28 August 2019

The Fox Was Ever the Hunter, by Herta Müller


In Der Fuchs war damals schon der Jäger (1992, translated as The Fox Was Ever the Hunter), Herta Müller seems to be writing from personal experience (though not specifically dealing with the Romanian German-speaking community) but transformed by an elliptical style that gives a sense of times out of joint.  We have to work hard to make sense of what is going on, as the characters too try to make sense of life in an authoritarian society.  They know the regime and its proxies are keeping a watchful eye for signs of dissent, but generally only a light touch is needed to repress the population because they do the job themselves.

The novel is set in the period leading up to the fall of Nicolae Ceaușescu in a town somewhere near the Danube.  Many characters come and go but it centres on a group of friends: Adina is a school teacher, who had been in a relationship with Paul.  Paul is a doctor and plays in a band.  Clara works in a wire factory and has an affair with Pavel, who brings her groceries.

Unfortunately Pavel works for the Securitate.  While one might think this would provide some protection, in Romania it actually affords more opportunities for surveillance because loyalty is in short supply.  The group is just anti-establishment enough to warrant the attention of the security service.  A concert in which Paul and Abi (Albert) are playing is brutally broken up and Abi, one of the members, arrested and interrogated by Pavel, dying in custody.

For Adina, the surveillance takes a bizarre form.  When she returns to her flat one day she finds that her fox-fur rug has had its tail neatly sliced and replaced.  Over time the limbs are sliced, like some countdown to a confrontation, then finally the head.  Someone seems to be sending her a message and intimidating her, the menace overlaying a sense of absurdism.

She pushes the fox parts back together while trying to carry on with her life, pretending the fractures are not there but knowing that while the menace may not be overt, it has the ability to get inside her head.  Repression is most successful when it is oblique and internalised.  Increasingly unsettled, eventually the strain is unbearable.  She becomes distressed while vainly trying to buy a bottle of brandy before 10 am.  In a sense her hysteria stands in for the nation’s.

The novel’s strength is the portrait of everyday existence, one characterised by a pervasive air of threat and mutual suspicion.  There is an emphasis on dirt, depicting a material poverty matching a poverty of spirit.  Daily life is continuous joyless drudgery, and conformity is wearing.  For a supposedly communist society there is little sense of community; when the tinsmith hangs himself items in his workshop, including the rope, are pilfered by his neighbours.  Petty theft from the factory is a matter of pitting wits with the gatekeepers (the gatekeepers invariably win because tellingly they recognise the signs)

The country is the site of both economic and sexual exploitation.  The director at the wire factory preys on the female employees, fathering who knows how many children.  All those in authority are out for what they can get, right to the top.  When not exploitative, sex is used as a safety valve to take the edge off the misery.  A cat becomes pregnant annually always eats her litter, mourns, yet repeatedly does it – a metaphor for the regime.  Occasionally people try to escape by swimming the Danube, but the chances of success are small.

Pavel is the one slicing Adina’s fox.  When Adina realises who Pavel is and that Clara’s friendship with him has put the circle of friends at risk she confronts Clara, which breaks their friendship.  Eventually Adina and Paul escape to the country to hide out, where they stay until they hear of the Ceaușescus’ flight from Bucharest on 22 December 1989.  They open the curtains and the light floods in.  The fox fur may have been dismembered, but as Adina says, ‘the fox is still the hunter.’  Pavel uses Abi’s passport to escape the country, cunning to the last.