Jose Saramago ~ BLINDNESS
Jose Saramago ~ BLINDNESS
Absurd to say it, but the blindness in Saramago's novel is an allegory for not being able to see. What exactly it is we should see, what Saramago - with all his years as a man and a writer and having lived through dictatorship and revolution - fears we cannot see, is present in the writing, present abundantly, but it is not to be paraphrased. This is a writer who puts us in mind of the great German novelist Theodor Fontane, whose masterpiece, ''Effi Briest'' (1895), also written in the latter part of a long life, written out of the fruit of so much experience, shares with Saramago's ''Blindness'', a powerful sense of the folly and heroism of ordinary lives. There is no cynicism and there are no conclusions, just a clear-eyed and compassionate acknowledgment of things as they are, a quality that canonly honestly be termed wisdom.
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