Anna Karenina by Lisa Appignanesi: "All Happy Families Are Alike Each Unhappy Family Is Unhappy in Its Own Way."
Anna Karenina by Lisa Appignanesi: "All Happy Families Are Alike Each Unhappy Family Is Unhappy in Its Own Way."
Anna Karenina by Lisa Appignanesi: "All Happy Families Are Alike Each Unhappy Family Is Unhappy in Its Own Way."
by Lisa Appignanesi
"All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own
way."
All novelists wish they had written the first line of Anna Karenina – and not
only because of its aphoristic brilliance. Tolstoy's opening cuts straight to the
heart of much of 19th and indeed 20th century fiction. The novel is, apart
from all the other things it may also be, the complex and variegated story of
the making and breaking of families. Most novelists highlight only one or
another aspect of this intricate process. Jane Austen emphasizes courtship and
seduction. George Eliot, in Middlemarch, focuses in on the pitfalls of
marriage. Dickens, in David Copperfield, on the fate of the orphaned child.
Balzac, in Le Père Goriot, on the subverted authority of the father. Flaubert,
in Madame Bovary, on infidelity. Tolstoy in Anna Karenina, that novel of
novels, does it all and a lot more besides.
This is seen from the point of view of Count Vronsky, her eventual lover, but
there is always a `surplus' in Anna, an excess, something which escapes her
conscious control. Without being told, we know it is her passionate nature,
her sexuality. It manifests itself in her quick, white hands, her gleaming
rounded shoulders, her dark, curling hair, even in her intensely physical
relationship with her small son. She has the passion which fuels
transgression. In contrast, her husband Karenin is a desiccated bureaucrat
with veined hands and a high-pitched squeaky voice, perhaps physically
repulsive to his creator and to us even before he becomes so to Anna. Tolstoy
sets it up so that we want Anna and Vronsky to come together whatever the
social cost and whatever ominous portents herald their fate.
In retrospect I suspect that Anna and Vronsky's story took over the novel for
me, so that for years I had no accurate recollection of the parallel and equally
important story of the courtship and marriage of Kitty and Levin. Most of my
reading until then had been in the 19th century English novel or what we
could call the tradition of the great renouncers. Women's passion was either a
question of property or locked up in the attic - certainly not something to be
given into unless one wanted to be a stray, subsidiary character. Indeed, with
many of Henry James's heroines, like Isabel Archer in The Portrait of a Lady,
the greatest passion goes into the act of renunciation. Tolstoy may have
embraced faith and traditional religion as Levin, his fictional alter-ego, does
by the end of Anna Karenina, but he was no puritan. Sexual desire, rampant
jealousy, the humiliations, the bondages, the power plays of passion were all
part of his fictional vocabulary. In Anna Karenina he diagnoses and
illuminates them so that the lives of his characters at times become more
vivid to us than those of the people we know.
The double-backed beast of jealousy is one Tolstoy knew only too well and it
plays a prominent role in Anna Karenina, moving contagiously between the
characters. At once sign and signal of love and potential destroyer, jealousy
haunts Levin's courtship of Kitty and almost prevents their union. Once
engaged, Levin, like Tolstoy himself had done with his fiancée, gives Kitty
his diaries of past exploits to read thus engendering her jealousy which
continues to move between them, eternally demanding reinvention and
assuagement. When Anna and Vronsky return from Italy to set up together in
the Moscow which ostracizes her, her social abasement feeds the tortured
jealousy she suffers at Vronsky's continuing freedom. She half knows that her
scenarios of other women are projections of her own imprisoned state, her
own wish to move and think freely if only she could. But she is utterly tied,
utterly dependent, more so than her sister-in-law Dasha ever was in her
betrayed, jealous state at the start of the novel.
Virginia Woolf called Tolstoy `the greatest of all novelists'. She might almost
have added the greatest writer about women at the cusp of a new century. I
can think of no earlier descriptions of childbirth in fiction than that of Kitty
and Levin's son and none more poignant. Experienced from the uxorious
Levin's point of view, it nonetheless encompasses the ravages, the fears, the
pain and finally the sense of miracle which attends the new life.
When Dasha, mother of five living and two dead children, in a bleak moment
does her mental accounts of fifteen years of marriage, they read like a
feminist litany:
Despite all this, in what must be the first frank conversation about birth
control in fiction, Dasha repudiates the methods Anna, ever the transgressor,
uses. Tolstoy, we know, was on Dasha's side yet his sympathy for Anna is
palpable.
He astutely depicts Anna's conflict over her children, the first by Karenin, the
second by Vronsky. The choice between love for her son and passion for her
lover is no real choice, since it only becomes clear once she has given in to
her passion that a choice had to be made and by then it is too late. Anna is
bound to Vronsky. It is almost as if she represses her love for her son, blinds
herself to it, puts it into abeyance until it surges forth to make her loathe her
lover. At the same time, Anna cannot bring herself to love her daughter by
Vronsky because the little girl is the very sign of her bondage, her fall into an
abject state.
A woman who is not a wife to one man or another is nothing. The inner
monologue which accompanies Anna's last desperate journey towards
Vronsky (who is, ironically, with his mother) and death is a howl of pain,
lurching between love and hate. In its opium-induced discontinuities, its
random juxtapositions of the mundane and the profound, it harks forward to
James Joyce and Woolf, herself.
In its sprawling flow, Anna Karenina may seem as artless as life itself. And
that is the greatness of Tolstoy's art.
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