| A Review of: Platform by David SolwayMichel Houellebecq's (pronounced Wellbeck, aspirated) Platform has
been reviewed and discussed so often by now that it is scarcely
necessary to recapitulate the plot of this complex and troubling
novel. Suffice it to say that the various penses and adventures of
its feckless protagonist, the sexual escapades in which he at times
vicariously and at times ravenously participates, his eventual
discovery of an unlikely love and compatibility-in-unfaithfulness,
the terrorist violence in which it comes to pieces, and the squalid
denouement of a largely misspent life provide us with a vivid
portrait of contemporary mores as repellant as it is convincing.
When they are not merely rehashing the story, the prelatical turn
adopted by many if not most reviewers of Platform, inflected by an
almost clinical attitude toward a presumed set of noxious convictions
associated with the author, prompts the inevitable question. Can
this commentariat of the enlightened, this clamp of percale volus
intent on merdifying both the author and his book, all be wrong?
"Michel Houellebecq is an ugly writer, vulgar, silly, sex
obsessed. His heroes are unprepossessing lonersand generally,
egotistically, they are named Michel" is how Jenny Turner
begins her New York Times review. Variants of her condemnation are
ubiquitous. "The characters in Platform are detestable,"
Max Winters piously intones in the San Francisco Chronicle. The
Independent's Boyd Tonkin wonders if "Sooner or later, will
we all be bored stiff by the internet homilies of Cardinal
Houellebecq?" For Janet Maslin, reprinted in the International
Herald Tribune, "the plot development [is] far too sentimental
for the book's overriding contempt" and is "dangerously
ambiguous" in its "casual racism andscorn for the Muslim
world." Similarly, Alex Levebvre, representing the French
socialist outlook on the ICFI website, excoriates Houellebecq for
"glorify[ing] the most depraved feelings" and goes on to
lament "anti-Muslim racism or hysteria over security' issues."
Julian Barnes writing in the New Yorker, albeit with approximate
respect, has nevertheless pointed out that the novel is somewhat
flawed in structure and consistency of tone, the narrative
"unevenly paced" and the bouts of invective inadequately
founded. And so it goes. The overall critical perspective on the
book gives new meaning to the term "et cetera."
There are welcome exceptions to this pervasive strain of opprobrium,
like Charles Taylor's brilliant assessment in the Boston Review and
Salman Rushdie's advocacy in the Guardian Review, but they are few
and far between. Is there little, then, that redeems this work apart
from its weird, exotic flavour and the admittedly bracing if
disturbing candour of its author? Are we dealing with another Cline
whose racist musings and habitual spite must ultimately estrange
the reader or with the depressive world-view of a novel-writing
Cioran giving us yet another short history of decay? Or, on the
contrary, are we confronting something quite different, a rigorous
and unsentimental analysis of our time, laying out the age in
cross-section?
Despite the running spate of objections, there can be little doubt
that the book develops enormous torque and staying power in its
pursuit of what it proposes as an important truth. Houellebecq's
books work less through strict verisimilitude than in the mode of
fable or parable, one story contained within or evincing another.
Houellebecq, after all, is a poet and a very fine one, plying the
customary techniques of allusion and anagoge, whose oeuvre is haunted
by the ghost of Baudelaire, in particular, Le Spleen de Paris.
(Michel at one point quotes pertinently from the poet.) The difference
is that Baudelaire's Parisian microcosm morphs into Houellebecq's
international macrocosm. But there is an epic component as well to
his analogical structures. In some ways, Platform is like an ironic
rewrite of The Pilgrim's Progress From This World To That Which Is
To Come; in others, like a tourist excursion through the Inferno.
Most significantly, the personal account of the novel's anti-hero
encloses within it the faltering and, indeed, suicidal trajectory
of a social world fast approaching terminal break-up. Michel's
investments of emotion (such as they are), the damaging choices he
tends to make, his subliminal inconsistencies, his gainful lassitude
and his predictable losses are also ours, irrespective of how numbed,
unloveable and alien he may strike the reader. What Houellebecq is
giving us in the peregrinations of this cynical voluptuary through
the circles of his private world is a kind of modern allegory, a
public disclosure of the intrinsic meaning of events as "[h]umanity
in all its different formscreep[s] into the third millennium"-the
story really gets under way on New Year's Day, 2001. As Dante
explained: literra gesta docet, quid credas, allegoria (the literal
sense teaches the fact, the allegory what you should believe).
For Michel is an emblematic figure. True, he is neither what
Houellebecq, in his previous novel The Elementary Particles, calls
a precursor nor is he a prophet, the two more advanced (though not
necessarily amicable) classes of human being, but a partial
symptomatic, that is, one whose drab iconicity says less about
himself than about the society which he models and evokes. I specify
"partial" because Michel is neither happy-except briefly-nor
determined to be a part of history, subfeatures, according to the
author, of the category of the symptomatic. Thus we might define
him as a catoptric, one who in his rooted habits and behaviours
reflects the world of which he is a disaffected part. The differences
we may detect between Michel and ourselves are only cosmetic. Michel
is an accurate and unflattering mirror. Additionally, many of his
observations about the social and political dynamics of our world,
unpalatable as they may be to us, are absolutely spot on. (For
example, his hilarious send-up of the contemporary "notion of
rights" and its abuses, a question examined at length and
rather more drily by Michael Ignatieff in The Rights Revolution.)
And this is why Michel is someone with whom the reader must come
to terms.
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