Gideon Lewis-Kraus on Rebecca West’s “The Crown Versus William Joyce”
The badge of maturity, for a literary style, is the nervousness of affect—the compulsion felt by an aspiring author to pee upon a hearth hydrant that an earlier eminence as soon as peed upon with distinction. Rebecca West, an unjustly uncared for deity of “novelistic” reportage, would have authorised of the vulgarity of this metaphor. Within the 1941 masterpiece “Black Lamb and Gray Falcon,” the place she micturated upon the fireplace hydrant of Yugoslavia for eleven hundred gloriously digressive pages, a “toilet of the previous Turkish form” conjures up an prolonged rumination on its darkish dung gap.
The New Yorker author Janet Malcolm, considered one of West’s biggest heirs, would by no means have dwelled on such crude terrain. However a lot of Malcolm’s preoccupations have been recognizable as makes an attempt to beat the debt that she owed her precursor. Authorized conflicts—just like the one on the coronary heart of Malcolm’s “The Journalist and the Assassin”—make for a very good instance. West, who mixed a psychoanalytic aversion to sentimentality with an anthropological curiosity, impressed a technology of writers to render courtroom proceedings as a civilized translation of a primordial ceremony. In 1946, her dispatch from Nuremberg started, “These males who had needed to kill me and my form and who had almost had their want have been to be advised whether or not I and my form have been to kill them and why.” Vengeance may need underwritten a given trial’s stakes, however circumstances themselves have been to be taken in as stylized performances. West handled trial protection as a variant of drama criticism.
West reserved her most operatic appreciation for tragedies of betrayal—“the darkish travesty of authentic hatred as a result of it’s felt for kindred, simply as incest is the darkish travesty of authentic love.” A yr earlier than Nuremberg, West chronicled the prosecution, in London, of William Joyce, alias Lord Haw-Haw. Joyce was a second-tier Fascist who had defected to Berlin to function a radio broadcaster for the Nazis’ English service. He was notorious in Britain for his bloodthirsty prophecies of German triumph.
The courthouse viewers’s vexed relationship with Joyce was “one thing new within the historical past of the world”—a prototype of the parasocial. Joyce’s voice “had steered a big and flashy handsomeness,” however his look broke the spell. “He was brief and, although not very ugly, was exhaustively so,” with the look “of an japanese European peasant pushed off the land by poverty right into a manufacturing unit city and there sporting his first swimsuit of western garments.” (Outdoing Malcolm in her icy dispassion, West was cruel with the poor jurors as properly: “although they have been drawn from completely different ranks of life, there is no such thing as a rank of life wherein middle-aged English persons are apart from puffy or haggard.”)
What should be West’s appreciable legacy has been diminished to her wit, and he or she was hilariously unsparing in her remedy of Joyce as “flimsy but coarse.” This, West was properly conscious, represented a crystallization of the angle that impressed his unique treason. Joyce’s youthful high-society aspirations had been dismissed, and the ache of this damage fed his populist resentment: “What might the little man do—since he so passionately desired to train authority and neither this nor another sane state would give it to him—however use his trick of gathering collectively luckless fellows to overturn the state and substitute a mad one?”
Rejected by the sensible institution, Joyce ingratiated himself with a counter-élite which may dignify his bitterness as political braveness. His fantasy of standing and goal destined him for Berlin, which he believed might train England a factor or two about old school martial valor. In some methods, he prefigured the toadying courtiers of our period’s New Proper, who fawn over despots with the identical pick-me devotion.
West discovered Joyce virtually beneath contempt. The bureaucratic march towards his conviction was however “extra horrible than another case I’ve ever seen wherein a demise sentence was given.” Privately, she wrote, “I’m consumed with pity for Joyce as a result of it appears to me that he lived in a real hell.” The deadpan pathos of her report painted this hell as a shared actuality. The despair that each created Joyce and attended his execution was common: “No person in court docket felt any emotion when he knew that Joyce was going to die.” ♦
