“. . . what literature is really about: our very survival as human beings.”
A bit melodramatic,
no? Grandiose? Perhaps expressed by a writer worried about sales or a reader boosting
his self-esteem? Could be. But there’s something to it. Maybe it amounts to
more than virtue-signaling after all, and it’s one of the reasons we go on reading
in a post-literate age.
The late Belgian-born
Simon Leys, né Pierre Ryckmans, was
not a frivolous man. He was serious but seldom solemn, and understood how to
prudently lend an ironic edge to his words. Above he is speaking in one of his 1996 Boyer Lectures, later published as The
View from the Bridge. He asks, “Are books essentially useless?” and
answers, “I suggest that we indeed subscribe to such a conclusion. But so long
as we remain aware that uselessness is also the hallmark of what is truly
priceless.” A paradox worthy of Chesterton, one of his admirations. (“He wrote
with a reckless generosity of genius.”) Leys goes on to quote the wife of an
Australian Outback farmer – and Nabokov: “Let us not kid ourselves; let us remember that
literature is of no use whatever, except in the very special case of somebody’s
wishing to become, of all things, a Professor of Literature.”
Books are
not the curriculum of a vocational school. A popular sentiment boosted by many
of late has been the therapeutic worth of literature. Reading makes us better people,
a statement revealing a childish naïveté about both books and human beings.
Serious readers read for non-utilitarian reasons. Books are consolation. Leys
cites a Chinese scholar who read Shakespeare and Du Fu while in one of Mao’s
camps, and Primo Levi who consoled himself and another prisoner in Auschwitz
with lines from Dante. Levi described this experience in If This is a Man. I would add the unexpected fondness inmates of
Soviet prisons and labor camps had for Proust, as recounted by Aleksander Wat, Józef
Czapski and Varlam Shalamov.
No, books
are not food, water or warm clothing. In fact, for many in camps and elsewhere they
might serve as kindling. In the title essay of Leys’ The Hall of Uselessness: Collected Essays (New York Review Books,
2013), he writes: “After all, this sort of ‘uselessness’ is the very ground on
which rest all the essential values of our common humanity.”
I always thought that when I retired I'd spend more time watching movies. But now I find I don't I don't have the patience for movies or TV. The actors seem like children playing dress up. Instead, I'm reading more than ever, and, for the first time in my life, quitting the books I don't like and moving on. Also, staying up late to finish the good ones.
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