|
Mohsin
Hamid's first novel, Moth Smoke, caused something of a stir. It
mercilessly took apart the warped life of an urban elite under the
influence and, through its two central characters, explored the
often painful realities of class and power in Pakistan. With the
perspicacity of an insider and the detachment of an outsider, Moth
Smoke laid bare a complex Pakistani elite searching for its identity
behind a seductive cocktail of drugs, alcohol, trans-national money
and class privilege.
Amidst
the growing army of South Asian authors - primarily of Indian extraction
- speaking to an increasingly curious western audience, Hamid distinguished
himself by his spare prose and instinctive feel for urban Pakistan.
It was just possible that he would go some way towards rectifying
the perennial shortage of internationally-known Pakistani authors
writing on Pakistan. But, for all his talent as a chronicler of
the Pakistani elite experience, Hamid himself admitted in a Newsline
interview last October that The Reluctant Fundamentalist is as much
about America as it is about Pakistan.
This
is not the only difference between Hamid's first and second books.
Gone are the complex characters playing off one another in constant
tension. The reluctant fundamentalist in the author's second book
- who goes by the name of Changez - has the book to himself. His
is a monologue, in many ways as claustrophobic as the life behind
the walled compounds of the elite depicted in Moth Smoke.
Changez's
monologue is directed towards a stranger - an American - whom he
encounters in a Lahori café. They strike up a 'conversation'
and Changez feels a sudden urge to share with this stranger his
entire life story. The reader is offered no introduction and Hamid
dispenses with a narrator: we hear only the sound of Changez's voice
from the first line of the book.
This
narrative move leaves us free to give our full attention to the
plot. Changez comes from a relatively well-off, if not spectacularly
rich, Lahori family. He does well in school and earns himself a
scholarship to study at Princeton, which marks the beginning of
a love affair with the United States. He is seduced by the dynamism
and freedom of his newly adopted nation. He breathes in the veneer
of a land of opportunity. He even becomes popular with his fellow
students, who admire his old-world restraint and focused work ethic.
Not surprisingly, his grades are impeccable.
His
strong academic potential means he is picked up by a management
consultant firm Underwood Samson. He is instantly given a golden
ticket into the world of the New York financial elite and performs
exceptionally well. Underwood Samson's motto - "focus on the
fundamentals" - seems to suit this particular hard-working
immigrant.
Alongside
his business interests, Changez develops something of a love life.
At Princeton, he meets the charming and mysterious Erica, a product
of an elite, white, east coast family. She, too, is drawn to his
old-world charm, and he carefully cultivates what appears to be
the beginnings of a romantic relationship. But the story is complicated
by her history: Erica's first boyfriend and childhood love, Chris,
died only a few years before. The memory of his death haunts her.
Despite Changez's attempts to unravel the emotional knots tied around
her, she eventually succumbs to her fantasies and her pathologies.
At
roughly the same time, Changez begins to question his own career
path. His American Dream is turning sour; the veneer of high achievement
has started to wear off. When the Twin Towers fall, he finds that
his geo-political conscience has been stirred. He can no longer
watch as America turns into a patriotic bubble, nor does he feel
comfortable as revenge is meted out to Afghanistan, a country Changez
feels has "a kinship to mine." America's inequalities
- easily ignored from the glass skyscraper in which he works - slowly
become all too apparent.
To
use an allusion far too apt for it to have been a coincidence, the
"fundamentals" of Underwood Samson slowly transform themselves
into Changez's reluctant fundamentalism. American capitalism - which
originally lured the protagonist from his native Pakistan - ultimately
pushes him back. He returns to his family and begins a teaching
career in Lahore, eventually finding himself unwittingly celebrated
and vilified as an anti-American spokesperson.
It
is with considerable skill that Hamid avoids turning the neat transformation
of his character into a trite metaphor or a predictable trope. The
title of the book announces the trajectory of the novel but there
is something compelling in the author's spare and clear prose. We
are given a John Le Carré-esque thriller wrapped up in a
claustrophobic and personal geo-political cloak.
Hamid
has also taken on some big themes. Tradition, nationalism, globalisation,
capitalism, Islam, the abuse of history - all are placed in the
dock, either explicitly or examined through Changez's monologue.
Here again Hamid shows sensitivity and, by doing away with a narrator,
allows his central character to walk along the fractures in East-West
relations in a post-9/11 world. America is no longer as unimpeachable
as it once appeared; nor are bearded and reluctant fundamentalists
as easy to caricature as the West would have us believe.
But, if the personal character of Changez's monologue gives the
narrative unity, it simultaneously flattens out the book's allegories
and insights. The dichotomies are too neat; the tensions too sharp;
the voice too loud. It is surely significant that we never hear
the anonymous American speak. This is not a dialogue between believer
and unbeliever; it is a dialogue between Changez and himself.
This
feels altogether too easy. Hamid is right to focus our attention
on the self-doubt of the modern, transnational man, but Changez
does not have the self-doubt of the vacillating, footloose, confused
world citizen of the 21st century in dialogue with a distrustful
West. Instead, his self-doubt resembles that of someone who, in
retrospect, feels he has made the right decision in the wrong world.
As
Changez becomes more militant, he becomes a little too sure of the
superiority of the Shalimar Gardens and Lahori jalebis. America
begins to fade into the misty distance. Changez's story takes on
a momentum of its own as the criticisms of America grow fiercer.
More and more, it is as if he is trying to convince himself of the
moral and historical rightness of his return journey to Pakistan.
One
cannot help but feel that Changez's increasingly militant - but
ultimately lonely - voice is the voice of Pakistan trying to convince
itself that its problems are not so bad. Is this what Hamid wanted
his character to embody? It is most unlikely that Hamid intended
his book to contribute to a new form of Pakistani victim mentality
that allows the country's elites to deflect responsibility from
domestic problems by pointing out that America is not all that it
pretends to be. But occasionally, it can feel as if Changez speaks
with just that voice. He pronounces historical judgements without
the dissenting voice of a narrator or his American acquaintance.
This
tendency becomes particularly pronounced in the portrayal of Changez's
relationship with Erica. The latter, like too many characters in
the novel, appears as a vessel designed to demonstrate a particular
pathology. The allegorical jump is easily made: Erica becomes ill
again after 9/11; she will commit suicide, pulled down by her own
memories. Erica, of course, is American Erica and her predicament
is that of a nation. Changez, in returning to Pakistan, is fleeing
a sinking ship. Thus, the ultimate superiority of the East over
the West seems assured.
Again,
the question seems prescient: is this what Hamid intended his characters
to do? There are, I think, the beginnings of an answer in the book's
ending. As Changez is accompanying the American back to the hotel,
he becomes aware that he is being followed, that something is about
to happen, that he has, in some sense, been so absorbed in his own
story that he no longer realises what is going on around him. This
clever twist is the first moment of real self-doubt - the first
time that Changez realises his own myopia. After a long evening
during which he convinces himself that his choices were the right
ones, he suddenly and momentarily realises that his has been a dialogue
of the deaf.
It is no more than a flourish at the end, but with it, Hamid undoes
some of the comfortable dichotomies he sets up. It suggests, if
only briefly, that a great deal more is taking place outside the
closed circle of Changez's life story than he is willing to countenance
in his monologue - and that may even be more important than what
is taking place within it.
Whether this flourish is enough to offset the limitations of form
that the book imposes on its central character remains a moot point.
What is beyond doubt, however, is that Hamid has confirmed his reputation
as an author of considerable talent. His taut, precise and sparse
prose serves him well, while his mastery of pace makes his second
book eminently readable. The Reluctant Fundamentalist deserves a
place among the growing number of reflections on a globalised world
still divided by its misunderstandings and misperceptions.
|