Authors: Émile Zola
Throughout
Germinal
, as elsewhere in
Les Rougon-Macquart
, Zola constantly dispels our fond illusions by making a concerted attempt to break down the barriers between human beings and other animals, and between animals and plants or objects. The miners display the dumb submissiveness of the herd; the mob is like a river in spate. Horses like Battle and Trumpet are best friends, with memories and longings every bit as powerful as those of their supposed masters. The mine itself is a voracious beast, or a living network of veins and arteries which retaliates when injured. Whether it be the water flooding the mine or the alcohol-tainted blood pumping through Ãtienne's brain, fundamental â even cataclysmic â natural processes are at work which render the distinctions of the world into animal, vegetable and mineral at best irrelevant and at worst deceptive. Seen in this light Zola's Naturalist world is an entropic world, in which nature inevitably reverts to a state of chaos, despite all human effort to create order and to dominate its course. What is natural can no more be withstood or reversed than, it seems, one can protect a mine like Le Voreux from the great underground sea known as the Torrent.
And yet Le Voreux is destroyed, first and foremost, by human agency. The Torrent is unleashed by a crazed and perverted application of human reason. The mine, on the contrary, has become a safer place since the days when young girls would plunge down its shaft to their death with the merest loss of footing. If being part of the natural process means being shaped by heredity and environment and being assimilated to dumb animals and plants, by the same token it also means being part of a process of evolution. Where historically there is hope at the end of
Germinal
, because the future contains the legalization of trade unions, then ânaturally' there is hope also. For we carry within us the seeds of eventual betterment. Education â which the miners lack but are gradually receiving, which Ãtienne lacks but gradually acquires â is the key. Human beings can learn,
and what they learn is genetically transmissable. The aristocracy and the bourgeoisie call this âbreeding'; Zola calls it âprogress'.
This central Zolian tenet is more plainly illustrated in
La Bête humaine
, published five years later, where the central psychopathic character finds himself unable to kill in cold blood because of the âaccumulated effect of education, the slowly erected and indestructible scaffolding of transmitted ideas'. His hand is stayed by âhuman conscience', an âinherited sense of justice': only when his mind is overwhelmed by atavistic dark forces of primordial bloodlust at the sight of a woman's white flesh does Jacques Lantier kill. But Zola's idea of âcivilization' as a process of intellectual and moral evolution is already present in
Germinal
, where the novel ends on an optimistic note because human conscience has clearly taken a step forward. Though defeated, the miners have become more aware of their situation and of the possibility of improving it. The strike may have seemed like all the strikes before it: born of fond hope and killed by cruel reality. But with each strike the hopes become less fond and the reality slightly less cruel. For Zola it is possible to envisage that in demonstrating the âtruth about humanity' â as Ãtienne in his way has just done for the mining community of Montsou â the novelist is himself educating his reader and contributing to the gradual âevolution' of a more civilized, less inhuman society. Indeed perhaps Zola is the real hero of
Germinal
, for as a consciousness-raiser his rhetoric is far superior â and far more insidious â than that of his leading character.
As a revolutionary leader Ãtienne tends to talk in clichés, borrowing ideas and phrases from Marx and others or relying on the familiar vistas of the promised land and the city on a hill. But Zola's moral landscape is a flat, open plain, a level playing-field on which to enact a Darwinian struggle in which humanity itself is fighting for survival. Not for him the quasi-mystical perpectives which beguile Souvarine and Father Ranvier so that these ideological opposites are united in their
murderous obliviousness to the realities of human experience. Rather, a powerful symbolic vision of life itself in which the forces of creation and destruction are waging an eternal war and in which human beings might, just might, be able to help the cause of creation.
Following completion of the novel and its publication in book form, Zola was quoted in the Paris newspaper
Le Matin
on 7 March 1885 as saying that as far as he was concerned a novel consisted of two things: the material and the process of creation (âles documents et la création'). Two weeks later he elaborated in a letter to Henry Céard:
We [novelists] are more or less liars, but how do our lies work and what are the thoughts behind them?â¦For my own part, I still believe that my lies lead in the direction of the truth. I have enlarged upon the facts and taken a leap towards the stars on the trampoline of precise observation. Truth soars upon the wing of the symbolic.
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Zola's symbolic vision is certainly a âNaturalist' vision in that it presents human beings as subject to nature, and it is also Darwinian in its emphasis on life as a battle of the food chain. Ours is a voracious universe, and images of eating and devouring and consuming and gobbling up abound. Human antagonisms â the class struggle, sexual rivalry, even the sexual act itself â are all presented in terms of eating. Mealtimes structure the narrative and demonstrate the central and fundamental divide between the miner's âprison-house of hunger' and the groaning tables of centrally heated bourgeois dining-rooms. Even the daily alternation of day and night becomes a dialectic of eating and being eaten. And Zola's vision is also, to use David Baguley's term, an âentropic vision', in which individuality and orderly difference give way to the chaos of the mob and an orgy of undifferentiated desire. Take for example the several accounts of the rampaging mob in
Part V
, or the astonishing description of Widow Desire's dance-hall in
Part III
, the scene of a Bosch-esque bacchanalia of mingling limbs and liquid dissolution with beer
flooding through the human body as the Torrent will later inundate the mine. The thirst for beer, sex and justice seems one and the same.
But even here there is emphasis also on regeneration, on collapse as being merely part of a broader cycle of integration and disintegration. The mass drinking-binge at Widow Desire's at once builds to an orgasm of contentment (âGod! This is the life, eh?') and precedes a multitude of innumerable private orgasms: âFrom the fields of ripe corn rose warm, urgent breath: many a child must have been fathered that night.' Similarly, the destructive debauches of the rampaging mob will sow the seed of a heightened political awareness. In fact these âentropic' elements are part of the broader picture of an epic struggle between human beings and nature, and indeed of the epic struggle going on within nature itself. To sink a mine-shaft is a human assault upon nature, but, as with the disused mine at Réquillart, nature soon reclaims its territory as shrub and bramble grow back and two trees appear to have sprung from the very depths of the earth. The ant-like activities of human beings digging up the earth are as nothing compared with the vast and eternal forces of nature, where today's flooded mine offers âa reminder of the ancient battles between earth and water when great floods turned the land inside out and buried mountains beneath the plains'.
This sense of a âbroader picture' is given also by the quasi-mythological portrayal of the human condition in
Germinal
. The quite unnaturalistically named Widow Desire is herself like some Mother Earth, a fount of fertility and indirect progenitrix of every miner in the region. For a desire whose permanent partner is always dead and in the past is a desire that cannot rest. Similarly, the women laying waste the boilers at a mine are participants in a witches' sabbath. The succeeding generations of the Maheu family seem like a dynasty of slaves who have worked for the âhidden god' of capital since time immemorial, this âsquat and sated deity' who demands human sacrifice â like a latter-day Moloch â but remains constantly out of sight. The mine itself, and especially the unquenchable fires of Le Tartaret, are evocative of a Christian hell in which the damned live out
an eternity of torture and irredeemable subjugation. At the same time the mine is suggestive of the âhidden' forces at work not only in capitalist society but also in the human body and the human psyche, a subterranean network of âpathways' in which blockage means disaster and the accumulated pressures of desire and trauma may explode with all the fatal consequences of firedamp. It is a place in which to confront the past, as when Ãtienne remembers his own in
Part I
,
Chapter IV
, or a place, as Ãtienne, Chaval and Catherine discover at the end, to plumb the violent reality of lust and sexual rivalry. In short, the mine is what lies beneath the surface: dark, monstrous and frightening.
But that is indeed Zola's purpose: to reveal, to bring to light what lies â literally and metaphorically â beneath the surface. At one level Zola goes to great lengths to allow us to visualize the action of the novel, which is no doubt why there have been so many successful film versions of
Germinal
. Thanks to his own on-the-spot investigations he knows exactly what the inside of a mine or a pitman's house actually looks and feels like, and the role which he adopts as the narrator of the story is essentially that of a dispassionate and anonymous cameraman focusing his lens on some powerful and eloquent evidence. But he is not merely a documentarist. He is also a demystifier. Where some myths disguise and obfuscate â like the picture of the happy worker which Mme Hennebeau blindly peddles to her Parisian visitors â his novels are intended to demonstrate the truth and thus contribute towards the creation of a better society. While such an ambition may itself seem quaint in a postmodernist world where all discourse is suspect, it is not necessarily a risible or a nugatory aim. Moreover, the Zola of
Germinal
â and indeed of
Les Rougon-Macquart
as a whole â is alive to the insidious and corrosive power of what is now called âspin' or âmedia management'. Throughout the novel we see how âcapital' covers up the truth, playing down the extent of the damage to its mines in order not to worry the shareholders and attempting to âbury' the news of miners being shot in order to deflect public outrage. The readiness of the uneducated to cross their fingers or to believe in the existence of ghosts is seen as part of their submissiveness, as part of their understandable but fatal
inability to confront, assess â and change â the reality of their situation. But if the uneducated have every excuse, how much worse it is that a benign couple like the Grégoires can be quite so blind to this reality, or that Deneulin's pleasant and capable daughters should be so appallingly content to view the murderous destruction of Le Voreux as a âthrilling' aesthetic experience.
Just as Zola catalogues, through Ãtienne's âeducation', the various political responses which it might be possible to have towards the actualities of mining and working-class life, so too he is careful to record a wide spectrum of âinterpretative' responses in order to highlight quite where he himself stands as a novelist writing about this subject. If he had to masquerade as Giard's secretary in order to research this subject at Anzin, that was no doubt because he feared the charge to which the bourgeois and indeed many members of the mining community are open at the end of
Germinal
: namely, that they are tourists. It has become fashionable to visit the scene of disaster, be it the collapse of Le Voreux or the rescue attempt going on to save the trapped miners. But Zola is no gawping rubberneck or heartless aesthete. Above all he is not simply the professional novelist doing the research for his latest, money-spinning bestseller, exploiting human suffering before he returns to his house in the country to write it up before a four-course lunch. Perhaps indeed that is why his documentation at Anzin was quite so thorough, and so valuable: he had a guilty conscience.
And his only saving grace can be that of âeducation'. As Ãtienne walks along the road from Marchiennes to Montsou at the beginning of the novel, he is not only destitute, he is also ignorant. The world of mining is a closed book to him, and the plain itself is a barren, windswept wasteland. His only hope is that sunrise may bring a modest rise in temperature. At the end, as he walks along the same road in the opposite direction, he has become knowledgeable, and he has a job to do. He is a man with a train to catch. The new dawn means progress. The world of mining â and the workers' struggle for justice â has become an open book, and the plain is now a teeming, âgerminating' surface from beneath which the truth is just waiting to spring into view: âa whole world of people labouring unseen in this
underground prison, so deep beneath the enormous mass of rock that you had to know they were there if you were to sense the great wave of misery rising from them'.
Buried beneath our own ignorance and incarcerated within our own prejudice, we readers of
Germinal
have similarly been provided with a map to the unknown. But we have not been lectured or subjected to the âhumanitarian claptrap' of the kind which Ãtienne himself still foolishly rehearses in his head: âDiscomfited by the workers' reek of poverty, he felt the need to raise them up to glory and set a halo on their heads; he would show how they alone among human beings were great and unimpeachably pure, the sole font of nobility and strength from which humanity at large might draw the means of its own renewal.' Rather we have been given a warning:
Germinal
is about compassion, not about revolution. What I wanted was to say loud and clear to the fortunate of this world, to its masters: Take heed. Look beneath the surface. See how these wretched people work and suffer. There may still be time to avoid total catastrophe. But hasten to be just, or else disaster looms: the earth will open at our feet and all nations will be swallowed up in one of the most terrible upheavals ever to take place in the course of human history.
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