by Douglas Messerli
César Aira Ghosts, translated from the Spanish by Chris Andrews (New York: New Directions, 2008)
They are a
fairly simple people, whose greatest joys in the world center upon the family
more than on material possessions. Living for some time without electricity,
water, or proper toilets, Raúl Viñas' family take their pleasures in almost any
form they're offered, and while the parents live for their children, they are
also curiously inattentive to the numerous young boys and girls scampering from floor to floor through the
open staircases and empty rooms of the six-story building on which they are
working.
Without
explaining it, Aira also gives these people, in their open acceptance of life
and their unstated commitment to faith, the ability to see ghosts, who show up,
often by the dozens throughout the complex, hanging upside down by the towers
as they laugh and mock the activities of workers and their wives.
Aira begins his
narrative with a visit from the future tenants, each arriving, with decorators
in tow, to plan their final move into the complex in the next few months.
Through this meaningless hubbub these wealthy men and women create, we compare
the builders with those who have paid for their jobs, recognizing, as Aira
hints, that there are not as many differences between the two groups as one
might think, and yet the differences that exist are essential to both
societies. What these more "fortunate" figures lack, is a recognition
of their condition and the vision to see the world around them—the very
qualities which poorer Chileans are blessed.
Although it may
first seem, however, that Aira is moving toward a Marxian tale of the haves and
have nots, his real concern lies elsewhere, represented by the oldest of the
Viñas children, Patri, who in almost every sense exists in a world that lays
outside of the one all others inhabit. Patri is too young to be properly
treated as an adult, and is too old to be able to play with her siblings.
Indeed, her mother treats her, at times, as a kind a servant, a young girl
expected to look after her brothers and sisters, share in the cooking, the
setting of the table, and other chores. Yet, Patri is clearly not quite able to
even focus on these activities. Her mother describes her as
"frivolous," and in some senses, unable to focus on any activity long
enough to identify with her acts, Patri, if not simply frivolous, is dreamily
self-indulgent.
She has clearly
not yet fully experienced her own sexuality—a failure in a family where the
women warn her to find a "real" man—and she feels equally outside the
world of male-female relationships. By following up one of Patri's dreams with
a long, semi-comical disquisition of how cultures define their own
relationships, in part, through architectural constructions and the paradigms
of their thinking, we recognize that Patri is perhaps more intelligent than her
large family and their friends, and, accordingly, feels as even more of an
outsider.
Patri, in fact,
has no place—no system of housing her own identity—in this grand circus of
family life. She has no money or great sexual interest to pull her into the
streets, but also has no commitment to that way of life, and does not fit into
the socio-sexual relationships of the surrounding adults.
It is almost
inevitable, accordingly, that the ghosts, outsiders witnessed and despised by
all these simple people, are attracted to her, speaking to her and, finally,
inviting her to a "Big Midnight Feast." While those around her grow more celebratory
and drunk, lighting the sky with their explosive New Year's rockets, Patri
pulls away from their society in an attempt to think out her response. Will she
attend the party of the non-living ghouls or attend to the celebration occurring around her at this very moment?
The elders call
for celebratory toasts, and the oversensitive Patri toasts her father (her own
father is not Raúl, but a man who died—another ghost—before her mother
remarried), quickly adding Raúl's name to avoid any confusion. And in that faux pas, we recognize that Patri is not
even a true Viñas. In this world she has no being.
As Patri creeps
further and further away from this world of "real" men and women, her
mother perceives suddenly that she is in danger. As Elisa and several other
women run to pull her away from the edge of the roof, Patri "leaps into
the void," giving herself up to the dead and their party. A passing ghost
catches only her falling glasses, returning them to Viñas as he stands at the
edge of what for him can only be an incomprehensible tragedy.
New York,
May 7, 2008 / Reprinted
from Or, No. 3 (October 2009).
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