martes, 15 de septiembre de 2015

MY TOP 5 LITERARY SELF-MADE OUTSIDERS

MY TOP 5 LITERARY SELF-MADE OUTSIDERS

I wanted to fit Albrecht von Wallenstein somewhere here. But, since he is a real-life person, I felt that it was somehow unnecessary...
And Lady Eboshi was also going to be squeezed in, and so was Ellen Kurokawa, but both of these are actually animated characters...
As for the Thénardiers... Indeed, I could have crammed them in somewhere, the Baron and Baroness de Thénard. But these are two characters that fill the slot of one (being husband and wife, kindred spirits, and partners in crime). So that's the reason why I lowed them out: because I couldn't decide if Monsieur and Madame Thénardier/de Thénard should have one entry each or share an entry.

5) The master of the galley, "A House of Pomegranates", Oscar Wilde


This villainous secondary character is an ethnically Sub-Saharan captain on board a slave galley for pearl-fishing for an unknown European Crown. Already his ethnic descent somehow contradicts his ostentatious attire. And his attitude of "business above all" reflects the fact that he has made himself a name through trade. Oh yeah, and his officer crew on board consists of Sub-Saharans as well:

On a carpet the master of the galley was seated. He was black as ebony, and his turban was of crimson silk. Great earrings of silver dragged down the thick lobes of his ears, and in his hands he had a pair of ivory scales.
At last they reached a little bay, and began to take soundings. A light wind blew from the shore, and covered the deck and the great lateen sail with a fine red dust. Three Arabs mounted on wild donkeys rode out and threw spears at them. The master of the galley took a painted bow in his hand and shot one of them in the throat. He fell heavily into the surf, and his companions galloped away. A woman wrapped in a yellow veil followed slowly on a camel, looking back now and then at the dead body.
As soon as they had cast anchor and hauled down the sail, the negroes went into the hold and brought up a long rope-ladder, heavily weighted with lead. The master of the galley threw it over the side, making the ends fast to two iron stanchions.
Again and again he came up, and each time that he did so he brought with him a beautiful pearl. The master of the galley weighed them, and put them into a little bag of green leather.
Then, he came up for the last time, and the pearl that he brought with him was fairer than all the pearls of Ormuz, for it was shaped like the full moon, and whiter than the morning star. But his face was strangely pale, and as he fell upon the deck the blood gushed from his ears and nostrils. He quivered for a little, and then he was still. The negroes shrugged their shoulders, and threw the body overboard.
And the master of the galley laughed, and, reaching out, he took the pearl, and when he saw it he pressed it to his forehead and bowed. 'It shall be,' he said, 'for the sceptre of our young King,' and he made a sign to the negroes to draw up the anchor.
I felt attracted to this rather minor character because of his appearance and attire, that seem to be contradictory and establish the master of the galley as a self-made outsider. Indeed, the pearl fishers are expendable tools to him, but such is the mind of one who has gained a fortune and risen through trade, to captain a ship in the name of a Crown and nation which are not his own. The master of the galley is the one who puts Death in the heart of the pearl, and he surely still gets unscathed in the end (he is not mentioned again in the story).


4) Okonkwo, Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe
The first we learn about Okonkwo is his badass-sounding name, that he is the leader of his local community, his reputation as a warrior has spread beyond the reach of nine villages... Oh yes, he's an abusive caregiver and an abusive husband, but this is, originally for fiction, not due to strong drink (In fact, Okonkwo would never touch the stuff, and he's a teetotaler), an explosive temper, or sadism. In fact, it's due to his strict adherence to Igbo patriarchal culture and his fear of weakness, failure, and reputation loss. A tragic flaw which forces Okonkwo to be hard and to do always the right things, which will come to no good end.
The Freudian excuse given to why Okonkwo is such a hardass is also worth mentioning: his own dad Unoka, though a peaceful fellow and a lover of creative arts (mostly music), drank and gambled, and, due to such a deviance from Igbo warrior and duty culture, was an outcast in the village of Umuofia. Okonkwo fears becoming such an outcast as well, lacking social status for being thought of as weak like his own father was. This is true irony.
But then comes the second half of the novel, and here we see what happens when things fall apart for the Igbo toffs. Rule Britannia comes to Igboland, and, of course, Okonkwo is "slightly" pleased with the new religion of love and mercy, and with the new more powerful female ruler, brought over by the colonists. The result: Okonkwo, who hates both Christianity and Queen Victoria, comes face to face with the new regime, and even declares war on it, reluctant to accept that his days and those of his culture are gone...
Still, he's a more developed character than the master of the galley, but also from a novel I didn't really feel at ease with. And, while Okonkwo rushed head on against the British Empire, the higher-up characters on this list would have taken a more sensible approach...


3) Iago, Othello, William Shakespeare/Arrigo Boito
Iago was most truly made for war, born and bred in camp, at the service of various nations, presumably also baptized in fire while still a lad... A badass, badarse veteran warrior who knows no other trade, and a non-com whose greatest aspiration is to become an officer, most surely aide-de-camp to his general (another self-made outsider who didn't make the cut into this list because... though badarse as well, not as interesting as Iago). 
Along comes a young lieutenant of the new school of educated officers.
And Iago gets pissed.

"That frilly little officer
has usurped my position,
my position,
which, by one hundred well-fought battles,
I have deserved!
Such was Othello's wish...
And I remain at His Moordship's service
as ensign!"

So Iago, not only ticked off by staying a non-com, but also by the debut of this cultured younger fellow with abso-freaking-lutely no prior experience of warfare. And the end of it is that he comes up with the most convoluted and efficient ruse in world literature, IMOHO.
Discrediting the lieutenant through ethyl intoxication, portraying him as the lover of the general's wife, planting the hanky she has lost in his quarters. Everything goes as smoothly as planned. Like beating children at chess.
There's also the riddle of his motives: sheer envy and revenge? unrequited love for Othello and/or Cassio? or simply for the fun of it? Though Iago stands defeated in the end, he swears to Cassio, his rival and (!) forgiven and made Othello's successor, that he will shut up no matter how much torture is wasted on his own frame:

Demand me nothing. What you know, you know.
From this time forth I never will speak word.

There you have it. And those, mind, reader, are his last words in the whole script. Then he shuts up as he is led away, so that his motivations will remain a mystery to everyone but Shakespeare himself (who, according to my theory, played the role in the Whitehall 1604 Ur-première).
I would like to quote something more on my own view of this characters
"And we shall not forget, for better or worse, that there is Iago. Who is Iago? Things for sure: he hateloves Cassio and he is not comfortable in the company of ladies. He has his own insecurities and reasons to do what he does (what he perceives as injustice), but his mask is never broken. Some say he is a devil undercover, like Mephisto, which would be true to a certain extent... Iago is to Cassio as the Wicked Queen is to Snow White. In both stories, the innocent victim-hero is reborn after apparent death, while the antagonist is punished. We have already mentioned women's immunity to Iago's tricks, Add his mastery of disappointment as a catalyst for his victims' actions. And the way he "grants wishes": granting the wishes of the male cast when he is near (in Dokidoki Precure, most of the victims of the week, whose hearts are corrupted, are significantly male as well, the corrupter also being male, and pitted against an all-female heroine team which purifies the victims and seals the immortal corrupter away!), the wishes backfiring and shattering the lives of those who made them. Does Iago grant wishes to have his own wishes granted? Of course.
Some say he is a devil undercover, like Mephisto, which would be true to a certain extent... while I see Iago as a more or less chaotic neutral, leaning on chaotic evil character, a personification of unreason not unlike the Norse Loki, the Spanish Don Carnal, or the Lord of Misrule. Or the Devil on Tarot (arcane XV), which represents the pulsions of the id, passions, unreason beyond good and evil. The keywords are all there: "Chaos is come again". Not evil in a demonic sense, yet a tempter and a trickster who temporarily disrupts and revolutionizes the social order, before and during his own reign as de facto governor, by granting wishes at a great price... but for which reason? There is the lieutenancy mentioned... but is this actually for no reason, Iago's character being unreason (the unreason of wish-making, of intoxication, of insecurity, of paranoia, of passion...) incarnate itself? Mind that his name means "usurper", which, in a story where identity, and the loss of it, are the central themes, is the key word to it all..."
As convenient as it can be in a tragedy whose setting is liminal and provincial, there is no struggle for a crown or a throne (though there is talk about usurpers: in love, within the hierarchy, within one's own system...), but, rather, for an in another context irrelevant lieutenancy.
Still, this is a game of power, in which the rules are to win or die (no third option or middle ground), some claim it's theirs by right and that the other is a usurper, or vice versa.
There is much talk, not about being governor/commandant, but about being lieutenant to this officer. Not in charge, but next in line, accepting the current ruler's reign.
Left-tenant. Or even "love-tenant", as some Elizabethans pronounced this French loanword. There is a homoerotic innuendo about holding this position as well, for it means a certain proximity to the governor.
Iago, when shall you learn... that not every rear end can be used as a scabbard?
And Iago is ostensibly preferring the company of other men. Does he want the post for other reasons than social climbing?
I leave it to you.

No matter for which reasons Iago wants the post, he sees Cassio as a usurper. Apparently, since the former is a seasoned veteran and the latter is a learned greenhorn, Iago has as much of a founded claim as Stannis against Renly. Add the fact that, in both scenarios, the former has wound up in the shade of the latter... and wishes to step out of that shade, even if death were the only means.
We all know Stannis had a magical priestess by her side... well, Iago believes in no gods (warfare experience has surely killed his faith) but rather in himself, and this self-reliance coupled with a knack for hitting soft spots is worth more than all the clergy of the Lord of Light.
Cue the scene when he gets Cassio intoxicated, successfully tempting his rival and making him fall, then trying to restrain the furious lieutenant, then, as he sobers up and comes to, telling the ostensible truth to their commanding officer...
An emotional shock that he is unable to cope with, and even more in that state. Now he is much more than confused. What had he done to stain his blade, frighten his dear Desdemona, anger his lord, and lose his rank? Add the ensuing shock to his internal state of recovery... and we've got the fact that he is completely ruined within. Aside from socially dead. How should he return to be the one he once was?
This predicament, this identity crisis, is the catalyst for the whole storm of passion to come.
We Swedes have a nice proverb: "One person's bread is another's death", and thus we see Cassio a devastated ensign and Iago a proud lieutenant. The tables have turned 180 degrees.
And this reversal gives the scheme a nice foundation. Not only has Iago earned more trust of his general, he also has discredited his rival completely.

...then cheering up the broken young officer and giving him the suggestion that he ask Desdemona to defend his cause.
There you have it. But Iago doesn't stop at that, rather, he keeps on tricking Othello to have the governor at his every beck and call. The one who called himself "rightful" is now actually a usurper, not only claiming the lieutenancy, but also a relevant influence over his commanding officer and, thus, the de facto rulership of the whole outpost.

That is, until he is defeated by his maidservant wife and the fiancée of his rival, both of which expose his whole gambit to the light. Earlier on, at the start of the final act with all its deaths, Iago couldn't put himself together to kill Cassio. He had earlier on expressed how he hates being second to the young officer. Yet there seems to be this underlying truth that... what should Iago do when he had already done what he was trying to reach?
As a result, he even sends a surgeon to tend to the wounded Cassio, who survives except for a leg cut off (metaphor for castration?) which puts an end to his military career (and puts him back in place as an intellectual, if you refuse to accept that he will become a disabled and prosthetic-limbed badass à la Jaime Lannister). Add the fact that Iago gives an account (a true one?) of himself standing guard by the sleeping then-lieutenant, sitting on the young man's bed, as he laid a leg on Iago's lap and gave the traitor a kiss. Yes, Cassio laid that same leg over Iago's crotch and then kissed Iago. Though the young officer was dreaming about banging a woman (Desdemona, Emilia, or Bianca?) and acting out his dream.
And this same person even succeeds Othello as his heir and successor as governor, while Iago is tortured with excruciating pain (yet still managing to stoically, or masochistically, shut up). So, while Cassio does his comeback on the rulership arena... Iago, in spite of his punishment, has at least partially succeeded by killing the former governor, his lady wife, and even his own (Iago's) stupid lovesick crony and maid wife (to make her shut up 'cause she knew too much, yet he managed to off her when it was too late and she had already told the whole truth).
Only Cassio and Bianca survive, and we are left to imagine their marriage since it does not appear in the play... it ends with Othello and Desdemona, and even Emilia the all-knowing maid, dead. And Iago arrested, swearing that he will not breathe a single word about his agenda, of which everyone else (audience included) but the late Emilia was completely unaware. Which purpose did the traitor have, and for which reason? This question is left unanswered. Here, I have given my own humble opinion, which may have been Iago's real motivation or may have not.
After all, this is an unusual play, in which women act and speak their minds, in which military men are insecure and desperate figures losing power at lightning speed, in which chaos is a ladder to a strange fellow who walks about at daylight and moonlight granting wishes at the price of disappointment and regret... The keywords are all there: "Chaos is come again".


2) Tywin Lannister, ASoIaF/GoT, George R.R. Martin
Just listen to his name. Tywin. Tye-win. Like "I win." It ends with "win". The maybe most powerful person in Westeros, an excellent high officer and statesman at court as well as strategist on the war front.
Like Okonkwo, Tywin is cold, hard, austere, imposing his own will on his children and grandchildren. The reason why? His own father Tytos, though a peaceful fellow and a lover of creative arts (mostly music), drank and let others tread on him, and, due to such a deviance from Westerosi warrior and duty culture, was regarded as an outcast within the nobility of Westeros. So Tywin, like Okonkwo (who shares his Freudian excuse), has risen to power through many hardships, courtly intrigues, military engagements, the loss of his beloved wife, confrontations with his three children...
In the end, his Waterloo will come from the most unexpected sources: his prospective granddaughter-in-law, a noblewoman a decade Tywin's senior, and the misshapen imp he has always doubted to have begotten. And Tywin Lannister dies, ingloriously enough, defecating on the privy (not expelling gold, as anyone would think).
So why Tywin in second place? We get to hear a lot, both for good and for evil. Tywin had royal children of the previous dynasty killed, and their mother too. Tywin forced his favourite daughter into a loveless marriage to the new ruler of Westeros, actually a drunken and already brokenhearted lout. Ned Stark would rather entrust a child to vipers than to Tywin. But also on the flip side: a brilliant strategist, a redoubtable strategist, the saviour of the Lannister surname, a self-made outsider to be reckoned with...
A well-developed character, whose whole life we Thronies have followed from Casterly Rock, through battlefields and holdfasts, to the privy of the Red Keep. And Charles Dance adds even more to the portrait novel readers like me have received: Tywin has got Dance's face, speaks with Dance's voice, is Charles Dance in a certain sense.
Tywin Lannister. The Rodrigo Borgia of Westeros.
Risen from obscurity to national hero and legend, both famous and infamous, with his own ambition and insecurities, resurrected a dynasty. Basically, Rodrigo Borgia without the religious implications of the papacy.


1) Céline Silverlärka (née Malm), Walloon Saga (Vallonböckerna), Maj Bylock
The crowner of this list just has to be the token female, and the only one from Swedish fiction. The greatest female lead in Swedish YA fiction I have read so far.
Born in the 1630s unto happily married blacksmith parents in a Delaware outpost belonging to Sweden, a red-haired and freckled Céline grows up as an adored only child, whose antics as a feisty tomboy and desire to learn more, are rather encouraged than suppressed. She soon draws the attention of Lieutenant Erik Silverlärka, aide-de-camp to the governor of the garrison, and soon, without any opposition from Marie and Mârten Malm (Yes, as you can guess from their names, her mother is from Liège and her father is from Värmland, making her 50% Swedish 50% Wallonian, and she's fluent in both French and Swedish), but rather with their blessing, becomes the young lieutenant's bride. Erik likes Céline because she's dynamic, self-reliant, and true to herself, unlike all those hitherto known to him European court ladies with their refined manners and shallowness.
As husband and wife, Erik and Céline arrive in the 1640s at his estate birthplace, where a few frictions with Erik's conservative parents (the Count and Countess of Silverlärka would never approve of their only son and heir married to a half-Wallonian blacksmith's daughter who also happens to be a carrot-topped and freckled "hoyden") and Maud, the obviously court-born and court-bred fiancée they chose for the lieutenant, ensue. So do concerns that the Oxenstierna Regency may send Erik off to the war front in Austria or Bohemia. All of these issues are fortunately solved when the redhead becomes a maid of honour at the royal court and discovers she has got much in common with her liege lady: Christina and Céline being kindred spirits, the latter becomes the former's best friend and confidante, and maybe something more to Her Majesty, leading me to ship both of them.
Céline Malm, a half-foreign commoner who marries up to become a countess and "the Hand of the Queen" in a certain sense. A great female character who gradually grows into adulthood and makes a good use of her talents while not giving up her tomboyishness and self-reliance, staying true to herself. A girl, then a young lady, as impulsive and impatient, self-reliant, dynamic, intelligent, and little caring for her appearance as Christina Vasa herself. And I identify with her strongly, since I share her appearance, personality, and third-culture background.




6 comentarios:

  1. Céline has not got Tywin's reflexiveness, patience etc. (she's on the other side of the scales, her lack of those qualities are her flaws) but anyway, I ordered these characters in order I like them.

    The prince in TSQ-IV? Well, in my headcanon he is a born blueblood incognito with an intellectual reputation, so here he's as out of the question as the Thénardiers.

    ResponderEliminar
  2. I forgot entirely about Gérard de Villefort - but still it is noteworthy that his character arc overlaps with both Okonkwo's and Tywin's, amiright?

    ResponderEliminar
    Respuestas
    1. GÉRARD DE VILLEFORT: Eh bien ! moi, je me suis séparé non seulement de l’opinion, mais encore du nom de mon père. Mon père à été ou est même peut-être encore bonapartiste et s’appelle Noirtier ; moi je suis royaliste et m’appelle de Villefort. Laissez mourir dans le vieux tronc un reste de sève révolutionnaire, et ne voyez, Madame, que le rejeton qui s’écarte de ce tronc, sans pouvoir, et je dirai presque sans vouloir s’en détacher tout à fait. Venez, s’il vous plaît, continuer cette conversation chez moi, monsieur le comte, un jour que vous aurez envie de rencontrer un adversaire capable de vous comprendre et avide de vous réfuter, et je vous montrerai mon père, M. Noirtier de Villefort, un des plus fougueux jacobins de la Révolution française, c’est-à-dire la plus brillante audace mise au service de la plus vigoureuse organisation ; un homme qui, comme vous, n’avait peut-être pas vu tous les royaumes de la terre, mais avait aidé à bouleverser un des plus puissants ; eh bien, monsieur, la rupture d’un vaisseau sanguin dans un lobe du cerveau a brisé tout cela, non pas en un jour, non pas en une heure, mais en une seconde. La veille, M. Noirtier, ancien jacobin, ancien sénateur, ancien carbonaro, riant de la guillotine, riant du canon, riant du poignard, M. Noirtier, riant avec les révolutions. M. Noirtier, pour qui la France n’était qu’un vaste échiquier duquel pions, tours, cavaliers et reine devaient disparaître pourvu que le roi fût mat, M. Noirtier, si redoutable, était le lendemain ce pauvre monsieur Noirtier, vieillard immobile, livré aux volontés de l’être le plus faible de la maison, c’est-à-dire de sa petite-fille Valentine ...
      ON OKONKWO: Unoka was very good on his flute, and his happiest moments were the two or three moons after the harvest when the village musicians brought down their instruments, hung about the fireplace. With a father like Unoka, Okonkwo did not have the start in life which many young men had. He neither inherited a barn nor a title, nor even a young wife. And so Okonkwo was ruled by one passion - to hate everything that his father Unoka had loved.
      NOW, CONSIDER TYWIN LANNISTER...
      All three had weak fathers who were very nice and fun loving whom people mocked. They all three grew up wanting to become stronger then their fathers. They all three had achievements in their youth (the destruction of the reynes and tarbecks for Tywin, Gérard becoming a powerful magistrate, and Okonkwo throwing the cat) that distinguished them showing that they were not their respective fathers and they got a lot of respect from those actions. They were all three very masculine and brutal and never showed emotion. They all three had strong commitments to family and legacy. in the end they all three ended up dying dishonorably (Okonkwo committing suicide and Tywin dying on the privy with a whore in his bed, and Gérard most surely in a lunatic asylum). Thoughts?

      Eliminar
    2. True, Tywin's story resembles Okonkwo's from Things Fall Apart, and Gérard de Villefort's from Monte-Cristo. Okonkwo is embarrassed by his father to the point he becomes the opposite of everything his father was, ditto de Villefort; what Okonkwo, like Tywin, didn't realize is that his father didn't do everything wrong, there some things his father did right. The same goes for Gérard de Villefort. Those things their fathers did right, their sons did wrong, and that's what causes their downfall.

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    3. PS. on Lannisters and de Villeforts:
      If Tywin remarried a dark lady with a secret grudge against his régime who happened to be a master poisoner, after Jaime were somehow disowned... hehehehe! That's a great AU bunny, isn't it?

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    4. Otro PS.
      Novela: Renée, la primera Mme. de Villefort, es rubia; Héloïse, la segunda Mme. de Villefort, es castaña.
      Anime: vice versa.
      Gérard de Villefort no deja de parecerse a Tywin Lannister en ninguna adaptación. De hecho, de mayor lo tengo interpretado por Charles Dance en mis dreamcasts - Renée es Cate Blanchett y Héloïse es Bonham-Carter; Valentine es Nathalie Dormer (Margaery Tyrell). Pero no sé quién podría ser el joven Gérard recién casado con Renée...

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