РефератыИностранный языкThThe Fixer Essay Research Paper Malamud

The Fixer Essay Research Paper Malamud

The Fixer Essay, Research Paper


Malamud ‘ s The Fixer is a novel which was written in a time of extreme prejudice


and inequality. Malamud fought this struggle in a very powerful way – through writing.


Perhaps the strongest styles he used to fight against the Jewish oppression are irony, and


the use of dreams and hallucinations.


Irony is an overpowering force in Bernard Malamud’s The Fixer. The sequence of


events which Yakov Bok goes through makes the entire novel ironic. The chief irony of


the novel lies in the fact that what Bok is attempting to escape, he cannot escape. To


understand the irony in the novel, it is necessary to examine two major events in the


circular life of Yakov Bok. Bok is attempting the escape his life in the shetl. He is wrongly


persecuted for a ritual murder and attempts to escape his physical and mental torture. In


each case, Bok is attempting to escape his Jewishness. The novel has an overall ironic


tone.


Bok leaves the shetl in which he has lived the majority of his life to go to Kiev. In


Kiev Bok hopes to find opportunities for work and education. Mainly, though, Bok seeks


relief from his earlier shame of being cheated on by his wife. While in the shetl Bok sees


himself as a victim of his wife’s barrenness. The irony lies in the fact that that even after


escaping the shetl and being in a different kind of hell, prison, Bok’s life in the shetl comes


back to haunt him. Bok learns of a child that Raisl has had with her lover and gives his


bitter sentence of “a black cholera upon her” ( Malamud 254 ). The one thing that might


have given him happiness in his life before has now gone to someone else. This event


brings Yakov shame that he could not father a child with Raisl while another man could.


Thus, the problems of the shetl which Bok has tried so desperately to escape have come


back to haunt him once again. Bok’s life is very circular.


Later in the novel, Raisl visits Yakov in prison in an attempt to end her own


ostracism in the shetl. Yakov could here exact some kind of revenge upon Raisl by


allowing her to be ostracized for having an illegitimate child the way he was ostracized for


being cheated on. However, Yakov eventually signs the document which says “I declare


myself to be the father of Chaim, the infant son of my wife Raisl Bok… Please help the


mother and child, and for this, amid all my troubles, I’ll be grateful” ( 262). Bok, now


having on paper what he once wanted most, a son, cannot enjoy it.


The second event which exemplifies the ironic and circular nature of Yakov Bok’s


life is his attempt to escape his Jewishness. In leaving the shetl Bok shaves his beard and


cuts his earlocks, and on the ferry across the river to his new hell drops his prayer things


into the water. Bok is not only attempting to turn his back on his own history, he is


attempting to turn his back on the history of his race. The poor fixer should have known


better, for he is arrested for the ritual murder of a young Christian child. His accusers


believe that Bok used the blood of this boy for the making of matzos. While in prison Bok


realizes that “being born a Jew meant being vulnerable to history, including its worst


errors” (Malamud 206). Furthermore, the prosecuting attorney, Grubeshov, tells Bok:


A Jew is a Jew, and that’s all there is to it. Their history and character are unchangeable.


Their nature is constant. This has been proved in scientific studies by Gobineau,


Chamberlain and others. Our peasants have a saying that a man


who steals wears a hat that burns. With a Jew it is the nose that burns and reveals the


criminal that he is. (130)


Here the irony partly lies in the fact that Bok is treated so badly because of


something which he was in the first place trying to escape. The other irony is that Bok


decides to defend his Jewish heritage to his captors. He is offered his freedom if he will


denounce the Jews. He refuses, stating that “he is against those who are against them…he


will protect them to the extent that he can…this is a covenant he has made with himself”


(189). When he is brought the confession by Raisl, he signs the line where his name


belongs with the statement, “Every word is a lie” ( 262).


Bok’s ordeal in prison occurs because of the religion which he was attempting to


turn his back on when he left the shetl. However, while in prison Bok seems to discover


something of value in the old Jewish religion (Tanner 336). Bok’s existence is once

again


shown to be very circular and full of irony.


Irony is definitely a constant in Bernard Malamud’s novel The Fixer. Two elements


best illustrate the irony in the life of Malamud’s protagonist, Yakov Bok: first, his attempt


to escape his life in the shetl; and second, Bok’s attempt to escape his religion. Each event


contributes to the ironic atmosphere in The Fixer.


Secondly in Malamud’s The Fixer, almost all of Yakov Bok’s time is spent in


prison. The Fixer is an examination of freedom and its compliment, commitment. Though


Bok has no physical freedom, the longer that he is imprisoned, the more true freedom he


obtains. Bok is able to attain this freedom through his dreams and hallucinations. These


sequences are important because they prevent the story from becoming static, but more


important, they illustrate that true freedom lies within one’s self.


Yakov Bok is tortured in the government’s attempt to obtain his confession to the ritual


murder of Zhenia Golov. He is poisoned, strip searched, chained, and nearly frozen to


death:


The fixer was chained to the wall all day,and at night he lay on the bedplank, his legs


locked in the stocks…the leg holes were tight and chafed his flesh if he tried to turn a


little…the straw mattress had been removed from his cell…now in chains, he thought the


searches of his body might end but they increased to six a day, three in the morning and


three in the afternoon.( 236 )


These tortures leave Bok with no conscious energy to focus against his captors. Thus, it is


only through Bok’s dreams and hallucinations that he can escape and deal with his


imprisonment.


One of the most important freedoms which Bok finds within himself is the freedom


to accept his religion. In one of his dreams he dreams that his father-in-law, the only father


that he has really known, has died. When he wakes, Bok says to himself, “Live Shmuel,


live…let me die for you” (287 ). Bok experiences a kind of panic after awakening from this


dream. He cannot fathom that he will not see this man again, even though he knows that


their ever meeting again is nearly impossible. Bok realizes through this dream his true


feelings towards the old man whom he called “father.”


Furthermore, Bok knows that through his death for a crime he did not commit, he


can save many of his Jewish brothers from death in the riots which would ensue if he were


released. Therefore, Bok’s saying “let me die for you” is directed not just to his father-in-


law, but to all those who, had they been in the wrong place at the wrong time as he was,


could just as easily have been accused of this same crime. Through a dream as small as


this, Bok has realized much about the greater purpose which he now serves.


Bibikov, the Investigating Magistrate, is one of Bok’s only friends in the novel.


After Bibikov’s death, Bok hallucinates a conversation with his old friend. In this


hallucination Bibikov tells Bok that “the purpose of freedom is to create it for others” (


336 ). This event again illustrates that Bok’s hallucinations are important to his discovering


an inner freedom. Bok holds this statement especially dear because of the fact that it


comes, although in a dream, from someone he trusted and believed in. Bok now realizes


that his freedom is not the important issue. It is the freedom of those who will come after


him that really matters. Realizing that his freedom is not important strangely gives Bok a


greater sense of freedom. He now knows what the purpose of his life must be: Bok must


be a martyr for his people, the very people that he had tried to abandon.


Bok’s dream sequences and hallucinations are a key part of The Fixer. They allow


Bok and the reader to see that it is possible to find freedom within oneself. Proportionally,


Bok’s dreams and hallucinations take up a large part of the novel because of his lengthy


stay in prison. They are also of great significance to the novel as a whole. The Fixer is a


novel which searches for the meaning of freedom and how one can achieve it under the


direst of circumstances. Bok finds his freedom because of revelations which he has


because of his dreams.


In conclusion , Malamud rebels against “the bad guys” in two main ways: through


the use of irony and the use of dreams and freedom. He is essentially fighting a war in this


literary work. He achieves a strong victory , especially considering when this book was


written.


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