The Drowned World

J. G. Ballard
The Drowned World Cover

A racist novel? Or psychological symbolism?

Bormgans
3/21/2021
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(...)

So if you are after spaceships or an adventure romp, look elsewhere: this is about inner space instead of outer space, as Martin Amis notes in his excellent introduction. The problem, however, is that for a novel that supposes to examine a certain psychology, Ballard's hypothesis obviously is ludicrous. So what is he examining here? A mere speculative effect, that doesn't offer much insight in the human condition, because it is totally unrealistic? For a psychological novel, there's not that much characterization, let alone character development, even though there are glimpses of brilliance on the matter.

Paintings of Paul Delvaux and DalĂ­ serve as props in the story, and they offer a way to get a better grip on what Ballard was trying to do, which is write a surrealist/symbolist novel. The Drowned World shouldn't be read for psychological realism, but rather for psychological symbolism - a tangent to the fact that what is psychologically real is not always the same as reality in this book. Once I realized that, it seemed a pretty straightforward affair: a tale about regression, about the mere veneer of civilized society, and the heart of darkness underlying all. It is as if Ballard's nature imagery might serve as a simile for the human condition:

Beautiful and serene from his balcony a few minutes earlier, Kerans realised that the lagoon was nothing more than a garbage-filled swamp.

(...) but I don't think there's something like an irreducible primitive core that needs to be held in check. The days of Freud are over - but who can blame Ballard for writing stuff like this in the sixties? Besides, dichotomies remain ever popular today.

(...)

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