“Children of Men,” by P.D. James, 1992
This book
is the foundation of the 2006 film of the same name but the film is actually
more left-wing and apocalyptic than the book.
The film is a great example of a dystopian story, set in 2027 Britain. It seems like a very near reality, given it pictures
mass prisons for migrants, violent internal police, an authoritarian
government, constant protests or war around the world and an underground rebellion
in the U.K. I would imagine most know of the book through the movie.
Most future
fiction books include one ‘event’ that changes everything, an event that is
sometimes unexplained, such as in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. The key apocalyptic
twist in this book (and film) is that no human baby has been born in the world
since the 1990s, so the human race is seemingly done. A bit similar to the fertility crisis in the earlier "The Handmaid's Tale." Both center around this calamity.
Infertility in these stories might function as a reflection of other dooms that
could befall humans - climate change, starvation, war or pandemics. Though there is present evidence that
testosterone levels are dropping in males.
James wrote
elegant and intricate detective stories, serving as a modern Agatha
Christie. So this 1992 book is quite the
exception given its social theme. The narrator of the novel, Theo, is an
upper-class Oxford
professor ruminating on life at the age of 50 in 2021. He’s been a failure at everything except
studying Victorian England – a lousy son, father and husband. At the beginning he’s also something of a
physical incompetent, a “Mr. Peepers.” Theo
gets drawn into a conspiracy by the self-named ‘Five Fishes,’ as he is a former
advisor to the Warden of England and they want his help contacting the Warden. The Fishes want some modest changes to the
English government. They want an end to
‘Quietus,’ which is a way groups of old people commit suicide by drowning. They want better treatment of poor migrant
‘Sojourners’ who do much of the grunt work in the society; an end to compulsory
sperm testing and better supervision of the Isle of Man, which has been turned
into an island prison camp run by the most violent inmates. Altogether quite modest goals for these five
somewhat inept and isolated rebels.
In the
novel religion is a constant theme and dialog.
The title itself is from multiple quotes in the Bible that see the
‘children of men’ as a lesser, sinful group. Theo is a rational agnostic while
two of the Fishes are good Christians, one of whom is carrying the first baby
to be born in two decades, while the other Christian is the father. The father
even sacrifices himself for the mother and baby during a violent confrontation, his ‘Jesus’ move. Male
infertility is the problem in the book, not female infertility as in the film,
so they had wished to keep the father alive too. At the end, the baby is born
and Theo puts a little blood cross on its forehead, reflecting James’ own
archaic Church of England obsession.
The Fishes
in the film are not as pathetic. They are
a large organized group that uses violence when necessary but are blamed for
bombings that the government itself carries out. They represent illegal immigrants and their British
supporters who are trying to make ‘Britain’ a legal home for everyone,
as the rest of the world has dissolved into barbarism and rebellions. Even the French are trying to cross the
Channel for refuge! But most of the
Fishes also want to keep the first baby born for their own purposes and so become
‘bad guys.’ The film’s version of Theo, a handsome, cynical, yet well-meaning
cube drone, turns out to be the only reliable person to help the baby and its
dark-skinned mother. Theo in the book also becomes
something more than the isolated loveless academic and instead transforms into
the ‘father’ in reality for the new baby and light-skinned mother. This is because he has finally found love.
The First Mother in the Movie |
The novel
has no living Jasper, the charming old hippie played by Michael Caine in the
film ("Pull my finger"). No migrant detention camp at Bexhill, no Uprising nor a Human Project
ship. Instead the Five Fishes try to
find a hidden rural place where Julian can have her baby out of the hands of
the grasping leader of the British government, Xan. The end up in a large woodshed in the woods
near Oxford.
The British,
after the counter-revolution called ‘Omega,’ have given up their democratic rights
to the Warden’s Council of Five in exchange for ‘security, stability and fun.’ Rural towns are being closed as the
population decreases and is moved into larger places. The old are shuffling into the sea, sometimes
even when they don’t want to. The Isle of Man prison, which became Bexhill in the film, is
a violent world where the strong crush the weak, though we only hear of it in
the book. Everyone in society has given
up long-range hope due to the prospective end of humanity. Barbarous groups of Omegas (the last-born young)
and Painted Faces roam the countryside. Other
than that, life in a seemingly old-fashioned and aging England goes on, tea and
crumpets-style – evidently without a labor movement or any social movements except
these five rebels. Even without an
economy! P.D. James was no radical herself, so the Fishes have one power-hungry
mini-leader who betrays them, proving that rebel leaders are also not
to be trusted. At the end all that is
left is the new mother Julian and Theo – the Adam & Eve of the new human
wave. Or as James puts it in her conservative
way, a new 'race.’
The book is
written switching between 1st and 3rd person, between
Theo and narration. It has many good
lines such as this dyspeptic one on religion.
After one new Christian replaces the cross with a sun symbol to popular
acclaim, Theo says: “Even to unbelievers like myself, the cross,
stigma of the barbarism of officialdom and of man’s ineluctable cruelty, has
never been a comfortable symbol.”
Both book
and film predict a world where crisis leads society to a dystopian
authoritarianism, even when sincere individuals do their small part. There are
no forces strong enough or trustworthy enough to change the situation. In other words, they are expressions of deep
historical pessimism in classes or humanity, as neither has a positive view of
the future. Of course understanding that
negative outcomes are possible is an improvement over the complacent Panglossian
‘best of all possible worlds’ approach.
Both are the opposite of a socialist perspective, which understands
‘pessimism of the intellect; optimism of the will’ as one of its
guidelines. This book and film might be
called “pessimism of the intellect, pessimism of the will except for a few
exceptions…” Essentially both are portrayals
of heroic individualism on an historic canvas.
Prior
reviews on dystopian books and films, some of which are carried at May
Day. Use blog search box, upper left: “The Testaments,” “Handmaid’s Tale” and “The
Heart Goes Last” (all 3 by Atwood) “The
Dispossessed” (Le Guin), “American
War,” “Good News” (Abbey), “The Road
(McCarthy) and “Blade Runner 2049,” “Do
Android’s Dream of Electric Sheep?” (Dick), “The Golden Age of Television,” “Hunger Games,” “Planet of the Apes” (various
modern sequels); “Divergent-Insurgent,” “Cloud
Atlas.”
And I got it at May Day's excellent used / cutout book section!
And I got it at May Day's excellent used / cutout book section!
The
Cultural Marxist
January 21,
2020
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