Current:Home > NewsRelationships are the true heart of 1940s dystopian novel 'Kallocain' -GlobalInvest
Relationships are the true heart of 1940s dystopian novel 'Kallocain'
View
Date:2025-04-15 08:52:44
There is nothing new about dystopian fiction — it's been around since the early 20th century or late 19th century, depending on who you ask — but discovering a classic of the genre can be thrilling nonetheless.
Kallocain is a lesser-known work of 20th century dystopia, authored by Swedish poet Karin Boye and published in 1940 in Sweden, a nation that maintained its neutrality throughout World War II. Horrified by the rise of the Nazi party and long disillusioned with what she'd seen and learned of the Soviet Union, Boye's home country's refusal to engage might have contributed to her need to write this particular book.
Kallocain's narrator, Leo Kall, expresses a similar need at the very start of his narrative: "The book I now sit down to write will inevitably appear pointless to many — if indeed I dare suppose that 'many' will ever have a chance to read it — since quite on my own initiative, without anyone's orders, I am beginning a task of this kind and yet am myself not really clear about its purpose. I will and I must, and that is all."
According to translator David McDuff's introduction to the new Penguin Classics edition of the novel, Kallocain is "unlike anything [Boye] had produced before, and unlike almost anything that had appeared in earlier Swedish literature." This is an important note, for while police-state dystopias already existed in fiction, and Boye herself had read We by Yevgeny Zamyatin (1924) and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (1932), Kallocain was still original within its author's specific literary context. It's also an outlier in that it was authored by a woman and, though narrated by a man, nevertheless expresses interest in women's inner life and acknowledges the subtleties of sexism within its faux-equitable World State.
It's true that Kallocain includes what we now consider tropes of the genre: a World State in which all citizens are considered fellow soldiers; an eternal readiness for war with a barbarian neighbor state; constant surveillance even within private spaces; and extremely limited freedoms of movement and speech. Still, the unique details of the regime in this novel are worth discovering. But it's not the bleakness of Boye's specific dystopia that mesmerizes; rather, it's the narrator, Leo Kall, and the immense change he undergoes over the course of the novel as well as his preoccupation with his wife, Linda.
At the start of the story (which Leo is writing in prison some 20 years later), Leo is a chemist living in Chemistry City No. 4, which is mostly subterranean — surface permits are required to go aboveground — with his family. His entire life is organized around the State, his belief in it, and his loyalty to it, which is why he invents a new drug which he christens Kallocain. The serum makes anyone who takes it speak with complete honesty, which of course is useful to the State, for as Leo explains to his family over dinner, "Does not the whole of the fellow soldier belong to the State? To whom would his thoughts and feelings belong, if not to the State?" The novel's plot follows Leo as he tests the drug on humans from the Voluntary Sacrifice Service, gets the city's police chief interested, and brings the drug to the upper echelons of the Ministry of Propaganda who soon ask for it to be made in quantity so it can be widely used.
But throughout this plot and its somewhat standard questions regarding freedom and its meaning, Boye manages to seed far more intimate themes. For instance, Leo loves his wife Linda and is endlessly curious about her internal life, what she thinks and believes and how she might judge him. At the same time, he thinks that he is entirely transparent to her, and that idea — that he is seen and known by another person — is so terrifying, so vulnerable, as to be almost intolerable to him. In a society that discourages such sentimental things like communication and individuality, is it any surprise that both he and Linda feel stifled within their marriage?
Another example — Leo and Linda have three children, the oldest of whom, Ossu, is already at the children's camp and only visits home twice a week. Leo feels a "hot wave of longing for the days when all three snuggled down in their little beds," which he sees as shameful, especially in the face of 8-year-old Ossu's discipline.
Relationships are the true heart of Kallocain: how intimacies shape us, how the presence of difference can free us, and how what is freely given between people is always so much more powerful and real than what is taken by force.
Ilana Masad is a fiction writer, book critic, and author of the novel All My Mother's Lovers.
veryGood! (6288)
Related
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Warming Trends: Chief Heat Officers, Disappearing Cave Art and a Game of Climate Survival
- Restoring Utah National Monument Boundaries Highlights a New Tactic in the Biden Administration’s Climate Strategy
- New tax credits for electric vehicles kicked in last week
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Solar Power Just Miles from the Arctic Circle? In Icy Nordic Climes, It’s Become the Norm
- The precarity of the H-1B work visa
- January is often a big month for layoffs. Here's what to do in a worst case scenario
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Warming Trends: Chief Heat Officers, Disappearing Cave Art and a Game of Climate Survival
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- At One of America’s Most Toxic Superfund Sites, Climate Change Imperils More Than Cleanup
- Energy Regulator’s Order Could Boost Coal Over Renewables, Raising Costs for Consumers
- How Maryland’s Preference for Burning Trash Galvanized Environmental Activists in Baltimore
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Warming Trends: Farming for City Dwellers, an Upbeat Climate Podcast and Soil Bacteria That May Outsmart Warming
- New York opens its first legal recreational marijuana dispensary
- From Brexit to Regrexit
Recommendation
See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
Allen Weisselberg sentenced to 5 months for his role in Trump Organization tax fraud
Pritzker-winning architect Arata Isozaki dies at 91
Text: Joe Biden on Climate Change, ‘a Global Crisis That Requires American Leadership’
What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
How Maryland’s Preference for Burning Trash Galvanized Environmental Activists in Baltimore
Listener Questions: Airline tickets, grocery pricing and the Fed
Opioid settlement pushes Walgreens to a $3.7 billion loss in the first quarter