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David Herman

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

Opinion

Case for and against Holocaust schlock

The JC Essay

November 25, 2012 11:57
8 min read

In his fascinating book, What Ever Happened to Modernism?, the Jewish writer, Gabriel Josipovici, lays into middlebrow writing. What attracted attention when his book came out last year was his attack on some of Britain's best-known contemporary novelists, including Martin Amis, Julian Barnes and Ian McEwan. Reading these writers, he said, "leaves me feeling that I and the world have been made smaller and meaner". This is a perfect summary of the problem with middlebrow books and films: they diminish the world.

Josipovici also attacked Irène Némirovsky, who became posthumously famous here for her novel, Suite Française. In it, she described life in France after the Nazi invasion in 1940. It was translated (by Sandra Smith) into English to considerable acclaim, although there was controversy about Némirovsky's depiction of her fellow Jews, with allegations of antisemitism, even though she was herself arrested as a "stateless person of Jewish descent" and died at Auschwitz. Josipovici's concern was not this debate but the writing itself. "Némirovsky," he wrote, "uses the clichés of the middlebrow novel without embarrassment… The work," he went on to say, "lies inert on the page, without any life of its own".

The subject matter is crucial. There is plenty of middlebrow fiction around but when it is used to describe some of the most tragic events of the 20th century, that is a problem. I have always taken a straightforward position on this. For me, the great accounts of Nazism (or Stalinism) are not middlebrow. Vassily Grossman's novel, Life and Death, Claude Lanzmann's film, Shoah, Isaac Babel's diary about the Russo-Polish war, Janina Bauman's memoir, Beyond These Walls and many more - these are not middlebrow, they are among the best books and films written about some of the worst events of the 20th century.

"Best" may mean many different things here. I do not mean simply the most moving, though all of these contain deeply moving and harrowing scenes: in Shoah, survivor Abraham Bomba describing cutting the hair of Jews as they are about to go into the gas chambers; Grossman's evocation of wartime Stalingrad; Babel's account of the ferociously antisemitic Red Cavalry wreaking havoc on small Jewish villages. These are tremendously powerful and moving scenes.