by
Douglas Messerli
Nigel
Dennis Cards of Identity (London:
Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1955; New York: Vanguard, 1955). Republished in the US (Normal, Illinois:
Dalkey Archive Press, 2002)
The Captain,
Mrs. Mallet, and Beaufort, now living in the house, are themselves imposters,
and in actuality are programmers for the Identity Club, sent out to secure the
house and staff it before the Club's annual meeting. In a wink of an eye—and a
little psychological reconditioning—the Paradises are ensconced in the house as
butler and head cook, and are soon joined by a former doctor and nurse (who are
transformed into gardeners) and a confused patient, Mrs. Finch, who in their
waiting room displayed her uncertainty of self by answering to Mrs. Chirk.
Enter the club members themselves, a motley crew who have all taken on
completely absurd identities recounted in fictional case histories presented as
ideal facts. Three of these histories—that of H. M. Bitterling (who has
discovered himself in the role of Co-Warden of the Badgeries), Alexander
Shubunkin (who is determined to remain sexually undetermined as man and woman
both), and Father Golden Orfe (once a secret agent but is now a brother living
in a monastery)—make up the largest part of this fiction, and represent the
spirited lunacy of Dennis's attack on national, sexual, and religious values.
The final downfall of the Club's president, commencing with a play
summarizing the novel's confusions of identity (ridiculously attributed to
Shakespeare) performed by the servants, and continuing with the appearance of a
policeman to check out the happenings, brings this incredible satire to its
satisfying end, as the servants—uncovering their old selves—are carted off to
jail. Anyone who still believes the fifties to be merely of time of
unquestioning conformity might well read this book.
Los Angeles,
December 7, 2002
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