

Excerpt
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Regarding the Pain of Others main page
1
In June 1938 Virginia Woolf published Three
Guineas, her brave, unwelcomed reflections on the roots of war. Written
during the preceding two years, while she and most of her intimates and fellow
writers were rapt by the advancing fascist insurrection in Spain, the book was
couched as the very tardy reply to a letter from an eminent lawyer in London who
had asked, "How in your opinion are we to prevent war?" Woolf begins by
observing tartly that a truthful dialogue between them may not be possible. For
though they belong to the same class, "the educated class, a vast gulf separates
them: the lawyer is a man and she is a woman. Men make war. Men (most men) like
war, since for men there is "some glory, some necessity, some satisfaction in
fighting" that women (most women) do not feel or enjoy. What does an educated --
read: privileged, well-off -- woman like her know of war? Can her recoil from
its allure be like his?
Let us test this "difficulty of communication,"
Woolf proposes, by looking together at images of war. The images are some of the
photographs the beleaguered Spanish government has been sending out twice a
week; she footnotes: "Written in the winter of 1936-37." Let's see, Woolf
writes, "whether when we look at the same photographs we feel the same things."
She continues:
This morning's collection contains the
photograph of what might be a man's body, or a woman's; it is so mutilated that
it might, on the other hand, be the body of a pig. But those certainly are dead
children, and that undoubtedly is the section of a house. A bomb has torn open
the side; there is still a bird-cage hanging in what was presumably the sitting
room . . .
The quickest, driest way to convey the inner
commotion caused by these photographs is by noting that one can't always make
out the subject, so thorough is the ruin of flesh and stone they depict. And
from there Woolf speeds to her conclusion. We do have the same responses,
"however different the education, the traditions behind us," she says to the
lawyer. Her evidence: both "we" -- here women are the "we" -- and you might well
respond in the same words.
You, Sir, call them "horror and disgust." We
also can them horror and disgust . . . War, you say, is an abomination; a
barbarity; war must, be stopped at whatever cost. And we echo your words. War is
an abomination; a barbarity; war must be stopped.
Who believes today that war can be abolished? No
one, not even pacifists. We hope only (so far in vain) to stop genocide and to
bring to justice those who commit gross violations of the laws of war (for there
are laws of war, to which combatants should be held), and to be able to stop
specific wars by imposing negotiated alternatives to armed conflict. It may be
hard to credit the desperate resolve produced by the aftershock of the First
World War, when the realization of the ruin Europe had brought on itself took
hold. Condemning war as such did not seem so futile or irrelevant in the wake of
the paper fantasies of the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928, in which fifteen leading
nations, including the United States, France, Great Britain, Germany, Italy, and
Japan, solemnly renounced war as an instrument of national policy; even Freud
and Einstein were drawn into the debate with a public exchange of letters in
1932 titled "Why War?" Woolf's Three Guineas, appearing toward the close
of nearly two decades of plangent denunciations of war, offered the originality
(which made this the least well received of all her books) of focusing on what
was regarded as too obvious or inapposite to be mentioned, much less brooded
over: that war is a man's game -- that the killing machine has a gender, and it
is male. Nevertheless, the temerity of Woolf's version of "Why War?" does not
make her revulsion against war any less conventional in its rhetoric, in its
summations, rich in repeated phrases. And photographs of the victims of war are
themselves a species of rhetoric. They reiterate. They simplify. They agitate.
They create the illusion of consensus.
Invoking this hypothetical shared experience
("we are seeing with you the same dead bodies, the same ruined houses"), Woolf
professes to believe that the shock of such pictures cannot fail to unite people
of good will. Does it? To be sure, Woolf and the unnamed addressee of this
book-length letter are not any two people. Although they are separated by the
age-old affinities of feeling and practice of their respective sexes, as Woolf
has reminded him, the lawyer is hardly a standard-issue bellicose male. His
antiwar opinions are no more in doubt than are hers. After all, his question was
not, What are your thoughts about preventing war? It was, How in your
opinion are we to prevent war?
It is this "we" that Woolf challenges at the
start of her book: she refuses to allow her interlocutor to take a "we" for
granted. But into this "we," after the pages devoted to the feminist point, she
then subsides.
No "we" should be taken for granted when the
subject is looking at other people's pain.
Copyright © 2003 Susan Sontag |