| Of
Lions and Storytelling
I,
THE DIVINE: A NOVEL IN FIRST CHAPTERS
Rabih
Alameddine
New
York : W.W. Norton, 2002, 308 pp.
By Wail S. Hassan
Like his first novel
"Koolaids: The Art of War" (1998), Rabih Alameddine's
second novel uses formal experimentation to reflect on the
Lebanese Civil War and immigration to the United States .
The plots of both novels are non-linear and fragmentary, structurally
reflecting the ravages of war and the shattered lives of the
characters. In both novels, as in Alameddine's short story
collection "The Perv" (1999), the theme of violence
dovetails with AIDS, death, sexual identity, racism, and homophobia
along the trajectory of migration.
"I, the Divine" is
more conceptually and structurally ambitious than the first
two books. It consists of the protagonist Sarah Nour el-Din's
interminable attempts to write her life story. She discards
draft after draft of the first chapter and starts anew at
a different point in her life or the lives of family members
and friends. Her restless abandonment of each draft is matched
only by her determination to start again, alternating between
first- and third - person narration, novel and memoir, English
and French. The "novel" as such consists of a string of repudiated
versions of the first chapter, although the aggregate effect
of the whole is no less successful than any linear novel at
painting a lively picture of the protagonist from childhood
to middle age and of those around her.
Born to a Lebanese
father and an American mother, Sarah was named by her grandfather
after the "Divine" Sarah Bernhardt, whom he idolized. This
choice of name helps explain the protagonist's crippling perfectionism
as she strives to live up to the example of her legendary
namesake. Sarah's persistent re-starts eventually make her
a successful painter, albeit a failed writer. Her success
and failure at creative self-expression are far from gratuitous:
she is much more at ease with abstract painting than she is
with words.
| "Like his first novel 'Koolaids...,'
Rabih Alameddine's second novel uses formal experimentation
to reflect on the Lebanese Civil War and immigration to
the United States ." |
It eventually becomes
clear that her difficulty with narration is the result of
a horrifically violent episode in her life that she struggles
to confront in at least three chapters, one of which is written
in French: her abduction and gang rape during the total breakdown
of law and order in war-torn Beirut . It is not until two-thirds
of the way through the novel, and only in a fictionalized
third-person rather than the autobiographical first-person
voice, that she manages to narrate this event. At that point,
things begin to fall into place: her chronic depression, her
broken relationships, her inability to help the dying AIDS
patients whom she volunteers to counsel, her restless wanderings
from San Francisco to New York to Beirut and back again, and
her obsession with storytelling coupled with total rejection
of canonical narrative genres, from fairy tales to realistic
fiction ("Count Leo Nikolayevitch Tolstoy lied"), to popular
romance (a whole shelf of first edition Danielle Steele novels
is ripped apart by a ricocheting sniper's bullet in Beirut).
For Sarah, these narrative genres, with their ideological
assumptions about order and final resolution, cannot possibly
contain her experience.
Nor can the memoir
or the Bildungsroman. (Title pages interspersed throughout
advertise her projected work alternately as "a memoir" and
"a novel"). Based on the ideology of individualism, these
genres cannot accommodate the kind of knowledge that Sarah
acquires, namely, that she is the sum of her relationships.
Toward the end, she describes the glorification of rugged
individualism as hypocritical ("the rigorous practice of rugged
individualism usually leads to poverty, ostracism and disgrace").
In the final chapter, provocatively yet appropriately titled
"Introduction," she has an epiphany while watching a PBS program
about lions. When a young male ousts the aging head of a pride
of lions, takes possession of his females, then proceeds to
kill his predecessor's cubs, Sarah is horrified; but then
she decides that the pride as a collective outlasts each member,
and that this is perhaps the way to think about individual
identity. In thus allegorizing the behavior of lions, the
novel neutralizes the problem of violence, with the perhaps
unintended effect of normalizing patriarchal coercion. This
solution is philosophically and ethically problematic, albeit
psychologically understandable as a trauma victim's repression
of painful experience. Recovery in a psychoanalytic sense
would have led her to see war and rape as effects of patriarchal
violence. The lion story provides a convenient "closure" to
the narrative (insofar as any can be envisioned) by allowing
Sarah to rationalize her crisis of authorship, which encodes
her crisis of identity. However, the implicit acceptance of
patriarchal violence deepens instead of resolves the trauma.
Neither in "Koolaids"
nor in "I, the Divine" does Alameddine shy away from major
philosophical questions, although some of the answers suggested
are less than satisfactory. Yet like the best of Anglophone
Arab and Arab-American writing, "I, the Divine" subverts
dominant discourses, ideologies, and sanctioned narratives
in Alameddine's case, teleological narratives of progress
and development; of self-confident knowledge of, and discursive
mastery over, other, particularly Arab, cultures; and of individualistic
becoming and self-realization. In this brilliant, sophisticated,
and highly original work, Alameddine succeeds in enacting
that subversion on the level of form and narration, drawing
attention all the more effectively to readers' expectations
cultivated while reading established genres, which sometimes
reveal themselves to be woefully inadequate for expressing
what Edward Said once called "discrepant experiences."
Vol. 10/ nos. 46/47
(Winter/Spring 2004).
Copyright (c)
2004 by Al Jadid
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