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Explosive narratives : terrorism and anarchy in the works of Emile Zola PDF

194 Pages·2010·3.87 MB·English
by  Febles
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Explosive Narratives Terrorism and Anarchy in the Works of Emile Zola FAUX TITRE 350 Etudes de langue et littérature françaises publiées sous la direction de Keith Busby, †M.J. Freeman, Sjef Houppermans et Paul Pelckmans Explosive Narratives Terrorism and Anarchy in the Works of Emile Zola Eduardo A. Febles AMSTERDAM - NEW YORK, NY 2010 Illustration cover: Emile Henry, Café Terminus Paris, 12 February, 1894. Silk screen print by Flavio Costantini, 1971, www.christiebooks.com; The Art of Anarchy by Flavio Costantini, 1975 (Cienfuegos Press, London). Cover design: Pier Post. The paper on which this book is printed meets the requirements of ‘ISO 9706: 1994, Information and documentation - Paper for documents - Requirements for permanence’. Le papier sur lequel le présent ouvrage est imprimé remplit les prescriptions de ‘ISO 9706: 1994, Information et documentation - Papier pour documents - Prescriptions pour la permanence’. ISBN: 978-90-420-3064-0 E-Book ISBN: 978-90-420-3065-7 © Editions Rodopi B.V., Amsterdam - New York, NY 2010 Printed in The Netherlands Table of Contents 7 Acknowledgments Introduction: Anarchy, Entropy, Naturalism 9 Anarchy 22 Entropy 25 Naturalism 28 Chapter 1 Souvarine’s Vanishing Act: The Effacement of Anarchy in Germinal 33 The Ambiguous Politics of Germinal 36 The Resurgence of Anarchy from the Underground Mine 45 Undermining Narratives: The Sub-text of Anarchy 55 Chapter 2 Anarchy as Narrative Capital: The Emplotment of Terrorism in Paris 65 The Political Discourse in Paris 73 Anarchy as Narrative Capital 89 Towards Utopia: Taking the Bite Out of Anarchy 96 Chapter 3 The Anarchic Commune as World’s Fair in Travail 109 Ideological Welding: Fourier and Anarchism 123 Revolutionary Rape as Entropic Heat Death 130 Beyond Narrative Entropy: Utopia 140 The Anarchic Commune as World’s Fair 151 Epilogue Zola’s Dream 167 Bibliography 181 Index 193 Acknowledgments The process of writing a book can be compared to an anarchic commune. In the true spirit of mutual aid, I have been fortunate enough to receive constant help throughout the many stages of this project. Though anarchy refuses the search for origins, the topic for this book was nevertheless born very specifically during a seminar on modernism led by Professor Robert Scholes at Brown University, where I completed my graduate work. My formative years in that institution were indelibly marked by the finest scholars who were always supportive and my colleagues who inspired me to perform at my very best. Thanks to all the Professors at Rochambeau House on Prospect Street and especially to Edward Ahearn who was my director and mentor: his keen insight into the problem of literature and politics has shaped my own thoughts in the matter. Furthermore, his caring approach to teaching and pedagogy remains with me to this day. I also want to express a nostalgic salute to the many special moments shared with Deborah Hahn and Jacinta Wright. My years at Simmons College have been the most productive pro- fessionally. Rare is it to find an institution that allows individuals to cultivate their interests with such freedom and in an atmosphere of honest collegiality. I want to extend a heart-felt thanks to all my col- leagues in the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures: Professor Dánisa Bonacic, Professor Florence Ciret-Strecker, Profes- sor Louise Cohen, Professor Deborah Fraioli, Professor Raquel Halty, and Professor Alister Inglis. The Chair of my Department, Professor Dolores Peláez-Benítez, embodies the most beautiful aspects of a utopian fantasy without ever losing her grounding in reality. Thank you, my friend. I also want to thank Professors Anthony S. Zielonka and Dean de la Motte for reading the manuscript and offering support when I needed it the most. Henry Majewski and José Santos are my intel- lectual traveling companions and have helped me weather moments of self-doubt. 8 Explosive Narratives My parents and family provided me with the strength to accomplish my goals. My parents are the fountain of my thirst for knowledge and I thank them for instilling in me the curiosity that has driven all of my endeavors. I dedicate this book to Steven Ransom who has helped me to manage the entropy in my life. I love you. This project was supported in part by a grant from the Simmons College Fund for Research. I wish to thank Mme Danielle Coussot who allowed me to use the wonderful resources of the Centre Zola in Paris, and Mme Michèle Sacquin, Chief Curator of the manuscripts department at the Richelieu branch of the Bibliothèque Nationale de France for permitting me to consult the original notebooks for Travail. Parts of Chapter 2 were first published as an article under the title “Souvarine’s Vanishing Act: The Effacement of Anarchy in Zola’s Germinal” in Excavatio, XXI, nos 1-2 (2006): 184-197. Material from the article is reproduced with permission of Dr. Anna Gural-Migdal, Editor of Excavatio. Parts of Chapter 3 were first published as an article under the title “The Anarchic Commune as World’s Fair in Zola’s Travail” in Nineteenth Century French Studies, volume 36, nos 3 & 4 (Spring- Summer 2008): 286-304. Material from the article is reproduced with permission of the publisher, the University of Nebraska Press. Parts of the Epilogue appeared as a book review of Frigerio, Vittorio, ed. Emile Zola au pays de l’anarchie. Grenoble, ELLUG [Editions littéraires et linguistiques de l’Université de Grenoble], 2006 which appeared in Nineteenth-Century French Studies, volume 36, nos 3 & 4 (Spring-Summer 2008): 368-369. Material from the review is reproduced with permission of the publisher, the University of Nebraska Press. I am also indebted to the team of editors at Rodopi Press and the Faux Titre Series for their gracious assistance, especially to Professor Christa Stevens. The cover image, “Terminus,” by Flavio Costantini, is reproduced with permission of the Kate Sharpley Library, Stuart Christie and his website www.christiebooks.com. Thank you so much for allowing me to use this beautiful image gratis. Introduction Anarchy, Entropy, Naturalism Throughout recent history, the ghost of terrorism has haunted modern democracies. At times, it appeared under the guise of a die- hard Communist; at others, it donned a gray-hooded sweatshirt, camouflaged its stare behind large sunglasses, and was named the Unabomber. In its latest manifestation, it is a religious fanatic and comes from the Middle East. In Belle Epoque France, it was a bomb- throwing anarchist. The changing image of the terrorist underscores the very fact that it is historically grounded. Yet, even to advance the seemingly innocuous thesis that terrorism is socially constructed can backfire because public authorities try to present the phenomenon as an essential category by appealing to values of good and evil. Constructionist theories do not erase the reality of terrorism but rather analyze its structural function within a society through a study of competing ideologies as inscribed within discursive practices, from hegemonic to subversive. But what if terrorism1 was precisely that which cannot be apprehended, that which cannot be configured symbolically inside a social structure? Another specter looms on the recent horizon of terrorism. Though hesitant at first to include any mention of the September 11th events in the present study, I realized that its very absence would already con- vey meaning: an auto-censorship that revealed the very resistance to analysis that I have posited at the heart of terrorism. This resistance comes to the fore in the articles that appeared immediately after the 1 For the purposes of this book, I will use Philip Jenkins’s definition of terrorism as “violent acts carried out randomly against nonmilitary, civilian targets, with the aim of inspiring fear in the wider population” (27). 10 Explosive Narratives attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. For instance, in “A creeping horror,” published in the front page of The New York Times on September 12th, Kleinfield focuses on an oxymoronic “unfathomable realization” of a gaping hole, a void in the middle of the Twin Towers, which symbolically circumscribes the limits of our understanding faced with the sheer horror of the attack. Kleinfield writes: The horror arrived in episodic bursts of chilling disbelief, signified first by trembling floors, sharp eruptions, cracked windows. There was the actual unfathomable realization of a gaping, flaming hole in first one of the tall towers, and then the same thing all over again in its twin... . For several panic-stricken hours yesterday morning, people in Lower Manhattan witnessed the inexpressible, the incomprehensible, the unthinkable (Kleinfield 1A, emphasis added). Furthermore, the destruction of the Towers registered the loss of a landmark which provided meaning to the urban landscape of New York. In the same article, a transit worker is quoted as saying “You always look for those two buildings. You always know where you are when you see those two buildings. And now they’re gone” (Kleinfield 7A). Terrorism defies our rational sense of the world and creates a semantic gap—what Kleinfield identifies as “the inexpressible, the incomprehensible, the unthinkable”—by posing as that which resists understanding, as that which is devoid of meaning. At the center of terror, the void or perhaps, the terror because of the void. The scope of this book is far more modest than an interpretation of the terrorist attacks of September 11th. My goals are rather to study the literary function of the anarchist figure in three of Emile Zola’s novels: Germinal, Paris, and Travail. Yet, through my studies of the bomb-throwing anarchists at the end of the 19th century, I could not help but to think of recent events in American history. In some ways, the manner in which we apprehend the violence of terrorism is informed by earlier tropes and images forged at that time period. In the novel Paris, the main character Pierre Froment witnesses the explosion of an anarchist bomb. Zola describes the event thus: Soudainement, ce fut le grondement de la foudre, une explosion formidable, comme si la terre s’ouvrait, comme si l’hôtel foudroyé s’anéantissait. Toutes les vitres des maisons voisines éclatèrent, tombèrent avec un bruit retentissant de grêle. Une flamme d’enfer avait embrasé un instant la rue, la poussière et la fumée furent telles, que les quelques passants aveuglés hurlèrent d’épouvante, dans le saisissement de cette fournaise où ils croyaient culbuter... Et, d’abord, il [Pierre] ne distingua rien, la fumée âcre noyait tout. Puis, il aperçut les murs fendus, l’étage supérieur éventré, le pavé défoncé, semé de décombres. Dehors, le landau qui allait entrer, n’avait rien eu, ni un cheval atteint, ni même la caisse

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Explosive Narratives: Terrorism and Anarchy in the Works of Emile Zola explores the genealogy of modern day terrorism through a close study of the anarchist figure in three of Emile Zola's novels: Germinal, Paris, and Travail. The study links the crisis of representation registered at the end of the
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