Tag: book-review

  • REVIEW: The Siege, By Ismail Kadare

    Ismail Kadare’s novel, the Siege, is a plaintive, raw work of subdued historical realism. Starting with a slow burn at first, the reader is able to remain grounded to the historical setting by Kadare’s inclusion of plentiful detail of the day-to-day minutiae of maintaining a siege. Outside of the clear historical framework that the narrative exists within, Kadare manages to weave in a startlingly human tale of individuals caught up in the gravity of systems with their own logic and progression, against the pull of which they remain powerless. In this sense, the role of fate is present throughout the entirety of this surprisingly poignant look at human reality.

    An impressionistic portrait of the murky moral waters that men swam in for much of human history, the Siege presents the problem of taking a fortified castle from the point of view of the aggressors, the Ottomans. Kadare intentionally places the narrative focus on the Ottoman side, with Albanian narrative progress occurring only at brief interludes between chapters. The vast majority of the novel is spent describing the goings-on of a handful of characters in the Ottoman camp. The protagonist is a sort of ersatz Herodotus in Ottoman dress, the stultified, uncharismatic Melva Çelabi, a chronicler sent to set down the events of the Siege into writing. The deuteragonist happens to be the man in charge of this mass of animated wills, wants, and needs whose circumstances led them, one way or another, into the Ottoman military machine, one Urgulu Tursun Pasha. And the tritagonist, and perhaps the most fascinating character, the Quartermaster General, equal parts mysterious and philosophical, uses Çelebi’s limited intellectual interests and political understanding as a sort of foil for his own philosophical whims and expatiations.

    Although the Albanian defenders eventually triumph, by outlasting the Ottomans, there is nothing romantic in Kadare’s depiction of the months of grim violence that the Ottomans and Albanians inflicted on each other. If the reader wasn’t aware of the author’s geographic provenance, it would be hard to tell on which side the author’s sympathies lie—this is how honestly, unflinchingly, and humanly the Ottoman characters are written. If anything, because of the paucity of narrative attention placed on the plight of the defenders one could be forgiven for assuming the writer to be Turkish, if he had to be one or the other nationality. In achieving a large degree of historical authenticity, the author doesn’t sacrifice the quality of the characterization of the major players of the Siege, with a startlingly humanized portraiture of the militarized, oppressed, terrified ranks of the Ottoman Empire. 

    A sense of the unstoppable forward march of forces beyond human comprehension or control is present throughout, and one cannot help but observe that the characters, like Çelebi or Tursun Pasha, don’t seem to struggle much against their fates. The soldiers in the Sultan’s army don’t have much choice, in the same way that any human being finding themselves in a hierarchy where violence is the essential relational element has a compromised ability to choose their path. One cannot forget that the novel deals with a time when human destinies were almost always forced upon them. This makes the problem of assigning moral blame to the perpetrators of the violence that features so prominently throughout the Siege even more difficult; it isn’t enough to simply and lazily apply a universal condemnation of violence in any form, as though each and every actor in the Ottoman camp were acting on their own accord in everything they did; as though the Azabs wanted to climb the burning ladders again and again and have hot pitch poured on their heads and burn and die horribly. The perpetrators of the violence, in the case of the rank and file Ottoman soldiers, are also themselves victims of hideous violence.

    One could argue that since the Ottomans are the ones attacking this fortress, and therefore the aggressors, they should not be considered victims for receiving the violence of defenders. This might be true for the commanders, but even then the truly responsible parties aren’t present at the scene of the battle; the Sultan and his divan back in Edirne are the ones who decided that these many thousands of men would die for nothing. It is, therefore, a complex task to make sound moral judgements when assessing the level of guilt of the various participants in the Siege. At the same time, these soldiers, the same Azabs who are so unjustly sent to their deaths time and again for the sake of taking the citadel, and others, are participants in the systematic rape and killing of captive Albanian women. There is no ambiguity or moral complexity here, this is simple, sheer barbarism. The author does not shy away from depicting the foulness human beings are capable of. There are parts of the book that are simply chilling in the juxtaposition they convey between the mellow, casual nature of the conversation between a group of friends drinking in the Ottoman camp, for example, including our chronicler, the milquetoast Thucydides, and then the same individuals discussing the way supply and demand applies to the village girls being used as human sex slaves. Everything, from the horrific to the prurient, is treated as equally mundane; Kadare doesn’t linger on the atrocities committed, everything is simply described, without exposition, moralizing, or any other incursion of the author’s sensibilities into the work. 

    In constructing the character of the Pasha, the author never gets into outright sympathetic territory. The Pasha always falls far short of decency, although he seems to exist more squarely within standard ethical parameters than the vast majority of his army. He is cold to his wives in the harem, treating them more like chattel than humans, and he remains consistently gloomy, surly, and short with his subordinates, although this last observation is far from unique for a military commander. He diverges from the common conception of a military general in one important respect, however. Generals, in the late medieval period and later, were typically men of major stature in the social structure, placed rather high up on the pyramid, and were therefore often insulated from the costs of war, including defeat, compared to their rank and file soldiers, whose blood was spilled regardless of the outcome of the battle. In the case of Tursun Pasha, the author made a deliberate choice to have his fate bound up with the result of the siege from the very beginning. For the Pasha the affair was all or nothing; either he would win the battle and return to Edirne to be rewarded with wealth and glory, or he would lose everything and be disgraced. In an interesting way, despite the obvious lack of even a hint of charm, warmth or likable traits, the Pasha’s dire situation puts him in an at least quasi-sympathetic light compared with the rest of the Ottoman cast. I found more to root for in the character of the Pasha, despite his presiding over a terrifying assemblage of bloodthirsty wretches, than the chronicler Çelebi, by leaps and bounds.

    All that said, it is very much worth noting that, upon reflection, one finds nothing redeeming whatsoever about nearly any single character on the Ottoman side. There is legitimately almost nothing positive that one could say about a single one of them. Perhaps Çelebi is the least reprehensible given his lack of participation in either the murder or the rape that occurs throughout the events of the Siege, but even he is only sort of neutral at best. He witnesses countless episodes of stunning, caustic brutality and is never bothered more than when he feels he has committed some kind of impropriety or faux pas in the company of his social betters. However, the way that these characters are presented with their inner thoughts and motivations leaves their humanity on clear display for the reader; they aren’t painted as uni-dimensional villains. It would have been easy to write the Ottoman characters, most of whom regularly commit acts of barbarous cruelty, in such a way as to neglect their emotional complexity as characters. Kadare consistently employs enough nuance to make the Ottoman characters morbidly fascinating to watch. A view of the inevitable march of technological progress is presented in the dialogue between Çelebi and the Quartermaster General, one that alludes to the terrors of our own age, forming part of the philosophical underpinnings of the novel. However, the larger burden of the book seems to rest on simply showing how humans behave in war, how it debases and corrodes their spirits, how it reduces them to barbarity, and how, despite all of this, they return again and again like moths to flames, to sow chaos and destruction at the behest of remote leaders and functionaries. 

    A fictional account of the protracted siege of an Albanian mountain fortress by marauding Ottoman ghazis, the work avoids any quaint massaging of the Albanian national spirit in its dealings with the Balkan nation’s national hero, Gjergj Kastrioti—Skanderbeg. While readers might expect Skanderbeg to take a more prominent role in the story that unfolds throughout the three hundred pages of Kadare’s novel, the author’s decision to limit his involvement in the events to little more than allusions and brief mentions almost has more impact than if he had written him in as a main character. While never actually appearing as a character in the novel, the fearsome reputation of the commander who harassed and defeated the Ottoman army all over the Balkans paid dividends for the defenders of the fortress in the Siege. One doesn’t get a sense of the themes of either national mythos or the resilience of the Albanian people occupying the fore in the Siege, which is noteworthy given the ease with which the tale could have slid into proverbial pandering to nationalist sentiments. 

    Kadare’s portrayal of the Ottoman characters, who are foregrounded in the book’s narrative, is at once nuanced, honest, and fair in its depiction of the actions of struggling masses of hierarchically organized humanity. Preoccupations with the logistical necessities of a prologued military action such as a siege are clear throughout. One can dismiss previous romantic or fanciful visions of what a siege consists of, minute to minute, hour to hour and so on. There are accounts to settle, budgets to balance, dead to bury, food and supplies to procure, systems of hygiene to institute, and more solidly unsexy aspects of siege warfare to expand upon. Kadare blends the historical foundation with the character-driven narrative progression in an adroit synthesis of world-building and pathos. 

    “Those among the council members who were familiar with administrative accounts realized that the secretary was making his quill squeal more than was actually necessary. To judge by the serious face he made at such times, it wasn’t hard to guess that these silent pauses in which his pen scratching was the overriding sound gave him his sole opportunity in life to assert his own importance. Once someone started talking again, his very presence would be forgotten (201).” This is a perfect example of the space and effort Kadare dedicates to humanizing even the most minuscule characters that appear, even if only in a scene or two, throughout the book. He is driven to catalogue the small preoccupations, motivations, and characteristics of the fleeting extras that dot the pages. All this detail and attention paid to sometimes inconsequential characters helps to create a narrative richness and believability; a sense of authenticity. 

    The blind poet, Sadedin, about whom a comparison to Homer is made partway through the book, muses cryptically about the futility and sadness about the world later on in the novel. “What is there to see in the world?” “An orphanage for fallen stars and nothing else!” (283) This quote seems to encapsulate the central thrust of the novel almost more than any other; the hopeless, doleful tone of the continued assault of the exhausted attackers combined with the succession of terrible events leading up to the final defeat of the Ottoman engine of war (by a symbol of nature, rain) creates an impression of a world hunched over with pain. There is a deep, persistent sadness echoing throughout this whole work. The Albanians defenders hold off the attackers, but it is known by both parties that the sieges will resume the following year, as though there is some providential teleology being played out again and again.  None of the players rejoice in the roles they’ve been given, nothing is glamorized or painted in romantic tones, there also is very little hope on the side of the Ottoman camp. A fatalism permeates the whole of the story, underwritten by the philosophical musings of the Quartermaster General, whose commentary lurches between the ontological and the topical. This novel is for people who not only love history, but also love humanity in all its hope, despair, ugliness, and its many shades of grey. 

  • Review: De Madariaga, Isabel. Catherine the Great: A Short History. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2002.

    Isabel De Madariaga’s Catherine the Great: A Short History provides the reader with an account of the crucial narrative contours of the rise and reign of Empress Catherine II of Russia. The work is a survey of a period of Russian history that is critically important yet largely overlooked. While not a detailed study or examination, De Madariaga’s Short History attempts to familiarize the reader with those salient historical episodes and developments that, taken in aggregate, coalesce into the Catherinite epoch. The clear object of De Madariaga’s work here is to give readers a reasonable summation of Catherine’s reign that can serve well as a stepping stone for further research and reading. The author executes these goals with a powerful sense of history and a clear command of the material. 

    Throughout A Short History, in dealing with Catherine II’s reign, De Madariaga casts the Empress in a consistently sympathetic light. The Catherine that is portrayed herein is a reluctant autocrat or a reformer in absolutist clothing. While some attention is given to various diplomatic and military crises, the overall emphasis of the work is placed on Catherine as an intellectually curious ruler with constitutional inclinations dealing with the obstacles of the entrenched, vested interests of the gentry that keep her from enacting her most liberalizing policies. Of all the aspects of Catherine’s rule, the most time and detail are given here to the various legislative and administrative reforms she was able to complete. The intellectual appetites of Catherine are discussed at length. Though De Madariaga never attempts to deny that Catherine ruled in  the one nation that had codified and legitimized Serfdom just as it was being phased out in the rest of Europe, an effort is made to signal to the reader just how enmeshed in enlightenment thought Catherine was during her rule. Her frequent correspondence and friendship with figures such as Diderot, Montesquieu, and Voltaire are highlighted throughout this summative work. It is clear that the author wants to draw attention to the degree to which Catherine contemplated systems of government outside of Tsarist autocracy or considered modifications thereto. It is recounted with some repetition how intimately familiar she was with Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England. Care is taken to inform the reader that Catherine even wrote some 700 pages of notes thereon. One could almost argue that the central burden of the work is to provide a counterargument to the prevalent narrative of Tsarism, even Tsarinaism, as unidimensional despotism; De Madariaga insists that, while Catherine shared many things in common with her autocratic successors and forbears, she was indeed a complex figure and presented, in policy choices and in concrete reforms, shades of a liberalizing tendency and even hints of constitutionalism. However, in her generous treatment of Catherine’s rule, De Madariaga seems to largely overlook the fact that nothing at all was ever done to improve the lives of the Serfs during her rule. 

    De Madariaga uses enlightenment German cameralism as a lens through which to appraise Catherine’s hints at reform. The legislative commission, as well as the Instructions, are both evidence of cameralist influence. She portrays Catherine as laying out a foundation of precedent for future reform and liberalization in Russia through the inauguration of corporate rights for each of the free estates. She admits that Catherine’s legislative achievements fell short of her aims but insists that her desires for reform were genuine. Her defense of the lack of reform during Catherine’s reign is partially based on the idea that Catherine herself was not to blame for the continued bondage of the Serfs; her ability to enact policies that would threaten the power or wealth of the nobility was limited by her political reliance on the former for legitimacy and support. Her goal for administrative reform was, according to Madariaga, essentially a complete reworking of the entire administrative apparatus of regional, provincial, and local government. The Legislative Commission that Catherine convened called for the appointment of representatives from each of the social estates, except the Serfs (except for 90 percent of the population). This, along with the creation of juridical and legal avenues for townspeople and free peasants to advocate for redress of grievance, none of which existed before, are certainly to be lauded, but whether these are reasons enough to justify giving Catherine the benefit of the doubt as much as Madariaga does in the text is uncertain. 

    Significant attention is also paid to the scale of legislative reforms attempted during Cathrine’s reign. The twin Statutes to the Townspeople and the Nobility formed the bulk of a chapter that, while providing the reader with detail and analysis, seemed to wander in the weeds a bit in terms of facts and figures and other indulgences in hyper-specificity and tedious detail. The reasonable reader of history cannot deny that, prior to Catherine, even the nobility had no formal representation in the Russian body politic; the old duma of the Boyars was dissolved long before her reign. It is understandable that the author would thus decide to dedicate significant time to the uniqueness of the political representation permitted by the legislative commission. It also bears mentioning that this representation, however unprecedented and quasi-democratizing, was limited, imperfect, and entirely confined to the free estates; Serfs were given no concessions. A criticism of Madariaga’s framing here can be made based on the fact that she largely neglects to emphasize how nearly all of Catherine’s reforms systematically ignore the plight of the Serf, even after the Pugachev uprising. 

    One area of the book that seems comparatively underdeveloped is the space devoted to Catherine’s rise. While the first chapter does establish the basic historical context in which Catherine’s seizure of power occurs, certain elements and aspects are glossed over. A prime example of this is Madariaga’s terse treatment of the plot hatched and executed to remove Peter III from power by taking his life. “According to the available evidence she was not informed of the plot to murder her husband; on the other hand she must have realized that if he remained alive he would be a constant threat to her hold on the throne, and that her supporters were unlikely to let him live.” (3) This kind of hedgy and equivocating statement alerts readers quite early on to Madariaga’s desire to spend more time on the admirable aspects of Catherine II, which are many, to the possible detriment of a more balanced view overall. While the work stops short of outright hagiography, this example of downplaying unsavory aspects of Catherine’s personality in favor of sympathetic traits is not the only one present in this survey.  In Madariaga’s dealings with Catherine’s innovations in the field of ethnic resettlement and assimilation, there are yet more jarring examples of the deliberate absence of seemingly warranted criticism. Only one paragraph is devoted to the creation of the Pale of Settlement and the double tax on Jews living in the Empire. “Yet, in spite of the broadly tolerant character of Catherine’s legislation, one of the most repressive features of nineteenth-century Russian policy towards the Jewish community dates from her reign. This was the setting up of the so-called Pale of Settlement” (141). In an earlier paragraph on the same page, De Madariaga describes the origin of Catherine’s “tolerant policy toward the Jews…” as coming from her lack of religious zealotry. Only a few paragraphs later, she describes the disproportionate tax levied on the Jewish townspeople and residents. Her insistence on coupling admissions of targeted ethnic repression with professions of Catherine’s tolerance read as incongruous and indicative of a wider pattern of emphasizing the positive aspects of Catherine’s reign and minimizing or explaining away the negative ones. 

    De Madariaga devotes considerable time to discussing the tenacity and single-mindedness with which Catherine faced the succession of crises that assailed her government. From the diplomatic intrigue, the clandestine plots to bet on a successor other than the Empress, the various Wars with Turkey, and the confusing geopolitical evolution of alliances to the massive cossack and peasant uprising led by Pugachev, each challenge Catherine faced is represented in Madariaga’s work with a detailed description of the methods the Empress used to overcome them. A picture of Catherine as a dedicated, serious ruler who relied on loyal military figures like Potemkin yet kept enough of her own initiative and strategic acumen to maintain herself in an advantageous position emerges from the narrative. Her willingness to bet on risky military solutions to diplomatic problems is presented, such as her adoption of the policy of armed neutrality to deal with the threats from the British Navy. Catherine’s Imperial character begins to truly show when she demonstrates to the other European rulers her complete willingness to commit Russian men and material to the projection of hard power in the Black Sea and elsewhere. In evaluating De Madariaga’s portrayal of Catherine as a ruler, it is important to note that the aspect of her reign that is most comprehensively dealt with, and that which has the most space dedicated to its exploration in the text, is Catherine’s various legal, administrative, and social reforms. While many dimensions of Catherine’s reign are confined to one chapter or only a page or two, the legislative and administrative reforms that she enacted are analyzed and described in a number of separate chapters. Understanding Catherine as a policymaker, influenced by Enlightenment thinkers yet still largely wedded to absolutist ideals, is made possible by the author’s detailed study of the Instructions and the dual Statutes to the Townspeople and the Nobility. 

    In distilling the grand narrative of Catherine’s thirty-year reign into an eminently readable and largely enjoyable survey, De Madariaga succeeds in producing an engaging, thoughtful account of a pivotal era in Russian History. While acknowledging Catherine’s penchant for favorites, the book refrains from a gossipy, tabloid depiction of her love life. Catherine is treated largely as any contemporaneous sovereign would be; an analysis of her policy decisions, the changes during her reign, and the impact she had on the course of Russian history are included. A certain respect for Catherine as an intellectual, as a strategist, as a stateswoman, and as a human being, is obvious in Madariaga’s treatment of the Empress. Madariaga explores the life of a sovereign who, rising through a coup, with no legitimate claim to the throne, went on to rule for more than thirty years, presided over the rise in influence of Russian military power, instituted the most comprehensive administrative reforms in Russian history as well as the first steps toward representative government, albeit imperfectly, fostered the emergence of the thitherto dormant Russian intelligentsia, and led a life of passion, learning, and romance. While the work is less than even-handed in its assessment of the downsides of Catherine’s rule, it never fails to take Catherine’s reign seriously and to impart to the reader the importance of the victories, reforms, and velleities of a complex and contradictory ruler. Ultimately, Isabel De Madariaga’s Short History is engaging, far-reaching in its areas of focus, and detailed in its examination of the reign of Catherine the Great.