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Review
Writing off Europe
By Gabriela Zabala-Notaras and Ismet Redzovic
16 November 2005
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Dead Europe, by Christos Tsiolkas, Sydney: Random House,
2005, 411 pp.
Dead Europe, Christos Tsiolkass third novel, is
a deeply disturbing work. The author believes in a Europe that
is monolithically bleak and beyond redemption, and he has constructed
characters and situations that conform to this idea.
The main protagonist is Isaac, an Australian-born photographer
of Greek background, who travels to Greece for an exhibition of
his work, which receives little attention but provides him with
the opportunity to meet relatives and friends. He is dismayed
to find them disillusioned and uninterested in politics, having
instead embraced racism and consumerism. He decides to travel
to Europes major historical and cultural centres, such as
Paris, Prague, Berlin, London and Cambridge, where he chronicles
through his photography the decay of contemporary, or as Tsiolkas
himself describes it, post-communist Europe.
The novel is organised through a series of plots and sub-plots
that are rather contrived and seem, more than anything else, a
means of playing with different styles, each supposedly providing
a different perspective. One of the recurring leitmotifs has Isaac
exploring his Greek heritage in a remote peasant village. He discovers
that his relatives murdered the young Jewish boy left in their
care by his father when the Germans were about to invade Greece
during World War II.
The murder, in Tsiolkass presentation, speaks to the
perceived entrenched anti-Semitism in the backward regions where
peasant traditions prevail. The boy assumes a sort of supernatural
presence, appearing as a menacing image in each photo Isaac takes
on his journey. This symbol of racism and superstition is a recurring
theme throughout the novel, with the Jewish boy wreaking vengeance
on those who murdered him and their descendants.
Another strand of the narrative involves Isaac and his lover
Colin. The latter is a working class man of Irish background who
at a young age had some fascist sympathies instilled in him by
his bullying stepfather. Isaacs own parents were heroin
addicts, his father dying from an overdose. His mother was of
peasant background and his father had been involved in left-wing
politics, particularly during his university years in Paris. Both
landed in the working class as migrants in Australia.
Then there is Isaacs metamorphosis into a depraved blood-lusting
parasite. His experiences in Europe leave him as something of
a bloodless, spiritually empty carcass, seeking sustenance, vampire-like,
in violent sexual encounters where he draws blood from his victims.
A particularly ghoulish and silly aspect of the novel has his
mother rescue her son when he winds up in hospital with a mysterious
illness, by cutting herself and at regular intervals feeding Isaac
her blood. Isaacs illness could be a metaphor for AIDS,
but this is as ambiguous and arbitrary as almost everything else
in the novel.
Dead Europe ends on a rather false, life-affirming note.
Transported back to Australia, Isaac is cared for by Colin and
his mother, who has sacrificed her soul in order to save her son.
This could indicate the severing of the ties between Australia
and Europe and an affirmation of family values as a counterweight
to the social and political chaos that characterises Europe, but
it is not clear what the author means.
Tsiolkas, Australian-born (Melbourne, 1965) and of Greek descent,
has written plays, criticism and reviews. A principal theme in
his first two novels was racism. His first novel, Loaded
(1995), was critically acclaimed and made into a film, Head
On (1998, directed by Ana Kokkinos). His second novel,
The Jesus Man (1999), received mixed reviews. Loaded
had some interesting features, in particular the conflict between
a young gay mans search for identity and the expectations
of society, family and the Greek diaspora in Melbournes
working class suburbs. Even in this novel, though, Tsiolkas demonstrates
a predilection for shock tactics.
The Jesus Man is also set in a working class suburb
of Melbourne, against the backdrop of the Whitlam governments
sacking in 1975. The novel traces the life and experiences of
a Greek migrant family and the middle sons depression that
leads ultimately to a grisly murder and his suicide. The more
convincing aspects of the novel are those that concentrate on
the dynamics of Greek migrant family life. The novelists
increasing reliance, however, on grotesque sexual and brutal depictions
indicates an accelerating disorientation.
To his credit, with Dead Europe Tsiolkas attempts to
treat important issues that other Australian writers seem to be
neglecting. He is animated by a desire to discover, behind the
official propaganda, the causes of social and political upheavals.
In an interview posted by the Paperback Bookshop, he explains,The
initial genesis for what is now Dead Europe lay in my responses
to the civil wars that erupted in Yugoslavia at the beginning
of the 1990s. As my ancestry is in the Balkans, I wanted to understand
conflicts that too easily were interpreted by the Western media
as arising from the savagery and irreconcilable differences of
the Balkan people.
Unfortunately, he is artistically unable to transcend his own
disillusionment, which in his case, reflects deep political misconceptions.
He is hardly alone in this, but rather he expresses the views
of a social layer that has drawn very pessimistic conclusions
from the collapse of Stalinism and social reformism. For instance,
in the same interview, he states that there were three deaths
that he claimed gave purpose to the title: the death
of Yugoslavia, of the agrarian and peasant class in Europe and
the other death in the book is connected. It is the death
of communism.... Again, the book is not a legitimising of European
communism; if anything it probably acknowledges the failure. But,
again, I wanted characters to give voice to the devastation wreaked
by the collapse of communism, that though we in the democratic
West celebrate its end, the collapse of such a huge system and
such a key ideology of the Enlightenment brings with it a certain
misery and moral collapse(www.paperbackbooks.com.au/christos.htm#interview).
While there is no doubting Tsiolkass seriousness and
intentionshe spent seven years in researching European history
and writing the novelthe fundamental problem with his approach
is bound up with his ignorance of a specific historical
question, the rise and fall of the USSR and Eastern Europe.
Stalinism was not the outcome of a struggle for Marxism, but
its antithesis. Bureaucratism arose in the 1920s in the Soviet
Union as an opportunist adaptation to the growing isolation of
the economically backward workers state as a consequence
of the failed revolutions in other countries.
An alternative to Stalinism existed, embodied in the Left Opposition,
organised by Trotsky and his co-thinkers in 1923. In the late
1920s, the leaders of the Opposition were arrested and sent into
exile. This assault on Marxism in the Soviet Union culminated
in the great purges and the Moscow Trials, and finally the assassination
of Trotsky in 1940 in Mexico.
By the outbreak of World War II, the communist parties around
the world were thoroughly Stalinised organisations, whose political
aim was to suppress socialist revolution. Although the political
and historical origins of the Stalinist satellite states in Eastern
Europe were different from those of the Soviet Union where the
working class had taken power in a social revolution, these were
also Stalinist regimes and had nothing to do with communism.
In many Eastern European countries, the Red Army was welcomed,
but under the Moscow bureaucracys orders, suppressed the
revolutionary aspirations of the working class and sought to re-install
the weak and discredited bourgeoisie. It was only in response
to the Marshall Plan that the Moscow bureaucracy felt compelled
to carve out its sphere of influence and nationalise most industry
in the region.
In the former Yugoslavia, a deformed workers state
was created through somewhat different means. Having taken power,
the Yugoslav Communist Party, led by Tito, with mass support and
against the wishes and plans of Stalin, undertook an economic
transformation based on nationalisation of industry and trade
and unified different ethnic groups into one entityYugoslavia.
However, this organisational break with Stalin did not constitute
a programmatic break with Stalinism itself. Subsequently, Tito
sought a means of balancing between the two superpowersAmerican
imperialism and the Soviet bureaucracy.
The collapse of Eastern European regimes, therefore, and the
Soviet Union did not signify the collapse of communism, but rather
signifies the collapse of all nationalist based programs including
social reformism and trade unionism.
Tsiolkas, unhappily, identifies Stalinism with communism and
proceeds from this false premise to investigate the ramifications
of their collapse in his novel. By implication, his comment above
attributes to Stalinism a progressive historical role, as an extension
of the ideas of the Enlightenment.
Read metaphorically, his Dead Europe suggests the impossibility
of any progressive solution to the unresolved social and historical
issues that have re-emerged more sharply in what was once the
centre of revolutionary cultural and political ideas, Europe.
Tsiolkas has written off Europe and the European working class.
Skeptical and pessimistic about the working classs ability
to struggle against the ills of capitalism, Tsiolkas attempts
to startle the reader and jolt him or her out of supposed apathy.
Tsiolkass political and historical misconceptions have
aesthetic implications. His Europe is one-dimensional, and he
restricts himself to superficial observations and characterisations
of certain layers in society: the disillusioned middle class,
the Greek peasantry and the most disenfranchised and depraved,
almost lumpen elements. The book resembles a freak show, with
the majority of ordinary people absent from this Europe he has
conjured up out of the most extreme layers and circumstances.
No one is asking Tsiolkas to paint a rosy picture of Europe. The
last two decades has seen a social devastation in most European
centres. Nevertheless, the majority of people do not necessarily
adapt, conform or descend to the basest form of existence. Many
merely survive the best they can.
By bringing to the fore the most extreme situations and characters,
Tsiolkas eliminates the need for complexity and contradiction.
He may disagree, but in our view he has taken a short-cut. The
general emerges through a concrete depiction of the particular
and ordinary. Shock tactics and the grotesque serve only to further
desensitise and alienate.
Where he tries to deal with the not-so-extreme, the characters
and their circumstances are still undeveloped and stereotyped
because they seem to exist only to conform to what Tsiolkas believes
to be true, rather than what really is in general. For
instance, there is a Yugoslav couple who live in Cambridge with
a teacher. The couple, who are educated professionals, now work
as a cleaner and a waiter. They are cynical and anti-Semitic.
The conversations they have with Isaac and the teacher are littered
with academic jargon and are really nothing more than empty sophistry
to justify racist views. This caricature of East European exiles
provides nothing more than grist for the mill for those who insist
that racism is intrinsic to human nature.
The Greek middle classes fare not much better in Tsiolkass
simplistic, one-dimensional portrayal. Hedonistic, self-serving
and cynical, they provide no insights into their own political
and social disillusionment and apathy. The presentation of the
Greek peasantry also lacks social dynamics, as if time has stood
still.
One of the most extreme episodes involves a Russian couple:
the pregnant wife grooms her husband for his homosexual live sex
show, in which his mother appears on stage as narrator. Other
characters include a heroin-addicted mother whose teenage son
prostitutes himself to foreign tourists. There are variations
on these themes, but none that yields any profound insights. In
fact, there is not a single characterincluding Isaac himselfwith
redeeming features or who arouses any sympathy whatsoever. There
are other goings-on, such as bestiality and paedophilia, which
serve no particular purpose and are neither more nor less interesting
than anything else in the book.
It is clear Tsiolkas has reached an impasse; he is profoundly
disoriented and disillusioned. He needs to study the history of
the twentieth history much more critically if his intention is
to write about important matters in a more convincing and truthful
way. Reviewers opinions, ranging from uncertainty as to
what to make of such a confronting work, to uncritical
praise, dont help matters.
For instance, Humphrey McQueen on Book Talk in
a transcript from Radio National (www.abc.net.au/rn/arts/booktalk/stories/s1404914.htm)
says, My concern and doubts are as nothing compared with
the achievements in Dead Europe as a novel of ideas, with
its compelling choice of language and delineated characters.
Ian Syson from The Age proclaims that This book is
not just good; its breathtakingly good. This is Tsiolkas
surely making his ascent to the position of one of Australias
pre-eminent contemporary novelist. The Sydney Morning
Heralds Sacha Molitorisz says Dizzying in its
ambitions and intensity, Dead Europe is an impressive achievement.
Tsiolkas comes across in interviews and discussions as sincere
and serious. It seems, however, that he operates in an artistic
milieu in which self-criticism isnt encouraged. It would
be detrimental to his development as a serious writer if he were
to unquestioningly accept the publicity and the praise heaped
upon him for this novel.
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