in their image; and as for those who
stood against them, they could be dispensed with
if necessary.
In his 1999 study of the
Japanese terror cult Aum Shinri Kyo and
comparable cult phenomenon, Destroying the
Word to Save It, Lifton returns to his
concept of the “dispensing of existence,” and
comments:
Finally, in their most draconian manifestation,
totalistic environments tend to press toward the
dispensing of existence, an absolute
division between those who have a right to exist
and those who possess no such right. That
division can remain merely judgmental or
ideological, but it can also become murderous, as
in Aum, which rendered such a “dispensation”
altruistic by offering a “higher existence” to
those it killed. Aum ultimately became convinced
that no one outside the cult had the right to
exist because all others, unrelated as they were
to the guru, remained hopelessly defiled.
(Lifton, 1999, p. 26)
In my search for literary
works that depict totalist leaders in a context
other than that of a totalitarian regime, I found
a handful of novels that possess literary merit,
which I will discuss here.
The first novel I would like
to examine is Three Continents, by Ruth
Prawer Jhabvala, first published in 1987.
Three Continents is the story of a pair of
twins, Michael and Harriet Wishwell, raised in a
wealthy and influential East Coast American
family, who are drawn into an Eastern religious
cult led by an eccentric triad of characters: an
elderly Indian gentleman, known as the Rawul; his
consort, known as the Rani; and their adopted
son, called Crishi. As the novel progresses, the
twins move first to England, and then to India,
and Harriet recounts the twins’ slow but
inexorable loss of their independent identities,
as Crishi—who turns out to be the real leader of
the cult—marries Harriet and sets his sights
unabashedly on claiming the Wishwell family
fortune. Eventually, he succeeds by arranging the
death of the ever-faithful Michael; and he even
manages to get Michael’s grieving sister to
attest to the validity of Michael’s forged
suicide note—even though it deeds their entire
inheritance over to Crishi. Jhabvala’s novel is
brilliant in the way it shows how a pair of
idealistic young people can be manipulated
through a subtle and slow process into supporting
a militaristic and materialistic cult—the very
opposite of their original ideals—and it is very
disturbing because it ends with Harriet
completely losing everything she once valued,
including her own identity.
Another novel that deserves
high praise for its literary quality is Janette
Turner Hospital’s Oyster. This is a
complex and beautiful novel by an author who, in
my opinion, deserves to be mentioned in the same
breath as Margaret Atwood, Don DeLillo, or other
contemporary literary stars. In Oyster,
Hospital strikes an artful balance between
suspense on the one hand and emotional power and
intellectual depth on the other. Oyster,
set in the Australian outback, in a remote corner
of Queensland, describes a small town called
Outer Maroo that has a terrible secret. All the
inhabitants of Outer Maroo hope to remain lost in
obscurity, with their town permanently missing
from the maps of the area. Yet inevitably, they
cannot remain lost forever, and an American woman
and an Australian man, the first seeking a
missing stepdaughter, the second a missing son,
arrive simultaneously in the town, where they
believe their missing children may be found. And
suddenly the residents’ terrible memories are
exposed.
A few years earlier, a man
who called himself Oyster had come to the area,
had set up an opal mine, and had begun to attract
a large following among young people who were
drawn to his teachings and his community. Oyster
speaks darkly of the coming millennium, but, in
the end, decides not to wait for the end to
overtake them, but chooses to precipitate it
himself. He becomes, to borrow Lifton’s term from
his 1999 study, a “world-ending guru,” but the
only world he ends is that of himself and his
followers. The American woman and the Australian
man are left with nothing more than a blackened
mineshaft to scrape at abstractedly, while they
remember their lost stepdaughter and son.
Another novel of particular
merit and relevance is Maggie Brooks’ Heavenly
Deception. This novel, based upon Brooks’ own
real experiences attending workshops sponsored by
the Reverend Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church
in England, describes a young woman named Carmen
who initially agrees to attend a Unification
Church workshop only because she wants to find
out if it might be the same group her sister
joined. Her sister had suddenly disappeared,
leaving only a note that ended cryptically,
“ITPN, Lucy.” Carmen soon realizes that she has
indeed found the right group, but at first finds
no trace of Lucy. She becomes caught up in the
extraordinarily well-calibrated manipulations of
a Unification Church workshop, in which she is
alternatively praised and berated, until by
degrees she feels she must go along with their
increasingly extreme teachings; otherwise, she
will appear closed-minded and hard-hearted. By
the time she finally does meet up with Lucy,
Carmen is completely trapped herself. The novel
contains little external action; it is all
internal, as it recounts Carmen’s losing battle
to retain her own individuality and viewpoint
against the relentless assault mounted by the
Unification Church teachers and members. I myself
was drawn into the Unification Church in 1976
through a workshop program very similar to the
one Brooks describes, and I can attest to the
accuracy of her descriptions, which differ from
my own experience in only a few minor details.
The particular value of the
Brooks novel is that it demonstrates that the
dispensing of existence need not be confined to a
decision of life or death. It also refers to a
much more subtle internal death, in which
individuals remain physically alive, while all
that makes them individual—all that distinguishes
them from the cult leader and his solipsistic
universe—has nearly passed away. Brooks notes at
one point:
She suddenly had a wild idea that the old Gary,
the one that he had been before the Family, was
sending out weak and plaintive signals, telling
her that he was reachable, pleading with her to
batter down the implacable new Gary that
contained him as though he was not trapped inside
there of his own free will but bottled up like a
genie. Perhaps if she found Lucy, she would find
that Lucy, too, had been shrunk and reduced and
packaged inside a brand new Lucy, empty except
for a small frightened voice saying ‘Look at me’,
‘Find me’. But Gary didn’t have parents, Gary
didn’t have a brother who had cared enough to
come looking. Suddenly she felt that their
conversation was not about a depth of feeling or
affection that might or might not exist between
them but about something far more serious. She
didn’t know what a soul was, but it seemed to her
that Gary had lost one, and that some little part
of him was mourning and demanding recognition of
its passing. (Brooks, p. 131)
This passage speaks at once
of the submergence of the individual self in the
solipsistic universe of the totalist leader, and
the ever-persistent voice of that submerged self,
which never ceases clamoring to be remembered.
Followers of totalist groups are almost always
ashamed of the persistent voice of their own
individuality, believing it to be a link to Satan
or sinfulness, but it never ceases crying out for
acknowledgment. And it is this fact that gives
humanity hope that it will ultimately resist the
claims of solipsistic leaders of totalist groups.
The final novel I am going
to look at is Joseph Conrad’s Heart of
Darkness, which is usually interpreted as an
indictment of colonialism. In that famous
novella, Marlowe, an English seaman, is engaged
by a Belgian company to take a steamboat up river
to the heart of the Congolese jungle. The man he
has been sent to search for has a reputation that
reaches far and wide; his name is Kurtz, and he
arrived in the Congo several years previous with
the intention not only of securing ivory for his
corporate masters, but of civilizing the African
people in the process. But something has gone
horribly wrong. By the time Marlowe eventually
meets up with Kurtz, the latter lies seriously
ill, and the local people defend him with the awe
and superstition of a god. Around his cabin is a
fence upon which have been placed the skulls of
his enemies. When Marlowe discovers and reads
Kurtz’ written thesis, which expounds how he
hoped to civilize the Africans, he finds at the
end—obviously scrawled in Kurtz’ hand much later
than the rest—the words “Exterminate all the
brutes!” (Conrad, p. 51) Here is the crudest
possible expression of dispensing of existence.
Yet Marlowe continues to be impressed by the
charismatic power of Kurtz, insisting that he is
a “remarkable man.” And as Marlowe leaves the
inner station with the seriously ill Kurtz,
taking him for the slow voyage downriver, he
remains loyal in his determination to carry out
the wishes of the dying man. Of Kurtz’ hubris,
Marlowe observes,
He
had kicked himself loose of the earth. Confound
the man! He had kicked the very earth to pieces.
He was alone, and I before him did not know
whether I stood on the ground or floated in the
air. (Conrad, p. 67).
Yet perhaps at the very end
Kurtz does finally realize the sheer absurdity
and solipsism of his position, for in his dying
words he cries out a judgment upon himself and
what he has done. Waking briefly from fevered
dreams, Kurtz gasps out the words for which this
character is best remembered: “The horror! The
horror!”
References
Nonfiction Works
Lifton, Robert J.
Destroying the World to Save It: Aum Shinrikyo,
Apocalyptic Violence, and the New Global
Terrorism. New York: Metropolitan Books,
1999.
Lifton, Robert J. Thought
Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of
“Brainwashing” in China. Chapel Hill, N.C.:
The University of North Carolina Press, 1989.
First published in 1961.
Novels
Brooks, Maggie. Heavenly
Deception. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1985.
Conrad, Joseph. Heart of
Darkness. New York: W. W. Norton & Company
Inc., 1963. First published in 1902.
Gao Xinjiang. One Man’s
Bible. New York: Harper Collins Publishers,
1999. Translated from the Chinese by Mabel Lee.
Hospital, Janette Turner.
Oyster. Toronto: Vintage Canada, 1997.
Jhabvala, Ruth Prawer.
Three Continents. New York: William Morrow
and Company, Inc., 1987.
Koestler, Arthur.
Darkness at Noon. New York: Bantam Books,
1968. Translated by Daphne Hardy. First published
in 1941.
Orwell, George. Nineteen
Eighty-Four. London: Penguin Books, 1949.
Alternative Literary Works of Interest
Atwood, Margaret. Cat’s
Eyes. This novel provides a good example of
what is sometimes called a “one-on-one cult”;
that is, an abusive or manipulative personal
relationship.
Atwood, Margaret. The
Handmaid’s Tale. This famous dystopian novel,
which was consciously modeled after Orwell’s
Nineteen Eight-Four, imagines what might
happen if a Taliban-style religious
fundamentalist regime took over America. It is,
therefore, a novel about both a totalitarian
regime and a religious cult at the same time.
Ellison, Ralph. Invisible
Man.
Though this novel is primarily about race
relations in America in the first half of the
twentieth century, as told from the point of view
of a young African American, it is also a fine
study of the narrator’s journey into, and out of,
a Marxist political cult known as The
Brotherhood.
Lurie, Alison. Imaginary
Friends. This satirical novel describes how
two sociology professors, one a highly respected
academic of an old school, and the other a young
academic eager to please his mentor, attempt to
study a small town cult that believes it is
communicating with aliens through telepathy. The
older professor ends up becoming one of the
group’s leaders. While very comic, this novel is
also very clever in showing how even a
sophisticated individual can get swept up in a
cult.
King, Laurie. A Darker
Place. This is a reasonably competent
thriller novel involving an academic who agrees
to go undercover into a cult with branches in
Sedona (Arizona) and in England. Though not a
truly literary work, it does have some merit; for
example, in the way it makes clever use of
alchemy as controlling metaphor.
Orwell, George. Animal
Farm. This is Orwell’s other famous novel
that examines tyranny and the propaganda that is
employed to justify tyranny, although in this
novel the tyranny occurs in the context of an
imaginary farm where the animals have overthrown
the farmer.
Rachlin, Nahid. Foreigner.
This well-written novel describes how a
thoroughly Americanized woman of Iranian
background and with a promising academic career
is forced to stay in her homeland for much longer
than she originally planned. The longer she stays
in Iran, the more she finds herself transforming
into the traditional sort of woman that she is
expected to be in that country: domestic,
unacademic, retiring.
Spinrad, Norman. Mind
Games. This novel, by a writer known for his
science-fiction works, is not a “sci-fi” novel,
although it has some of the atmosphere of one. A
man gets entangled with a cult that is intent on
luring Hollywood celebrities and ends up meeting
the cult leader himself, a man of overwhelming
charisma. He quickly realizes he is in over his
head, and he can extricate himself only by
cutting what amounts to a “deal with the devil.”
Though the group makes a modest pretense of not
being based on Scientology, it is clear that the
Church of Scientology was the model for the cult
in this story. The book suffers, however, from
shallow characterizations and a merely competent
literary style. |