"L'Assommoir
can be seen not only as a firmly constructed, hard-hitting
novel of Paris slum life, but also as a vast canvas of colors and
tones making the reader both actually see and feel the life of the
poor in the baking sun amid the stench of moldering refuse or in the
squalor of snow melting with filthy street waste."
This
excerpt from Angus Wilson's "Afterword" sums up all that is
so extraordinary and so depressing about the seventh novel in the
great Rougon-Macquart
chronicle. Setting out to write about every aspect of French society
under the Second Empire, Zola crafted twenty exquisitely detailed
novels over the course of two decades at the end of the 19th century.
His formulation of literary Naturalism, where the writer attempts to
study objectively and analyze human society through the lives of
his/her characters, was so influential that it drove Stephen Crane,
Frank Norris, and Theodore Dreiser, among others, to craft their own
versions of American naturalism.
Zola
believed that the novel should dive below the surface of everyday
life, revealing the dirt, gossip, waste, greed, hostility, and
bitterness that other writers refused to acknowledge. Inspired by the
discussions of human evolution and natural selection raging around
the world at the time, Zola wanted to use literature to expose and
acknowledge the animal in all of us, the most basic instincts that
still drive us no matter how "civilized" we attempt to be.
He saw himself as a student of human behavior, and subsequently left
a remarkable chronicle of one nation on the cusp of enormous change.
L'Assommoir,
a story of poverty, vice, and the wine shops that fueled the two, is
one of those Zola novels that is hard to read, at times. For twenty
pages, sometimes, Zola will
describe in great detail scenes of domestic
abuse, drunken rages, starvation,
and sickness. It all adds up, ultimately, to a dense study of one
part of the Rougon-Macquart family- the Lantier-Coupeaus, whose
descent into abject poverty is tragic because it is so unnecessary.
Focusing
on Gervaise, an impressionable and easily-persuadable girl, Zola asks
us to understand the forces that ultimately drive her to an early
death. Precisely because she is a trusting, good-natured young woman,
Gervaise is taken advantage of by several men, and yet despite this,
she manages to open a successful laundry. But as in all Zola's
novels, when things are going well you just know that the crash is
coming. As her husband descends into drunkenness, helped along by
many friends who encourage him to join them in the many bars and wine
shops of the slum, Gervaise slowly loses her own drive and wish for
respectability. As her business grows, so does her indolence and
appetite, until she runs up massive debts and loses everything.
The
slow- very slow- decay
of her life, underscored by the desertion of her children (one
becomes a prostitute, the central figure in a later novel, Nana),
is painful because, despite everything, Gervaise continues to hope
for happiness. Following her husband into a life of drunkenness, she
forgets everything that she used to want in life. Malicious,
gossiping neighbors and family members drive the stake in harder,
until Gervaise has lost her will to live.
L'Assommoir,
then, is the kind of book that smacks you on the head with a
figurative iron skillet, leaving you stunned, exhausted, but
ultimately more compassionate and thoughtful. Zola presents us with
unanswerable questions about nature vs. nurture, and the extent to
which anyone can resist the pull of their own genetics. Oh, and the
dude can write. So go
find yourself a copy of L'Assommoir
and let me know what you think.
This is one of my favourite Zolas, it does leave you stunned as you say (which is appropriate, given the title!).
ReplyDeleteA lot of Zola characters can be quite foul at times, but Gervaise is one of the more sympathetic characters despite her flaws.
Love this post, you've hit the nail on the head :) Plus you're making me want to re-read it!
This is my very favorite Zola novel and Gervaise is such a wonderful character. So hopeful and tries so hard. She doesn't dream too big and does actually achieve her dreams so I found most of the novel very upbeat. So sad that circumstances conspired against her.
ReplyDeleteYour review sums up the book brilliantly. L'assommoir has to be one of the best ones of the series; maybe one of the best in world literature.
ReplyDeleteWhat is impressive with the book is that we see the characters through both the good times and the bad...and with Zola it nearly always ends badly. I love the chapter with the big celebration dinner; it's a brilliant tipping point of the novel especially with the arrival of Lantier.