Re-reading books many years later, by Elizabeth Kay
I have just re-read Wild Swans, by Jung Chang, for my book group. It wasn’t my choice, as I read it several decades ago, and I thought I remembered it. But once I opened it I realised there was so much I didn’t remember at all. Even though I had a Polish father, and was well aware of the paranoia associated with a totalitarian government due in part to a trip to Poland in the middle of the Cold War in 1966, I still hadn’t grasped the full implications of mind control. Mao was a ruthless and heartless dictator, and the hero worship he encouraged looks far more familiar today than it did then. The England in which I grew up was a safe and relatively honest country, and I simply couldn’t believe it could be so dangerous to say the wrong thing. The China of Wild Swans bears a strong resemblance to the North Korea and Russia of today, and strong rulers are in vogue with populations who believe what they read on Tiktok, Instagram and Telegram. This time, I saw things very differently from the first time I read it, when it didn’t seem linked to contemporary life at all.
A tepui |
investigate the contents of a notebook written by deceased explorer which suggests there are still dinosaurs alive and well and living the good life on an inaccessible plateau. It wasn’t until I travelled to Venezuela that I realised these mountains really do exist, and that many of them are still unexplored. However, when I re-read the book I realised how politically incorrect it is.
…the
sloping forehead and low, curved skull of the ape-man were in sharp contrast to
the broad brow and magnificent cranium of the European…
…a
gigantic negro named Zambo, who is a black Hercules, as willing as any horse,
and about as intelligent…
And after a
bloody battle between the ape-men and our four privileged white males… the
rule of man was assured forever in Maple White Land. The males were
exterminated, Ape Town was destroyed, the females and young were driven away to
live in bondage…
And thus was
genocide extolled.
Various
authors, politicians, and organisations have provided commentary on the
controversy. In the following month it was announced that the works of Enid Blyton, (author of The Famous Five) and Ian Fleming, (author of James Bond) would be expurgated as well, and it was revealed that R.L.Stine's Goosebumps had already been expurgated,
without the author's knowledge or consent. (Wikipedia)
I think my point here is that is as we remove or alter books that the current zeitgeist deem offensive we are losing a sense of what the world was like when they were written. We don’t seem to take things in context any more, and we are losing history as a consequence. How can we understand the things that have happened if we don’t know how people thought at the time? Apologising for things that happened centuries ago is pointless; it’s like blaming modern Italy for the atrocities of the Colosseum. The Spanish philosopher George Santayana is credited with the aphorism, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it,” while British statesman Winston Churchill wrote, “Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” I think it is the second version which is displayed at the entrance to Auschwitz.
Comments
As for rewriting Enid Blyton... well good luck with that. Contemporary stereotypes of sex roles, class and race go through her stories like a stick of rock. They will have to rewrite everything: characters, settings, dialogue, plots. Why bother? I'm sure the Powers That Be would like to cancel her altogether but unfortunately children still love her, and her books make loadsamoney. Bottom line, eh.