Saturday, August 3, 2019
Reaction to The Reader :: Reader
      Reaction to The Reader            In part II, chapter eight of Bernhard Schlink's The Reader, the first-person  narrator Michael describes reading the account written by a concentration camp  who had survived along with her mother, the soul survivors in a large group of  women who were being marched away from the camp. He says, "the book...creates  distance. It does not invite one to identify with it and makes no one  sympathetic..." The same could be said of The Reader. The book is written in  such a way as to distance one from the characters. It prevents people from  sympathizing with Hanna or Michael or anyone else, taking a sort of detached  viewpoint from their problems. This can be paralleled to the efforts of the  German people towards Vergangenheitsbewältigung, or "coping with the past." In  coping with Germany's Nazi history, the Germans attempted to distance themselves  from it and the moral implications it presented. They tried to understand it  without involving themselves in it, since involving them   selves could implicate  them. The one person in the book who cannot distance herself, Hanna, is still  unsympathetic because everyone else distances themselves from her, making it  impossible to sympathize with any aspect of her plight. Hanna is symbolic of  German history in this respect.            As the narrator, Michael is particularly hard to sympathize with. The way he  guides the story eschews emotional attachment. He himself feels detached from  almost everything: "....I felt nothing: my feelings were numbed." His detachment  transfers to the readers. None of his traits, or any of the situations he comes  up against, makes one feel particularly sorry for him. Nothing makes one want to  understand what he's going through or where he's coming from. He is simply  there, dictating the story, telling us about his feelings without us getting  involved. Further alienating is his tendency to fall into tangents which don't  relate to the main narrative. These tangents are even harder to muster interest  in than the true point of the book and don't serve any discernible purpose, in  the end causing us to separate even further from the story.            Michael's feelings of numbness and alienation--and, subsequently, the  feelings of numbess and alienation that are produced in the book's  audience--reflect the attempts made by the German people to distance themselves  from the spectres of the Nazi past.  					    
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