Robert van Gulik's Judge Dee |
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Some of the most important works in a genre challenge the definitions of the genre. For instance, Samuel Delany's Neveryon tales challenge many of the themes of sword and sorcery. Judith Hanna wrote a very interesting article about these and Delany's writing about them in Paperback Inferno 47. However, while Delany knew what he was doing, some works may challenge the bounds of their genre without acknowledging that that is what they are doing. This essay is an attempt to demonstrate how this challenge can be identified, and why it is worth looking for it. Sometimes critics try to distinguish SF from genres they say are related but
distinct, such as satire, utopiae, fantasy etc. Darko Suvin makes this distinction
in his essay "On the Poetics of the Science Fiction Genre", and then
defines SF as "a literary genre whose necessary and sufficient conditions
are the presence and interaction of estrangement and cognition, and whose main
formal device is an imaginative framework alternative to the author's empirical
environment". However, I now want to use his argument in reverse, because
I want to examine Robert van Gulik's Judge Dee
detective stories and show that many science fictional features can be found in
them, even while the facts that they are set in seventh century By "cognition" Suvin means that stories
make the readers think, and by "estrangement" Suvin
means both creating worlds different from this one and making this one feel
strange when we read about it. The historical detective stories of Umberto Eco and Ellis Peters have sold
well to SF readers, so this argument may be better accepted now than ten years
ago. However, van Gulik is a better example to
illustrate this argument, and reveals, I think, that what Suvin
calls "estrangement and cognition" can be dealt with in different
types of literature. In his history of the crime novel, Bloody Murder Julian Symons calls the The stories can be examined in three lights: that of their estrangement (a
different world to ours), their science/technology, and their methodology. By setting them in a society which had been settled into feudalism for a
thousand years, had an established infrastructure and high degree of
civilisation, as well as a long established technology, van Gulik
paradoxically was able to create a world very different to our own. At the same time the level of technology affects the geography and social
order in very clear ways. They are obviously part of their time, but we would
look at them very oddly today. For instance, people accept that earthquakes
occur. In The Emperor's Pearl an
earthquake years before has left a murder scene a marsh. This is not a
development we would expect at all in We are estranged in these stories because the characters in some ways either
seem modern (Judge Dee as the rational detective) or because the stories can be
read in modern ways (they could be read as a sort of Sword and Sorcery). Delany
said "sword-and-sorcery tends to take place in a world that seems to be
changing from a barter to a money economy". But Consider what further distinctions have to be made between a magistrate who
has just solved three cases and announces his ratification in these words:
"This is the official verdict on Yoo Kee's treason, the killing of General Ding, and Mrs Lee's
murder. It will interest you that the conspiracy of the Uigur
tribes has been settled on high government level, in negotiations between our
Board for Barbarian Affairs and the khan of the Uigurs"
(The Chinese Maze Murders) with the
same man announcing "The criminal Yoo Kee is guilty of high treason. He should properly be
submitted to the lingering death, being cut to pieces alive ... (but) this
sentence is mitigated in so far as that the said criminal shall first be killed
and thereafter dismembered" (one page later). Other elements all go to present a world different to our own - we recognise
the established Guilds that control the trades (Goldsmiths, Merchants,
ironmongers) but did So this estranging or distancing is achieved by a number of things: the
historical setting, the distant location, the foreign culture and the different
social standards. The level of technology and what it can and cannot do also
affect the reading of the story. The science in the books is chiefly forensic: medicine, herbally
based, is well advanced both in the knowledge of pharmacy and in pathology.
Several of the books include detailed accounts of post-mortems carried out on
suspected victims. Admittedly, one coroner misses the signs of imminent leprosy
in a man with a severed jugular and another misses the modus operandi of an
obscure domestic murder but overall the scientists are well equipped with
devices and information. Van Gulik reinforces this
knowledge by forensic detail of other types (identifying weapons which made
blows, identifying the murder scene from the presence of disguised blood stains
etc). One effect of this, given other restrictions on technical advance (travel,
for instance, is very slow) is to make the Judge something of a superhero.
Equally, though, it can be seen as reinforcing the feudal structure since it is
only because the Judge represents the central power (the Emperor) that he has
access to the technical advisors, and so is perhaps only a superhero in locum. If there is a distinction between technical and scientific developments,
then no new scientific developments are being made. The canal system is being
expanded which helps trade but on the edges of the Empire this is still subject
to other forces (like oases drying). The only new technical development ever
mentioned is the adoption by the army of iron tipped crossbow bolts to replace
simple wood. So what we have instead is a Detective Science (or method). If this existed
in ancient The official religion of the Empire was Confucianism, but many of the people
worshipped an animistic pantheon; Taoism was allowed but frowned upon as
leading to sexual excess, while Buddhism was spreading. Buddhism is represented
as a rapacious cult and not as the force for peace it is now held to be.
Suppression of vice leaves Taoist temples empty to be misused by others,
political struggles as the Buddhists try to influence the throne lead to
corruption and injustice, while all kinds of reprehensible and dubious crooks
hide behind the shield of the cloth. This kind of struggle is clearer than other cultural problems, since schisms
in Christianity have lead to the same developments in the west. However,
religion has not had the same kind of affect on society in the west -
Confucianism with its obligations to preserve the old order inherently stopped
social change and improvement. This is so much at odds with western
developments that again in presenting something like a modern man in In many ways the world of Judge Dee was totalitarian because everything
reinforced the social order. There was no escape from it. All who lived within
it were free but there was no freedom without it, and again it makes this world
strange by showing that it could continue even while forces which have
undermined other cultures thrived within it. This becomes very evident in This sort of Chauvinism apparently still continues (and is still mentioned
in the Japanese treatment of Korean guestworkers and
the aboriginal Ainu) but its significance is its continuing so long - we
recognize it in the Third Reich but reassure ourselves that the Reich showed it
could not be maintained, Dee's society demonstrates that an unfairness can be
maintained for a chiliad or longer. Certainty in progress, or the rate of
progress at any rate, is called into question. It is in these sort of areas that Suvin's
cognition is called for: SF has examples of chauvinism being extended into the
future (the further suppression of women, for instance; or the suppression of
races), even without considering the suppression of species (aliens by humans,
animals by humans etc), but generally the impression is of an optimism that
implies We can write about this problem because passing time will see it
corrected. Van Gulik challenges this gratuitous
optimism - an Empire maintained itself with no internal challenge (Emperors
changed and were overthrown but imperial rule continued), accepted by its
people and by its administrators and literati. Van Gulik's historical, detective stories show the same sort of challenge that Darko Suvin said were the qualities of generic sf but show them in ways other than those identified by Suvin. Thus they help to redefine what is sf and also to show the critical uses of the theory of estrangement and cognition - making what seems obvious, strange and thus challenging the reader to think about all the implications of that estrangement. Appendix
Van Gulik was a Dutch diplomat who worked in the The following list gives, I hope, a list of all the
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Note:After this article was published, David V Barrett, the
editor of Vector, received a
fascinating letter of comment from Cyril Simsa, who
pointed out that I had omitted two works - the novel Necklace and Calabash and the short story collection Judge Dee at Work. Mr Simsa was kind enough to give me a copy of Necklace and Calabash. |