Book Review
Title: The Vegetarian
Author: Han Kang
Translator: Deborah Smith [from Korean]
Publisher: Granta, London, 2018
Pages: 183
Insanity can provide infinite opportunities to a novelist.
The protagonist of Nobel laureate Han Kang’s Booker-winner novel, The Vegetarian,
thinks of herself as a tree. One can argue with ample logic and conviction that
trees are far better than humans. “Trees are like brothers and sisters,”
Yeong-hye, the protagonist, says. She identifies herself with the trees and
turns vegetarian one day. Worse, she gives up all food eventually. Of course,
she ends up in a mental hospital.
The Vegetarian tells Yeong-hye’s tragic
story on the surface. Below that surface, it raises too many questions that
leave us pondering deeply. What does it mean to be human? Must humanity always entail
violence? Is madness a form of truth, a more profound truth than sanity’s
wisdom?
In the disturbing world of this
novel, trees represent peace, stillness, and nonviolence all of which are conspicuously
absent in human society as far as Yeong-hye understands. She transforms herself
into a tree out of her profound unwillingness of accept her human self. That
transformation is a rejection of the carnivorous, aggressive, and insensitive
human world. She utters statements such as: “I’m not an animal anymore,” “I don’t
need to eat now,” and “I thought trees were standing people.”
When her affectionate sister, In-hye,
tries to feed her, Yeong-hye’s response is: “I need to water my body. I don’t need
this kind of food, sister. I need water.”
Yeong-hye is a symbol in the novel.
There is a Mongolian mark on her body, just above one of her buttocks. Usually such
marks fade away as people grow up. In the case of Yeong-hye, however, her mark
remains with her “against a background of silence, a soundless harmony
recalling something primeval, something eternal.” That primeval-ness is what
Yeong-hye symbolises. Every now and then we are reminded of that primeval side
of the protagonist’s very essence.
Trees are primeval. And more. They
are symbols of purity, rootedness, and harmony with nature. Yeong-hye’s
hallucinations and dreams suggest a yearning to return to a pre-human,
pre-violent state, a kind of vegetative innocence. Yeong-hye transmutes herself
into a tree eventually in order to escape from the vile world of humans. Trees
do no harm and ask for nothing.
While trees may symbolise a kind of
liberation, they also imply passivity. As a tree, Yeong-hye become mute,
immobile, and objectified. Is Yeong-hye’s transformation an act of rebellion or
one of ultimate surrender? Or is it the ultimate spiritual liberation from ego,
desires, and even the flesh?
This is a very slim novel that can be
read in a day or two. The narrative is so concise and crisp that it keeps you
hooked to the end. It is divided into three parts, the first of which is a
first-person narrative by Cheong, Yeong-hye’s husband. His very opening sentence
catches our attention like a tight clamp: “Before my wife turned vegetarian, I’d
always thought of her as completely unremarkable in every way.”
Part 2, third-person narrative,
focuses on Yeong-hye’s brother-in-law, referred to as P. P plays a crucial role
to highlight the tree-symbolism in the novel. He is a painter and paints trees
and flowers on Yeong-hye’s naked body, which she loves. She wishes to bloom
too. The subhuman side of P is also evident to us though Yeong-hye doesn’t
quite understand that.
The concluding part shows the sublime
heights that human sacrifice can attain in the character of In-hye, Yeong-hye’s
sister. It is not necessary to be like a tree in order to ascend above human
vileness. You can be human and noble too.
Reading The Vegetarian is like
being drawn into a quiet storm. Its power lies in its restraint, its ambiguity,
and its refusal to comfort. You finish it feeling unsettled, contemplative, and
changed. It is not a story you consume: it is a story that consumes you.
PS. This post is part of
the Bookish League blog hop hosted by Bohemian Bibliophile.
Hari OM
ReplyDeleteMy, a strong review that draws one towards this book as much as the first sentence you quote! YAM xx
I read about this book somewhere last week and instantly placed the order for my copy.
DeleteThe dividing line between sanctity, sanity and insanity are very porous, in the Jungean Archetypal realm. That is why the "Mad" have the acumen to divine into the True Nature of Things and into the Future.
ReplyDeleteYes. William James also speaks about the link between sanctity and insanity.
DeleteWhat a very sad story. I don't really blame her for wanting to be a tree. Of course, it doesn't go as well as all that.
ReplyDelete