'Do you know, Quinn, there isn't even a word for a parent who has lost a child? Strange isn't it? You would think, after all these centuries of war and disease and trouble , but no, there is a hole in the English language. It is unspeakable. Bereft.' (from Bereft by Chris Womersley 2012)
The above, excellent, novel was brought to my attention by my friend Lola Herrero and it struck me as another powerful narrative involving a lost child. This has been the focus of my research for about 10 years - my wife berates me for being 'sick', and gets me some accusing looks by announcing my fascination in public.
But then again, Liz did create the image above. So...
(For more of Liz's art and writing, please see here: https://lizfroud.com/ )
In this blog I will be discussing some of my ideas surrounding the lost child - why it pervades our culture, and has done for centuries, from folk tales such as Red Riding Hood and Hansel and Gretel to modern books, plays, films and television series. In the cold, hard, material world our media often explodes with terror and anger on high-profile cases such as Maddie Macann and yet there are hundreds of thousands of lost children in Europe, not to mention the wider world, that receive no attention. Their loss is perhaps more desperate as shattered lives become silence.
And that brings me back to the quote at the top - the lost child is 'unspeakable', the lost child is silence. It is a quivering in our voice and a collective sigh when we can form no words, or the words we try to speak, or write, become utterly devoid of meaning. I think the lost child represents a void within language itself - a 'hole'.
I will write some more detail on this in later posts. I don't want to trivialise the very human, real tragedies surrounding every lost child - far from it. I think that by analysing the way we speak, write and represent lost children reveals huge amounts about our individual and collective psychologies and the traumas which crack our society. The Australian academic Peter Pierce wrote that his country is The Country of Lost Children (1999): he argues that the early settler narratives (fact and fiction) of children lost in the 'bush' were symptomatic of their anxiety in a new, foreign landscape. But Pierce admits himself that in the twentieth century, as the agents of child loss became human and urban, the anxiety was not restricted to one country. Geraldine Cousin, in her book Playing for Time, analysed British theatre productions between 1990 and 2005, noting a prevalence of stories about lost children alongside themes of fear and danger.
As our society is gripped by seemingly ever greater fears of terrorism, war and disease, the figure of the lost child is a symbol, a symptom but perhaps also can point us to how we should be repairing the holes...
For now, to end this first-born child of a blog as it enters the hole in language, I'll quote some more of Bereft:
'He shuddered to imagine all the children of the world left defenceless, abandoned by war or disease to fend for themselves. He pictured a crusading army of them storming over the land with Sarah at their head, seeking retribution from those who had failed them'
Thursday, 26 October 2017
Tuesday, 24 October 2017
Politics, Void, and The Child in Time
There were a few critical comments from viewers of the
recent adaptation of Ian McEwan’s novel The
Child in Time which was shown on the BBC. Some found the plot ‘baffling’
with the storyline involving Stephen’s friend, the politician/publisher Charles
Darke and his regression to childhood a bit difficult to digest. It was
understandable that an hour and a half was too short a time to shoehorn all the
different threads of the original novel.
I am pleased that the political focus of the novel was not
ditched entirely. McEwan used his novel (published in 1987) as a critique of
the Thatcher government. The ‘Prime Minister’ is always referred to by this
title, the author deliberately avoiding any reference to the incumbent’s gender
(gender itself being another prominent subject debated within the novel). The
novel is set in a fictional near future, extrapolated from the social policies of
the Conservative government in the 1980s. The opening pages follow Stephen as
he weaves his way through busy London commuters, on his way to participate in a
government enquiry, supposedly contributing to the formation of a new
‘Childcare Handbook’. A young beggar draws Stephen’s attention, makes him think
of his own lost daughter, and also the moral degeneracy of the government
(which has introduced licensed begging to replace social security benefits
payments):
To give
money ensured the success of the Government programme.
Not
to give involved some determined facing away from private
distress. There was no way out.
The art of bad government was to
sever
the line between public policy and intimate feeling, the instinct
for
what was right (McEwan 1987, 8-9).
The loss of a child is clearly a metaphor for a governmental
abuse of innocence. This opening scene establishes the interconnectedness of
the plot themes: politics, the state of a nation and different concepts of
time, all passing through the spectre of a lost child.
However, although Stephen’s missing child is often described
in ghostly, uncanny terms, sweeping down to inhabit any child on the streets of
London, the possibility that the child has been killed is never broached.
Indeed, neither the book nor its adaptation mentions even the possibility that
Kate could have been abducted by a paedophile. Instead, like the public
pronouncements of the McCanns, Stephen imagines his daughter growing up with
another family, taken as a surrogate daughter, ageing like the computer-aged
images of Maddy.
The absence of any mention of child murder and paedophilia is
itself a haunting omission from the story. The current Independent Inquiry into
Child Sexual Abuse is due in 2018 to investigate allegations of child abuse and
‘exploitation involving people of public prominence associated with
Westminster’.
The Inquiry stems from the belated public exposure of the
widespread abuses of Jimmy Saville. Allegations of high-level paedophile rings
have persisted over decades. Many of these allegations are still derided as
‘conspiracy theories’ but, it must be remembered, Saville’s crimes were also
confined to the realm of supposition through decades when he was a high profile
celebrity. More significantly, his horrific, systematic assaults were carried
out while Saville was a close friend to both politicians (most notably Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher) and members of the British Royal Family (including
Prince Charles). One of the intentions of the Inquiry is to uncover evidence of
institutions covering-up or conspiring to enable such abuses to take place. For
those members of the establishment who have recently reacted with outrage at
investigations into former public figures and politicians, it must be
remembered that Saville was allowed to destroy young people’s lives for the
whole of his life, without anyone in authority questioning his behaviour.
Allegations only seem to be taken seriously when the prominent person is dead,
or very close to it, such as the investigation into the former Prime Minister
Edward Heath:
At the time of writing, the IICSA was hearing evidence that
the late Liberal MP Cyril Smith was known by security forces such as MI5 to be
an abuser of boys. MI5 were aware that the Department for Public Prosecution
had lied to elements of the press, denying having been sent reports of
investigations into Smith’s crimes. A detective superintendent at Lancashire
Police had actually made a damning report that stated
‘It seems impossible to excuse
his [Smith’s] conduct over a considerable period of time whilst sheltering
behind a veneer of respectability.
He has used his unique position
to indulge in a sordid series of indecent episodes with young boys towards whom
he had a special responsibility.’
This report was written in 1970, the year he first ran for
office as an MP. The Inquiry heard that Margaret Thatcher would have been aware
of the allegations prior to awarding Smith a knighthood in 1988. This was the
year after The Child in Time was
published. Although Smith himself was never in Government, other investigations
and reports are uncovering strong evidence that so much abuse was known about
during the years in which McEwan was writing his novel, and the decades leading
up to it. The Conservative government Chief Whip during the leadership of Ted
Heath in the 1970s, Tim Fortescue admitted in a national BBC television
interview that they would help MPs who came to them with problems, including
with ‘small boys’:
I don’t believe McEwan had any notion of there being hidden
paedophile rings within circles of power within Westminster. But, the narrative
refers to child abuse of a different kind, with the Government creating their
own ’Authorised Childcare Handbook’ which promotes an authoritarian,
disciplinarian approach to bringing-up children. The author of this handbook is
discovered to be Stephen’s friend Charles Darke. His retirement from politics
to live in the countryside, where he can play at a ‘Just William’ cliché of
childhood, symbolises the conflict within individuals and society about what
childhood represents. But, in our current society, a man re-living his
childhood would involve simply playing computer games and immersing themselves
in a virtual world – which is how many men now continue living their lives into
adulthood, which is an interesting, possibly depressing, thing to contemplate
in itself. At one point in The Child in
Time, Stephen watches a new Government endorsed, all-day television
channel. He despairs of the childishness of the contestants and audience on a
game show. As other critics have noted, McEwan was anticipating our current
obsession with multiple channels, satellite and digital, and the domination of
reality television.
The fictional storyline is a commentary on the way politics
rejects those qualities that are romantically associated with childhood: a
freedom of spirit and unfettered connection with the natural world. But the
television adaptation introduces a darker suggestion of conspiracy within
government: Darke is found dead in the woods, dressed in his schoolboy clothes.
He has apparently committed suicide, unable to reconcile the differences in his
“nature”. However, an earlier scene where the Prime Minister discusses with his
colleague the inconvenience caused by Darke’s actions, combined with mentions
that Charles is under surveillance, suggests that he was actually killed by
security services and his death made to look like suicide. At least one of the public
comments I read after the Guardian online review of the television adaptation
likened this apparent suicide in the woods to the death of the government
scientist Dr David Kelly. Perhaps, in symbolic terms, the ‘murder’ of Darke in
his short trousers represents a child sacrifice.
Believers in Satanism view their practices as influencing or
even controlling events in the physical world. It has been alleged that Satanic
paedophile rings use children to tap into a youthful energy which will confer
on them an increase in power. In the final episode of the first season of the
HBO series True Detective, when asked
where the principal abuser is, his half-sister says he ‘is all around us,
before you were born and after you die’.
This concept of timelessness is one of the principal themes of The Child in Time. Although the
television adaptation omits the references to quantum physics, it retains the
scene at ‘The Bell’ pub. Stephen stumbles upon a pub while on the way to see
his estranged wife. It seems familiar although he cannot remember ever being
there. He looks in the window and sees a woman apparently arguing with her
partner. Later, his now ageing mother reveals how she contemplated aborting
Stephen before seeing a child through the window and realising that this was
going to be her son (the adaptation diluted this to avoid mention of abortion).
In the novel, Stephen collapses after seeing the vision,
temporarily falling into some sort of time warp. It is unsurprising that many
viewers of the television adaptation were confused about the portrayal of a mixing
of past and present in an otherwise “realistic” narrative, without the context
of the discussions of different concepts of time. McEwan himself seemed
conflicted over the scene, having his neurosurgeon hero of the much later novel
Saturday despair of magic realist
novels, particularly one where ‘One visionary saw through a pub window his
parents as they had been some weeks after his conception, discussing the
possibility of aborting him’ (McEwan 2006, 67-68). The neuro-surgeon, Henry
Perowne, argues that, as a brain surgeon, he knows ‘for a quotidian fact, the
mind is what the brain, mere matter, performs’ and ‘the supernatural was the
recourse of an insufficient imagination, a dereliction of duty, a childish
evasion of the difficulties and wonders of the real, of the demanding
re-enactment of the plausible’ (McEwan 2006, 67-68). The scene seemed to offend McEwan’s
self-professed love of science.
But, perhaps, the uncanny and imaginary must break the
conventional veneer of a rational, logical society which has been built on
abuse and deceit. The trauma of the lost child is a cause of social breakdown
and it is also a symptom of a crisis within humanity. The final episode of the
first season of True Detective had a
similar break with realism. There had been earlier signposting to enable
viewers to process Rust’s vision of a whirlpool-like void above the head of the
child-sacrificing villain. Rust mentioned several times that he experienced
occasional hallucinations as a result of his previous time undercover with drug
gangs. However, the visual presentation of the void is so striking and “real”
that it should be considered as something more than mere hallucination. This is
emphasised by Rust’s final speech at the end of the series. He tells his
partner that when he saw the void, at the point of what seemed like his own
imminent death, he felt the presence of his dead daughter. She brought with her
an overwhelming sense of love, a love that was outside of the material
corrupted world. Rust ends by saying that light seemed to be winning its battle
with the dark. This may be a statement which is overly optimistic in view of
the depths of depravity which our world is full of. There can only be hope that
by letting light and love come through the traumatic void which our lost
children leave behind, the material world can fill its own hole.
Saturday, 21 October 2017
The Missing ripples beyond history
The first series of the BBC drama The Missing is another of many crime programmes and films which centre on the disappearance or murder of a child. This series came out soon after the success of ITV’s Broadchurch, British TV companies are tapping into the media exposure of several high-profile real stories. In a Radio Times interview, the star of The Missing James Nesbitt says “a lot of people have mentioned the Madeleine McCann case” in its similarity to the series’ plot:
“But it’s much more of a thriller than that. That’s not to say there aren’t thriller elements in any child abduction. But it’s the notion of dropping a pebble in water and the ripples…the ramifications are huge.
It’s not just about the father and mother and immediate family. It’s about other people’s lives being affected over a course of time. That brings the thriller element.” (RT, 25-31 October 2014, p. 11)
This interview aligns the fictional drama with real life while placing it back as a creative work. It’s interesting that Nesbitt refers to a pebble and ripples – in a way the McCann case could be seen as the pebble and this drama itself is one of the myriad ripples which have proceeded from it. Except, of course, the ripples have been crossing the surface for centuries, long before our technological media was invented. The ramifications are indeed huge, and far below the surface.
The academic Jack Zipes published a translation of the very first edition of Grimm’s fairy tales. This is the edition before the Grimms censored, edited and sanitised the stories for middle-class families, upholding Christian values. The tales are apparently much closer to those passed down orally through communities over many years and include such gems as ‘How the Children Played at Slaughtering’ in which a group of children play at being a butcher and a pig and a boy cuts the throat of his little brother, only to be stabbed in the heart by his enraged mother. Unfortunately, the stabbing meant she left her other child alone in the bath, where he drowned.
In these early versions, those tales we think are familiar are also harsher: the stepmothers of Snow White and Hansel and Gretel were, originally, their mothers, Zipes believing that the Grimms made the change in later editions because they “held motherhood sacred”. So it is Snow White’s own mother who orders the huntsman to “stab her to death and bring me back her lungs and liver as proof of your deed. After that I’ll cook them with salt and eat them”, and Hansel and Gretel’s biological mother who abandons them in the forest.
In ‘The Children of Famine’ a mother threatens her daughters because there is nothing else to eat: “You’ve got to die or else we’ll waste away,” she tells them. In response, the children give up life: “We’ll lie down and sleep, and we won’t get up again until the Judgement Day arrives.” (Guardian.com, 12 November 2014,http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/nov/12/grimm-brothers-fairytales-horror-new-translation)
This shows that lost children (not only lost as victims of violence, but also children lost to innocence who perpetrate violence…) are sadly nothing new. The last story recalls an infamous scene in Thomas Hardy’s novel Jude the Obscure when the young son, known as ‘Little Father Time’, feels the burden of his parents’ poverty and kills himself and his siblings. He leaves a suicide note saying “Done because we are too menny”. Narratives of lost children are perhaps the starkest, most powerful way to convey themes of poverty and social exclusion. They draw attention to the brutal realities of contemporary life in the time in which they are written. The crushing of future hopes is starkly apparent when a child is the victim.
But they are also a reminder of time itself. Hardy’s child who chooses death is called ‘Little Father Time’ because he acts and speaks with world-weariness even though he is only a young child. He is youth and age, life and death in one small package. A doctor in the novel asserts that the boy is an example of a modern child who sees the “terrors” of life too early and embodies “new views of life” different to the previous generation. The figure of the lost child has been and is an embodiment of the conflicts of the modern world but is also a more profound symbol of something beyond history.
In the first series of The Missing, the narrative continually switches back and forth from the present day to eight years ago, when the boy Ollie is abducted. This is a common narrative device in many TV programmes, films and novels with all sorts of subjects. But it is most appropriate in narratives of lost children, where we are forced to consider a future curtailed, what might have been, and the past stretching back, also irrevocably altered as every past event becomes redefined at the point in history – beyond history – where the story is broken, a silence opens up, the pebble hits the pond and the ripples go on forever.
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