Book Review
Racists By Kunal Basu - Copyright(2006)
Reviewed by Shafinaaz Hassim
''Jean-Louis Belavoix had stood up amid the applause that
followed Bates exhibition, and had begun all at once to speak in a loud voice.
'How absurd, Mr.Bates!' He called down. 'Are we really to believe that men
differ from each other simply because of the funny angle under their noses? Is
that why the German is stubborn, the Italian greedy, the English cunning, the
Finn dull, and the French? charming? Will your facial angle explain why the
Greeks were slaves to the Romans? No! You're carrying it too far!'
Before an astounded audience, he had plunged his knife
into Bate's famous Chain of Races. 'And what about our Semitic saviour? If the
Englishman is going to be at the top and the Negro at the bottom, where will
the brown Jesus stand in your chain?'''
It's the year 1855. Two
scientists are at loggerheads. One an Englishman and the other, a Frenchman.
The issue is race.
In an effort to resolve
their dispute they design an elaborate experiment on a deserted island off the
coast of Africa. Two samples are set up to
settle the argument of race. A pair of infants: one black male and one white
female. They are to be raised away from civilisation, with a mute nurse who
must conform to the scientists 'Ten Commandments'. No games. No stimulation. No
happy and sad. No influence of good or bad. No punishment or play. Will their
primitive natures dictate their development? This is the objective: 'which
child will be master and which the slave?' They are to be observed over twelve
years. And so begins the quest on the Dark Continent of Arlinda, to prove, discover
and perhaps challenge the assumptions of the two scientists from the realms of
colonial England and France. The
deemed racists.
But while the plot and
the storyline moves along at a surreal pace, keeping reader attention in its
often absurd but curious indications at defining race, the story tends to take
its time getting to grips with the observations. The reader wants to see what
happens to the children at the outset, and is made to first grapple with the
issues of the nurse, the scientists and their assistant. Nurse Norah is a mute.
The prejudice shown in choosing her as the caretaker is highlighted in the
awakening of a somewhat maternal instinct that conflicts with her recommended duties
as the sterile facilitator. And what of emotion? And compassion. And the
tug-of-war between instincts of protectiveness and survival. It seems that the
scientists have disregarded these obstacles in designing their project, as each
already predict that the outcomes will prove their respective theories to be
true.
The author manages his
genre with ease. Characters are believable, even if the articulation of plot
struggles to convince at first. The current day reader needs more to be
convinced, but curiosity holds to the end. Basu's use of satire works well to
taunt the imagination. The text is dense and readability tends to waver at some
points. However, we must remember that Basu is writing for a time unknown to
us. It takes some doing to drag us back two hundred years. As a social
scientist, the theories of Frantz Fanon come to mind. At some point, it had me
reaching for excerpts of Black Skin's,
White Masks and the famed Wretched of
the Earth in order to decipher the disparities in the book's research.
While Basu touches on issues of race, blackness and whiteness, masculinity and
femininity, the stereotypes inevitably prevail in some or other way. The notion
of nationality vs racial identification is all too easily simplified as the
background thread. The colonialist must be made to question his base ideals and
the simplistic 'othering' that occurs with his subordinates and the 'samples'
serve as nagging reminders, but not enough of practical prompts to this end.
And so we trudge on
through the journey of words, especially because the conflicts and disaster
that finally show out midway through the book, present further opportunity for contemplation
about our own conditioning and prior assumptions about race and superiority.
"Did we rise from barbaric roots, Mr. Darwin? he whispers under his
breathe, or have we fallen from a
civilised Eden?"
Kunal Basu was born in Calcutta. He teaches at Oxford University
and is the author of two other novels, The
Miniaturist and The Opium Clerk. His new short
story/screenplay The Japanese Wife (2008) will be released as a film directed
by Aparna Sen in October 2008, starring Rahul Bose, Raima Sen and Moushumi
Chatterjee.
Shafinaaz Hassim is a sociology lecturer and writer based in Johannesburg, South Africa