Sunday, February 10

The Late Mattia Pascal + Boredom

   A couple of book reviews, and related links ...


   1. "The Late Mattia Pascal" ("Il fu Mattia Pascal") by Luigi Pirandello
     <http://www.amazon.com/Late-Mattia-Pascal/dp/1590171152>

   Mattia Pascal is not a lucky man.  His father died when he was four,
   leaving behind a large estate consisting of sevarl properties.  His
   mother entrusted the management of the estate to a business partner of
   her late husband, Battista Malagna.  But the "Mole", as Malagna became
   known, gradually defrauds the family of its inheritance.

   Mattia falls in love with Oliva.  He thinks another girl, Romilda, would
   be a good match for his friend, Pomino.  The two boys often go to
   Romilda's house.  The Mole is also looking for a new wife, and starts
   courting Oliva.  Romilda is not interested in Pomino, preferring Mattia.
   When she gets pregnant, poor Mattia's die is cast: he is forced to marry
   Romilda, while Oliva ends up marrying the Mole.

   Mattia moves in with Romilda and her mother.  He gets nagged constantly
   by both women.  Romilda gives birth to twin girls, but one of them is
   still-born.  The other daughter dies a few months later.  To make things
   worse for poor Mattia, his own mother dies.  Up until now you'd get the
   impression that his life is a veritable series of unfortunate events.

   One day Mattia decides to get away from his troubles: he takes the train
   to the French Riviera without telling anyone.  He's not a gambler but is
   drawn to Monte Carlo, in particular the roulette tables.  He has an
   incredible winning streak, and makes a small fortune.  He toys with the
   idea of running away to America, but decides to go back home.  While at
   the train station and flicking through a newspaper, he reads an item
   about a suicide - his own apparently!  A man was found dead in his home
   town.  His wife had earlier reported him missing, and when the badly
   decomposed body of a drowned man was found, she mistakenly identified it
   as that of Mattia.

   Mattia sees this a an opportunity to break free from his misery, and he
   can starts his life over.  He adopts a new name, Adriano Meis, and makes
   up a new life story.  He uses his winnings to live it up around Italy.
   But eventually he sees that this lifestyle cannot last, so he settles in
   Naples where he rents a room from a family.

   Mattia's second life as Adriano starts to lose its appeal.  He realises
   he cannot explain his wealth, and he cannot legally marry a woman he's
   fallen in love with (and who has fallen in love with him).  The woman's
   father dabbles in metaphysics, which appeals to Mattia/Adriano since he
   feels he is himself living "beyond the grave".  The woman's brother-in-
   law is suspicious and starts causing trouble for "Adriano".

   When "Adriano" is wrongly accused of making advances to the girlfriend
   of a volatile artist, he is challenged to a duel.  He sees this crisis
   as a way to stop living a lie as "Adriano".  To avoid the duel, he
   "kills off" his second persona by faking suicide.  Then, reborn as
   Mattia Pascal, he can return home to reclaim his identity and confront
   his wife.  But he is in for more surprises when he gets there.

   The issue of identity provides the philosophical theme for the story.
   While Mattia's life appears very tragic, the style of the book is
   actually rather comical.  I really enjoyed the first half of the story
   up until Mattia rents the room in Naples.  The account of his life with
   the slightly dysfunctional family was good but didn't work as well for
   me.  Mattia's return home rounds out an interesting and amusing book.

   The book was written over a hundred years ago.  The author, Luigi
   Pirandello, is better know for his plays, and won a Nobel-prize for
   Literature.  An English translation is available online at:
     <http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks03/0300381.txt>


   2. "Boredom" ("La noia") by Alberto Moravia
     <http://www.amazon.com/Boredom/dp/1590171217>

   As the title suggests, this is a story about boredom.  In particular, it
   is about the boredom of an individual named Dino, and the role it plays
   in his life.

   In the prologue, the narrator (Dino) describes his concept of boredom:
   "Boredom to me consists in a kind of insufficiency, or inadequacy, or
   lack of reality... the feeling of boredom originates in a sense of the
   absurdity of a reality which is insufficient, or anyhow unable, to
   convince of its own effective existence."

   Dino didn't get good grades when he was at school.  He blames this on
   boredom.  Once he started a school project, a universal history
   "according to boredom".  The central argument was that history was the
   consequence of boredom: "In the beginning was boredom, commonly called
   chaos.  God, bored with boredom, created the earth, the sky, ..., Adam
   and Eve; and the latter, bored in their turn in paradise, ate the
   forbidden fruit.  God became bored with them and drove them out of Eden;
   Cain, bored with Abel, killed him; ... God, once again bored with
   mankind, destroyed the world by means of the Flood; ... The great
   empires - Egyptian, Babylonian, Persian, Greek and Roman - rose out of
   boredom and fell again in boredom..." etc.  Of course, Dino grew bored
   with the whole project and abandoned it before completing it.

   His widowed mother says they are not just rich, but in fact they are
   very rich.  Dino doesn't want to be rich.  Dino is a painter.  He finds
   he can no longer paint: boredom has made it impossible for him to accept
   the reality of anything, even a simple drinking glass.  He visits his
   mother's villa on his 35th birthday.  She wants him to move back home,
   and gives him an expensive sports car as a present.  Initially he says
   he will move back, but then changes his mind and flees.

   A beautiful teenage girl (Cecilia), who has been modelling for another
   artist, offers to be a model for Dino.  Maybe Dino thought she could be
   his muse, so he accepts.  But she turns out to be more of a nymphet.
   Dino falls for Cecilia, but not long after seeing him, he discovers that
   she has started going out with an actor.  Despite this, Dino finds her
   intriguing, and continues to see her.  Later he wants to break it off
   with Cecilia, but he can only do this after he has truly "possessed"
   her.  By "possessing" her, he can then become bored with her.  Once he
   has become bored with her, he will be content to ditch her.

   He tries a few things to "possess" Cecilia, including paying for her
   visits in the hope of rendering her vain and mercenary.  But this
   backfires when she says she treats the payments as gifts and has no
   expectation of receiving anything.  Eventually he devises a cunning
   plan: "... possibly the only way I could set myself free from Cecilia
   - that is, possess her truly and consequently become bored with her -
   was to marry her.  I had not succeeded in becoming bored with Cecilia by
   having her as a mistress; but I was almost sure that I would be bored
   with her once she had become my wife... full of domestic and social
   occupations, satisfied, without mystery; that in fact she would become,
   as they say, 'settled.'"

   The middle part of the book got a bit repetitive, but overall it was
   another fascinating and in-depth psychological portrait of a tortured
   soul by Alberto Moravia, author of "Contempt" and "The Conformist".


   3. Related links:

   * "Polish man struggles to return from the dead"
     <http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/01/30/2149421.htm>
   "Piotr Kucy, from the city of Polkowice in south-west Poland, was
    wrongly identified by authorities last August as a drowned man, only
    to show up a few days after his own funeral."

   * "A brief history of boredom"
     <http://www.conceptualdevice.com/2007/08/a-brief-history-of-boredom.html>
   An interesting essay, and includes a reference to Moravia's novel.