Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Submission By Michel Houellebecq

Submission

By Michel Houellebecq

(Heinemann, £18.99 stg)

Published in French on January 7th this year, the day of the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris, and now appearing in English translation, you couldn’t say controversialist Michel Houellebecq latest novel, his seventh, is not prescient. He has form when it comes to Muslim immigration in France, and jihadism, of course. He was taken to court in 2002 for incitement to racial hatred, after calling Islam ‘the stupidest religion’, and his 1999 novel Platform culminates in the conflagration of a fundamentalist terrorist atrocity on a beach resort in Thailand.

Submission’s central character is a recognisable Houellebecq type. François, 44, a lecturer at the Sorbonne, is reclusive, friendless, existing on a diet of frozen dinners in his two room apartment, and trying to avoid mithering by postgraduate students he doesn’t consider up to snuff. He usually initiates an annual affair with a female student, which ends in the summer when he receives a message beginning ‘I’ve met someone.’ The current incumbent is 22-year-old Myriam, beautiful, sexy and Jewish, who clearly cares for him, but he can’t respond. He was the author, in his 20s, of a brilliant dissertation on decadent 19th century novelist Joris-Karl Huysmans, author of the infamous Au Rebours

Set slightly in the future, Submission partakes of a trait of most of the best science fiction, that of a ‘What if…?’ projection on the present. It is also in the tradition of the dystopian narrative, á la Orwell’s 1984, although the timeline here is rather more truncated and immediate, for this is a dystopia we mostly already inhabit.

It is 2022, and the apolitical François is settling in to watch the Presidential election results on TV, entertainment he considers second only to the soccer World Cup. After the preliminary voting, two candidates emerge: Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right Front National, and the head of France’s new Islamic party, Mohammed Ben Abbes. The Socialists coalesce with the Muslim Brotherhood to defeat Le Pen, and Ben Abbes becomes president. Because the Brotherhood cares more about education than the economy, as the chief instiller of appropriate moral values in the next generation, all they ask is that state secondary schools and universities adopt an Islamic curriculum. François is duly informed that he cannot return to his university work unless he converts to Islam, and is retired on a generous pension.

These events precipitate a crisis of (non) faith, which sees François taking off for the Benedictine abbey in southern France where Huysmans spent his last years after abandoning his dissolute life in Paris and converting to mystical Catholicism in middle age, and thence to the medieval Christian pilgrimage site Rocamadour. Myriam leaves for Israel with her parents, but François concludes, “There is no Israel for me.”

This is no coup d’etat, so little seems to change at first, but over the following months François starts to notice small things, beginning with how women dress. He sees fewer skirts and dresses, more baggy pants and shirts that hide the body’s contours. Non-Muslim women have adopted the style to escape the sexual marketplace that Houellebecq has delineated so well elsewhere. Youth crime declines, as does unemployment when women, grateful for the social engineering of new family subsidies, begin to leave the workforce to care for their children.

François thinks he sees a new social model developing before his eyes, which he imagines has the polygamous family at its center. Men have different wives for sex, childbearing, and affection; the wives pass through all these stages as they age, but never have to worry about being abandoned. They are always surrounded by their children, who have lots of siblings and feel loved by their parents, who never divorce. François is impressed, but while his admiration may initially stem from a colonial fantasy of the erotic harem, it flourishes as acknowledgement of a secure social order, based on the family.

The big question here is, how much does Houellebecq himself endorse this view? Curiously, he may not simply be pulling our leg here. When François accedes to the gentle proslytising of suave university president, Robert Rediger, and returns to his now exorbitantly paid teaching post, it seems not solely out of self-interest, if at all. Similarly, when he also edits a complete works of Huysmans, where he concludes that his hero was not really a decadent after all, he genuinely seems to believe this. But if François rolls over, does that mean Michel H has?

When asked about ‘the stupidest religion’ remark last January, Houellebecq declared that he had now changed his mind, through reading the Qu’ran. “Perhaps I hadn’t read it with enough care,” he said. “Now I think that a reasonably honest interpretation of the Qu’ran does not end up with jihadism. It would require a very dishonest interpretation to arrive at jihadism.” He also added that Submission is “not Islamophobic. Even an inattentive reading would not see it as that.”

So, while some in France have complained that the novel fans right-wing fears of the Muslim population, that is to miss Houellebecq’s deeply subversive point: Islamists and anti-immigration demagogues really ought to be on the same side, because they share a suspicion of pluralist liberalism and a desire to return to ‘traditional’ or pre-feminist values, where a woman submits to her husband, just as ‘Islam’ means that a Muslim submits to God. Rediger even permits himself a sly allusion to Pauline Réage’s BDSM classic The Story of O in this regard.

 Which is all fine and well, unless you’re the kind of man who’d like to be with a woman who has a brain, or are the kind of woman for whom domesticity does not provide total fulfilment. 

 The other aspect of this timely novel to be remarked upon is how much Houellebecq has improved as a writer qua writing since his early scattergun sprawls. When he started off, he had a lot to say, but was not always all that careful about how he said it. However, aphoristic sentences such as ‘For man, love is nothing more than gratitude for the gift of pleasure’, and ‘Living together would have spelled the end of all sexual desire between us, and we were still too young to survive that as a couple’ partake of a Wildean exactitude. How much of this greater attention to language is the result of working with more skilled editors and translators we may never know, but it is one more reason to read this novel, from a writer who has never been afraid to grapple with the big questions.




Monday, 2 February 2026

Breakdown by Cathy Sweeney

So I read Breakdown (2024) by Cathy Sweeney. Well written, easy to read. My main takeaway is: 


Why do women think they have a monopoly on middle-class, middle-aged discontent and angst under the vacuousness of late capitalism, mindless consumerism and domestic tedium? I’ve some news for you: lotsa men feel the same way. Lots of people are unfulfilled, both men and women. Why is it always men’s fault? * Ah yes, the patriarchy. As if men didn’t suffer under that too. It’s hardly the boring husband’s fault that she’s a failed artist. Also: why do people like this nameless character have children in the first place? Did they think that they wouldn’t grow to dislike them so much, over time? 


I would say that there is a very strange mother/daughter dynamic going on between Cathy Sweeney and Lucy Sweeney Byrne (who, incidentally, I would consider to be a far superior writer), particularly in the wake of this novel’s publication. Both share a disaffected worldview. Maybe I just find the disillusionment of younger women more interesting than that of the older cohort. 


* This strawman argument against these strawmen is, of course, a commonly observable phenomenon among contemporary Irish women whom I’ve read, e.g. Eimear McBride, Niamh Campbell, Nicole Flattery. While it may be therapeutic to get things off your chest, I’m not sure how much it helps the discourse. 




Friday, 30 January 2026

The Map and the Territory By Michel Houellebecq

The Map and the Territory 

By Michel Houellebecq

(Vintage, £7.99 stg, P/B)

The latest novel from the author of controversial and prize-winning works Atomised and Platform is his most normal and conventional outing thus far. But this is Houellebecq, so it is still relatively challenging. 

Essentially it is the life-story of successful French artist Jed Martin, an only child and a solitary adult, whose social and sexual interactions are few and far between. He meets his retired architect father once a year for Christmas dinner (his mother committed suicide when he was a boy). For a time he has an affair with beautiful Russian émigré, Olga. Otherwise his main distraction is the fluctuating state of the boiler in his bachelor pad/artist’s studio. He seems to stumble through life, having the great good fortune that his talent is recognised, and handsomely remunerated, without much obvious self-promotion. Indeed, his Kiplingesque indifference to ‘those two imposters’, and the feeling that his acclaim is as much the result of blind chance as it is of ability and application, is one of his more attractive features.

He begins his artistic career photographing tools and household objects, but gains attention for his series of photographic recastings of Michelin maps. It is through these works that he meets Olga, who is Public Relations director of Michelin France. After they become lovers, they enjoy weekends away in provincial France, at ‘Charm & Relax’ hotels and Michelin starred restaurants. One could argue that in his caustic observations on the socio-economic demographics of the domestic leisure industry, Houellebecq here does for tourism in France what Platform did for holidays in Thailand. Jed’s mature work, carried out long after Olga has returned to promotion in Moscow, starts out as the Series of Simple Professions, and culminates in canvases with titles like Bill Gates and Steve Jobs Discussing the Future of Information Technology and Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons Dividing Up the Art Market. He photographs things; he paints people.

The Michelin fixation has a clear antecedent in Roland Barthes’ essay ‘The Blue Guide’ from Mythologies; but it is another, more well-known Barthes work which really informs The Map and the Territory: ‘The Death of the Author’. Jed requests that none other than Michel Houellebecq, the notorious novelist, write the catalogue essay for a retrospective of his work. After meeting the author, he decides to do a portrait of Michel Houellebecq, Writer. So, Houellebecq becomes a character in his own novel, with all the opportunities for satire, self-parody and doubleness that entails. When the author gets bumped off in gruesome fashion, the book takes an unexpected left turn into a police procedural. It also brings the nod to Barthes full circle, and sets up a challenge from the creative to the critical, the literary to the theoretical. Barthes argued for the effacement of authorial biography and intention. Houellebecq’s voice, entangled as it is with his anti-celebrity, and the flatly opinionated tone of his writings, is so powerful that it speaks from beyond the grave.

Some will say that this is Houellebecq’s least ambitious novel, even if it is the first one to win the prestigious Prix Goncourt in France. Atomised, after all, was dedicated ‘to mankind’. But, aside from taking a few pot-shots at his detractors among France’s media figures, for the most part Houellebecq avoids the navel-gazing pitfalls inherent in the ‘novelist-as-character-in-his-own-novel’ ploy. Rather like the artist Jed Martin, the writer Michel Houellebecq has achieved both critical and commercial recognition, a combination which can arouse a good deal of professional jealousy and financial envy. The novel does contain some shrewd send-ups of art criticism and the art market. The character Houellebecq, in his exhibition catalogue, opines that all of Jed Martin’s work could be subtitled A Brief History of Capitalism. Perhaps the same is true of Houellebecq’s oeuvre. At any rate, he can still employ his trenchant talent for amusingly sweeping generalisation to devastating effect, as with, ‘They had several happy weeks. It was not, it couldn’t be, the exacerbated, feverish happiness of young people, and it was no longer a question for them in the course of a weekend to get plastered or totally shit-faced; it was already – but they were still young enough to laugh about it – the preparation for that epicurean, peaceful, refined but unsnobbish happiness that Western society offered the representatives of its middle-to-upper classes in middle age.’ One certainly wonders how far his tongue was planted in his cheek when he has Jed’s father offer this opinion of his work: ‘He’s a good author, it seems to me. He’s pleasant to read, and he has quite an accurate view of society.’


First published in The Sunday Independent.




Monday, 26 January 2026

The Possibility of an Island By Michel Houellebecq

The Possibility of an Island

By Michel Houellebecq

(Hamish Hamilton, £12.99stg/€19.04)

In many ways, this new novel by the bad boy (or hot property, depending on your point of view) of contemporary French letters, could be described as a sequel to his breakthrough, second novel, 1999’s Atomised. Less generously, it could equally be dismissed as ‘more of the same’.

All the previous and expected particular elements are in place: the jaundiced disdain for the rampant yet alarmingly unselfconscious self-indulgence of hippie-liberal hangover values (or, rather, lack of them); the acerbic appraisal of the selfishly hedonistic West, fixated as it is on the glorification of youth, the accumulation of wealth and the instant gratification of pleasure – in short what is generally rather euphemistically described as ‘progress’, the dark corollary of which is its incapacity to accommodate its own old, sick or poor – much less those of what is usually somewhat optimistically referred to as the ‘developing’ world; an equal contempt for the power-hungry absurdities of traditional, atavistic, family-values orientated religion, be it Jewish, Christian or Muslim; and a quasi-science fictional fascination with the possibilities opened up by biochemistry and genetics for curing man, the sick animal, of his desires, violence and neuroses, sometime in the distant future.

Daniel is a successful forty-something French comedian, who has built his reputation on envelope-pushing, near-the-knuckle shock tactics, in his stand-up routines and films. Having amassed a fortune but, in the process, grown blasé about what he does, he goes to live in a depopulated part of southern Spain, in semi-retirement.

There have been two significant women in his life. The first is his contemporary Isabelle, a magazine editor whom he marries and takes to Spain, and with whom all goes well until her aging body initially puts her off herself, and then puts him off her. They divorce, and she goes to live in Biarritz, with the morphine-shooting old biddies.  The second is younger model Esther, the twenty-two-year old Spanish student of philosophy and piano, who supplements her income with acting and, well yes, modelling. But their intensely erotic affair, described in copious detail, is doomed, since, ‘For Esther, as for all the young girls of her generation, sexuality was just a pleasant pastime, driven by seduction and eroticism, which implied no particular sentimental commitment.’ Through her Daniel realises that he too, at forty-seven, is careworn and past it. Isabelle wanted love but not sex; Esther wanted sex but not love: therein lies his conundrum.

While in mainland Spain, and subsequently in Lanzarote, Daniel becomes involved with The Elohimites, a cult espousing free love and eternal life through DNA cloning. When the cult leader, The Prophet, is murdered by a jealously disgruntled acolyte, and Daniel’s artist friend Vincent takes over the reins, Daniel donates his own DNA sample for posterity. Thus, in a kind of Biblical pastiche, the narrative is shared between him, Daniel1, and Daniel24 and Daniel25, his distant descendants, who have been culled from his DNA, with all the annoyingly rancorous human traits ironed out of the mix. When one incarnation dies, he is replaced by the next number in line. So, we are transported to 2000 years in the future, where Daniel25, like the rest of these ‘neohumans’, passes his days in neutral tranquillity, adding his commentary to his ancestor’s personal history, striving to understand what could have made him so unhappy, while the remnants of the old human race roam in primitive packs outside his secure compound.   

In his ABC of Reading, Ezra Pound asked a pertinent question: ‘Can you be interested in the work of a man who is blind to 80 percent of the spectrum? To 30 per cent of the spectrum? Here the answer is, curiously enough, yes IF…if his perceptions are hypernormal in any part of the spectrum he can be of very great use as a writer – though perhaps not of very great ‘weight’. This is where the so-called crack-brained genius comes in. The concept of genius as akin to madness has been carefully fostered by the inferiority complex of the public.’ Houellebecq’s range may be limited, but his gaze is intense, the jettisoning of a balanced and well-rounded worldview being the price for the unflinching and penetrating stare which produces insight. However, he is far from being a prophet, or even the prescient social and cultural forecaster he has been hailed as. For he is merely describing things as they already are, as he sees them (and his objective reality is certainly as verifiable and valid as those who cheerfully persist in ‘looking on the bright side’), but as most people are still too blithely unaware or too wilfully unwilling to see for themselves.

While never a very elegant stylist (at least in translation), his true metier is that venerable, almost forgotten genre, ‘the novel of ideas’. As for the repetition and lack of progression in his oeuvre, that is something which can only trouble his longtime admirers rather than those new to his work. But even the old fans may well find themselves making allowances. For, while he may only have a couple of things to say, hardly anyone else is saying them, and he says them very well. Whether or not he needs to keep on restating them is another matter, and the choice to continue listening is ultimately yours. His choice is whether or not he needs to change his tune, or at least to conduct some variations on it. But for the time being, he has decided to leave well enough alone.


First published in The Sunday Independent



Friday, 23 January 2026

Rothko in Paris

‘Content is a glimpse of something, an encounter like a flash. It’s very tiny – very tiny, content.’

Willem De Kooning


The evening before we left for two days in Paris (or, more accurately, one evening, one day and one morning), solely to see the massive Mark Rothko retrospective exhibition (115 canvasses, the largest collection of his works ever shown together in one place) at the Fondation Louis Vuitton, I attended a concert given by the (nominally) drone metal group Sunn O))) at the National Concert Hall, Dublin. Serendipitously, I find I can discern certain elective affinities between these two artists’ respective oeuvres – one visual and painterly, the other aural and musical – in terms of what I find most challenging and moving in art. I made the journey to Paris in an effort to answer a question I have been asking myself for a long time: why is it that I am so enthralled by Rothko’s work, above that of other twentieth century painters I admire? Correspondingly, I might invite a similar self-interrogation regarding Sunn O)))’s output: why am I so drawn to drone in different musical genres, as exponents of which Greg Anderson and Stephen O’Malley’s band are in many ways the epitome? 

At first encounter, both partake of the Hegelian aesthetic in striving for the Absolute, or telos, in art: i.e. if you want to worship God, or e/in/pre-voke the Transcendental through an art work, then build something Bloody Big. Ergo, on the one hand: cathedrals as venues, banks of twelve vintage tube amplifier heads atop twenty-four speaker cabinets, enormous volume; and, on the other: chapels as locations, huge canvasses, blocks of pure, primary colour blurring into each other. However, as Rothko wrote:


              I paint very large pictures. I realise that historically the function of painting 

              large pictures is painting something very grandiose and pompous. The

              reason I paint them, however, is precisely because I want to be very intimate

              and human. To paint a small picture is to place yourself outside your

              experience, to look upon an experience as a stereopticon view or with a

              reducing glass. However you paint the larger picture and devote yourself to

              it wholeheartedly, you are inside it. It isn’t something you command.


In other words, paradoxically, go large for more intimacy. Rothko’s work may be characterised by rigorous attention to formal elements such as colour, shape, balance, depth, composition, and scale; yet, he refused to consider his paintings exclusively in these terms. He explained: ‘It is a widely accepted notion among painters that it does not matter what one paints as long as it is well painted. This is the essence of academicism. There is no such thing as good painting about nothing.’ 

Flaubert declared, with provocative hyperbole, in a letter to his great friend Louise Colet, while he was struggling with the writing of Madame Bovary: ‘What I would like to write is a book about nothing, a book dependent on nothing external, which would be held together by the inner strength of its style.’ Similarly, as John Banville has observed of Kafka: 


              ‘The artist’, says Kafka, ‘is the one who has nothing to say.’ By which he 

              means that art, true art, carries no message, has no opinion, does not

              attempt to coerce or persuade, but simply – simply! – bears witness.

              Ironically, we find this dictum particularly hard to accept in the case of his

              own work, which comes to us with all the numinous weight and opacity of a

              secret testament, the codes of which we seem required to decrypt.


Here, Banville is echoing what Susan Sontag wrote about Kafka’s work in her seminal, influential (well, at least on me) 1964 essay ‘Against Interpretation’:


              The work of Kafka, for example, has been subjected to a mass ravishment

              by no less than three armies of interpreters. Those who read Kafka as a

              social allegory see case studies of the frustrations and insanity of modern

              bureaucracy and its ultimate issuance in the totalitarian state. Those who

              read Kafka as a psychoanalytic allegory see desperate revelations of Kafka’s

              fear of his father, his castration anxieties, his sense of his own impotence,

              his thralldom to his dreams. Those who read Kafka as a religious allegory

              explain that K. in The Castle is trying to gain access to heaven, that Joseph

              K. in The Trial is being judged by the inexorable and mysterious justice of

              God … Another body of work that has attracted interpreters like leeches is

              that of Samuel Beckett. Beckett’s delicate dramas of the withdrawn

              consciousness – pared down to essentials, cut off, often represented as

              physically immobiliezed – are read as a statement about modern man’s

              alienation from meaning or from God, or as an allegory of 

              psychopathology. 


This impatience with overinterpretation, and a concomitant aspiration towards pure engagement with works of art, is further echoed (reverbed?) in E.M. Forster’s famous pronouncement in Aspects of the Novel:


              Yes – oh dear yes – the novel tells a story. That is the fundamental aspect 

              without which it could not exist. That is the highest factor common to all 

              novels, and I wish that it was not so, that it could be something different – 

              melody, or perception of truth, not this low atavistic form.


If Rothko’s painting can be considered ‘good’ (which, I take as self-evident, it is), and is therefore, by his own lights, not ‘about nothing’, then what is it about? Scale was not an end in itself for Rothko, I surmise: it is merely a means to an end. ‘If you are only moved by colour relationships, you are missing the point. I am interested in expressing the big emotions - tragedy, ecstasy, doom.’ The parallels with the music of Sunn O))) need not be laboured: their work is not, or not only, about loudness for its own sake. They clearly want to make an audience feel something, be it a viscerally physical reaction felt in the chest, the abdomen, the nervous system, or something less tangible and more esoteric, something you can’t quite put your finger on. Perhaps they are seeking to show, at some profound level, that this mind/body duality problem, in terms of apprehension and appreciation, is not irreconcilable. Both artists are exponents of a maximalism which is a port of entry for a greater minimalism. You may share a large bottle of cognac in front of a roaring fire on a chilly evening with a friend, but it is not necessary to down the lot between you in one sitting to achieve a warm inner glow. Again, maybe this apparent something/nothing, presence/absence dichotomy can be resolved by way of Beckett’s remark in his essay ‘Dante... Bruno. Vico.. Joyce’, an exegesis of Joyce’s Finnegans Wake – then known simply as Work in Progress: ‘His writing is not about something; it is that something itself.’ This chimes well with Rothko’s own proclamation: ‘A painting is not about an experience. It is an experience.’

When Rothko moved on from his early figurative work, which included landscapes, still lifes, figure studies, and portraits – even, almost unthinkably, a self-portrait – and had demonstrated an ability to blend expressionism and surrealism, he also abandoned what Philip Larkin called, with characteristic disenchantment, ‘the myth kitty’: those Greco-Roman archetypes in which he (Rothko – and, it should be conceded, Larkin too) was well-versed. His search for new forms led to his colour field paintings, which, it is safe to say – however much we may be embarrassed by the acknowledgement – employed shimmering colour to convey a sense of spirituality. Yet, despite almost always being classed (nominally) as an abstract expressionist, he never considered himself as one such. Startlingly, he wrote, ‘I’m not an abstractionist... I’m not interested in relationships of colour or form or anything else.’ He continued, elsewhere, to elaborate on this contention: ‘I’m interested only in expressing basic human emotions. And the fact that a lot of people break down and cry when confronted with my pictures shows that I can communicate these basic human emotions.’

How, it might reasonably be asked, does this process take place? How is pure emotion, the sense of transcendence and the sublime which Rothko sought to transmit through abstract forms and colour, communicated without representation, figuration, narrative? Perhaps it is their very absence which clears the way for the tranquillity necessary for meditation upon the infinite. Rock music writer Jim DeRogatis titled his book on neo-psychedelic group The Flaming Lips Staring at Sound. In a form of synaesthesia, a study of Rothko might usefully bear the moniker Listening to Vision. The paintings are not about the emotions, they are the feelings themselves. It is what it is. In this regard, one may think of another painter, whose ‘squares’ of primary colour separated by black lines are often thought of as ‘cold’: Mondrian. And yet, certain viewers confess to being intensely moved by his work. 

This may all sound like a secular instance of prayer for those who do not pray – or even an ancillary form of worship for those who still do. (Certainly, both Sunn O))) and Rothko invite such a reading: the former donning their stage attire of billowing monks’ robes – floor-length habit and hooded cowl, while pumping incense-tinged dry ice at the audience and adopting hierophantic poses; the latter designing a non-denominational chapel which houses fourteen of his paintings – a possible modernist spin on the Via Dolorosa’s Stations of the Cross). Rothko implied as much when he wrote: ‘The people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them.’ 

Within this statement, Rothko encapsulates the profound impact his art has on those who fall under its spell. His works promote an emotional response akin to a deeply personal spiritual encounter. Rothko’s intention was to engage the viewer in a dialogue that transcends words, inviting them to immerse themselves in an experience that mirrors his own unfathomable connection with his art. Through this shared emotional resonance, Rothko forges a connection with those who encounter his creations, which also offers them an opportunity to connect with something transcendent and sublime within themselves. The artist’s son, Christopher Rothko, wrote in his introduction to The Artist’s Reality, the posthumously published book by his father from which most of the foregoing quotations are taken: ‘Like music, my father’s artwork seeks to express the inexpressible — we are far removed from the realm of words… The written word would only disrupt the experience of these paintings; it cannot enter their universe.’ Which renders my task here, and indeed Rothko père’s attempts to explain himself – if only to himself – moot. One hardly wants to be seen espousing, at this late stage of the game, high Victorian Matthew Arnold’s notion of a ‘religion of art’, or even fellow late Victorian Walter Pater’s line about how ‘All arts aspire to the condition of music’ (even if they do). Again, let Beckett – himself a notable Bible reader (to the extent that, taking a part for the whole as synecdoche does, the Holy Book might also rejoice in the alternative title The Book of Samuel) – fly to my rescue, with his definition, from Watt, of the ineffable as ‘That which cannot be effed.’ The instrumental music of Sunn O))) might also be said to reside far beyond the written, or spoken, word, and even beyond most easily resolved music. 

Both Rothko and Sunn O))) run the risk common to any artists who deal in extremity, that of the danger of repetition blunting their vision, and of replication diminishing the sought after emotional impact of their work. This hazard is more acute in the performing arts, where audience expectation due to previous reputation is more immediately felt by the artist, and boredom at fulfilling it by doing the same thing every night with perhaps only minor variations can easily or eventually set in –  although it is still to be guarded against in the plastic arts too. Indeed, Rothko was unable to enjoy much of his later success, when he considered that people might only be purchasing his work as investments, with no regard as to the ‘content’, having ‘a Rothko’ being more important to some than owning a particular Rothko because of a personal affinity with it. His repudiation of pop and op art was partly because they seemed to him to make a virtue of repetition, and partly because their practitioners did not appear to have many qualms about viewing their work as saleable commodities, products feeding a market through factory-like production processes which lead predictably to commodification, swallowed by the ravenous maw of late capitalism. (In this context, one might also fruitfully speculate on the significance of the venues for both of these shows. How did a drone metal group come to be playing in Ireland’s National Concert Hall – an auditorium more ordinarily associated with the classical tradition? And how did Rothko’s paintings wind up in the Fondation Louis Vuitton – a patron who embodies the fads of luxury fashion [and was, inter alia, a Nazi collaborator]? Perhaps everything grows respectable, or else degrades, in the end. Or, more mundanely, becomes popular with the general public.)

While no self-respecting critic these days would want to be caught dead dwelling overlong on the separation of ‘form’ from ‘content’, it is worth referring again to Susan Sontag’s musings on the conundrum in the above mentioned ‘Against Interpretation’, from which is borrowed, in an act of homage, the Willem De Kooning epigraph regarding ‘content’, as also the epigraph to this essay. In her short but wide-ranging piece, one deleterious aspect of over-interpretation Sontag stresses is how it diminishes the sensuous experience of a work of art. While her famous, aphoristic final sentence reads, ‘In place of a hermeneutics we need an erotics of art’, the preceding, penultimate section finishes thus:


              Our task is not to find the maximum amount of content in a work of art,

              much less to squeeze more content out of the work than is already there. Our

              task is to cut back content so that we can see the thing at all. 

              The aim of all commentary on art now should be to make works of art –

              and, by analogy, our own experience – more, rather than less, real to us. The

              function of criticism should be to show how it is what it is, even that it is

              what it is, rather than to show what it means.


‘Content’ is a term by which no writer or artist worth his or her salt would refer to what s/he makes – lest they become a finkish ‘content provider’ – and yet it is one forcefully thrust onto writing and art by the tyrannical vocabulary of commercial media, that hotbed of professionalised consumerism concerned not with the promotion of culture but with the profitable exploitation of it.  This is made manifest in criticism which is thinly-veiled advertising and public relations. Again, from ‘Against Interpretation’:



              Real art has the capacity to make us nervous. By reducing the work of art to

              its content and then interpreting that, one tames the work of art.

              Interpretation makes art manageable, conformable.


In another prescient insight, Sontag considers this notion of ‘content’ – perhaps the most contemptible term by which professional commodifiers refer to cultural material today – and how it defiles art:


              Interpretation, based on the highly dubious theory that a work of art is

              composed of items of content, violates art. It makes art into an article for

              use, for arrangement into a mental scheme of categories.


In opposition to such harmful acts of interpretation, Sontag points to ‘making works of art whose surface is so unified and clean, whose momentum is so rapid, whose address is so direct that the work can be … just what it is.’

What, then, is this elusive and rarely glimpsed ‘content’ – if any – in Rothko’s work, which eludes us as we endlessly consider its forms (even if we are enlightened enough to know that they are ultimately indivisible)? And, furthermore, what does it mean? Here is a tentatively trial, and purely provisional, open conclusion.

Shortly before his death by suicide, Rothko suffered an aneurysm of the aorta. As was only to be expected, his medical advisors told him to stop drinking alcohol and smoking tobacco. (His version of being ‘off the sauce’ was the compromise of drinking only vodka, and from the bottle rather than a glass – as this was not really drinking; he remained, as he had always been, a chronic chain smoker.) He also became impotent, so couldn’t have sex. But most saliently, he was warned to stop painting large canvases, because of the physical exertion it demanded of his body. Given the shrinking of his world imposed by these new limitations on it, perhaps the question as to why he killed himself could be better recast as: why wouldn’t he? Indeed, it is possible to argue that it was his perception – nay, his conviction – of the very thinness of the veil between this world and another one – the blurring of the borders between them reflected in the fuzzy-around-the-edges rectangular blocks merging onto larger rectangular backgrounds in his own paintings – which led him to suppose that ‘doing away with himself’ – as it is called – was merely the slewing off of one particular plain of existence for a fresh start on another. As a reader of the Talmud since boyhood, he would have been familiar with the concept (surely influenced by Hindu and Buddhist notions of reincarnation) that with the last breath, the soul breaks free from the body and endures as a form of consciousness. Beckett again, from Malone Dies: ‘…a last prayer, the true prayer at last, the one that asks for nothing.’ Even atheists, much less agnostics, can espouse a belief that spirit – if only as a materialistic concept – is somehow eternal. Unfashionable as it may be among post-structuralists and deconstructionists, something akin to a fallen, secular variety of mystical awe is undoubtedly aspired to and even realised in these engulfing, rapturous, rapture-inducing canvasses. Just as the same could also be said of the sprawling, overwhelming soundscapes conjured by Sunn O))). 

But now I realise that I too have been tempted into the trap, and committed the sin, of overinterpretation, and so must seek some sort of redemption. Strike all of the above. Go look at the paintings. Go listen to the music. It is enough. It is more than enough. 







Saturday, 10 January 2026

Lanzarote By Michel Houellebecq

Lanzarote

By Michel Houellebecq

(Heinemann, £9.99stg h/b)

An unnamed French narrator sets out for a week in the sun in January of the new millennium, choosing the most unspoilt of the Canary Islands, the volcanic Lanzarote. There he meets up with, and gets off with, non-exclusive German lesbians Pam and Barbara. He tries to involve the morose divorcee Rudi, a police inspector from Luxemburg who works in Brussels, in their activities, but to no avail. Instead Rudi is seduced by the Azraelian cult, which is preparing for humanity to be regenerated by extra-terrestrials. Later, when they are all back in their respective countries, Rudi is implicated in the revelations of paedophile activities among the Azraelians.

    ‘If it is no match for Corfu or Ibiza in the crazy techno afternoons holiday sector,’ Houellebecq tells us through his narrator, ‘neither is Lanzarote in a position to offer ecotourism’, because of its volcanic composition. The possibility of cultural tourism is also ruled out, since all baroque convents and medieval fortresses were destroyed by the succession of earthquakes and volcanic eruptions which took place between 1730 and 1732, an eyewitness account of which closes the book.

    Lanzarote probably appeals to Houellebecq because its inhabitants do not ‘correspond to the image of flamboyant Mediterranean peoples so beloved of some Nordic and Batavian tourists.’ The prehistoric peoples of the island never took to the sea, believing that avoiding contact with the outside world was the wisest course of action. So, the history of Lanzarote until recent times has been a history of complete isolation.

    That said, Lanzarote is a relatively lightweight concoction in comparison with the author’s much more substantial, and award-winning, Atomised and Platform, and bears all the hallmarks of a contractual-fulfilling short story painfully elongated into a novel. We’ve heard this tone, and the worldview it expresses, done before and done better in the previous books, and here he is merely repeating himself, right down to the way his language of sexual description mimics the terminology pornography employs. Nor is this slim volume cohesive enough a work to be called a novel.

    Finally, writing as one who honeymooned on Lanzarote, Houellebecq is rather reductive about the island’s merits. It is remarkable that a book could appear about the place without one reference to Caesar Manrique, the architect and artist whose presence is felt everywhere, and whose campaigning is the reason that, until recently, no building there exceeded five stories in height.    

  

Desmond Traynor is a Hennessey Literary Award winner, whose essays and short stories have been widely published.


First published in the Irish Independent




Sunday, 28 December 2025

Platform By Michel Houellebecq

Platform

By Michel Houellebecq

(Heinemann, £12.99 stg, H/B)

In The Outsider, Camus wrote of his anti-hero Mersault killing an Arab. In this follow up to his Impac Award-winning Atomised, Houellebecq, the first French novelist since Camus to find a wide readership outside France, has the Arabs - or more accurately, and safer to say - Islamic fundamentalists, take their revenge, dispatching first the anti-hero's father, and then the love of his life.

'Father died last year', begins Platform's central character Michel, a civil servant accounts manager at the Ministry of Culture, thus deliberately echoing The Outsider's Meursault, with his opening shot, 'Mother died today'.  But if Michel is another outsider, he is also curiously representative of the contemporary single, middle-class, middle-aged, Western male. With his inheritance, he takes a package holiday to Thailand, where he disdains his fat, plebeian, or equally noxious New Age fellow-tourists, and frequents the hostess bars and massage parlours. He also meets Valerie, an employee of the tour company, and embarks on an intense affair with her back in Paris.  

Michel persuades Valerie and her boss, who have been headhunted by a rival conglomerate to turn around an ailing company, to promote sex tourism in Thailand and the Caribbean. His socio-economic rationale of the venture is succinct: 'maybe it's something to do with narcissism, or individualism, the cult of success', but 'you have several hundred million Westerners who have everything they could want but no longer manage to obtain sexual satisfaction…on the other hand, you have several billion people who have nothing, who are starving, who die young, who live in conditions unfit for human habitation and who have nothing left to sell except their bodies and their unspoiled sexuality.' For himself, Michel has enough self-knowledge to recognise that, 'As a wealthy European, I could obtain food and the services of women more cheaply in other countries; as a decadent European, conscious of my approaching death, and given over entirely to selfishness, I could see no reason to deprive myself of such things.'

The launch of the Aphrodite package is initially a success, and with Michel 'finding it more and more difficult to understand how one could feel attached to an idea, a country, anything in fact other than an individual', he and Valerie are planning to settle in Thailand for good. Then some Muslim terrorists put an end to the idyll on the beach, blowing Valerie and 116 prostitutes and their customers to smithereens, for contravention of strict Islamic law.

Criticisms of the book include that Valerie is more the product of male, specifically French, fantasy - she used to prefer women and is happy to find and share girls with Michel. But women like her do exist in 'real' life, outside the pages of books written by men, or for that matter, by women. There is much interpolation of social theory and data, which can become tedious. Women are frequently reduced simply to body parts, but then so are men. There is little audacious use of language or ‘fine writing’, and scenes can lack atmosphere.

For all that, Houellebecq is a profound writer, and Platform, when added to Atomised, confirms his importance as a writer who still thinks ideas matter, and that books should be about something that matters. For him, the values of the West are hollow, consumerist, self-serving and vicious. Everyone works in marketing, and customer satisfaction is the only criterion, and profit the bottom line. But the traditional pieties of the alien invading hordes of Islam are no better an alternative, being just as mindless, and even more barbaric and brutal.

For his pains, Houellebecq has been sued by several Muslim organisations, and inadvertently become a 'new Rushdie'. But his character Michel is aware that he is as much a part of the morass he delineates as anyone else. He knows that no society can survive with individuals like him, but sees no way out, given the way society is currently configured and, more essentially, given human nature. What everyone forgets is that Meursault, like Camus, was himself an Algerian. From his $50 a month apartment outside Pattaya, Thailand, where Michel goes to die, he ends his sad, apocalyptic memoir by admitting, 'I'll be forgotten. I'll be quickly forgotten.'

First published in the Irish Independent