Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The man of pleasure, the aristocrat and the belly-dancer

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The man of pleasure, the aristocrat and the belly-dancer

    The Daily Telegraph (LONDON)
    September 16, 2006 Saturday

    The man of pleasure, the aristocrat and the belly-dancer

    by Jane Stevenson


    The Ruby in her Navel
    by Barry Unsworth
    336pp, Hamish Hamilton, pounds 17.99
    T pounds 15.99 (plus pounds 1.25 p&p) 0870 428 4112

    This lushly written novel is set in one of the most extraordinary
    cultures ever to have existed, 12th-century Sicily. When the Normans,
    those austere Christian descendants of the Vikings, went native in
    the Mediterranean, they created a dazzlingly sophisticated hybrid
    civilisation. Barry Unsworth's evocation of this exquisite world of
    perfumed silk, mosaics and tinkling fountains is a brilliant example
    of the historical novelist's art. Every detail carries conviction
    but, far more importantly, what is going on in Thurstan Beauchamps's
    head is also perfectly realised. He is a product of a world in which
    loyalty is a central virtue, knighthood is not a joke and the code of
    courtly love still rules. He finds himself poised between two women,
    the Norman aristocrat he has worshipped since childhood, and an
    independent-minded Armenian belly-dancer; spiritual versus fleshly
    love.

    Or so he thinks. I do not want to give away the twists and turns of
    this eminently well-plotted story, but in the course of the
    narrative, all his faiths are tested, including his beliefs about
    women. The novel is entirely successful as a romance, or a story
    about growing up and growing out of unexamined assumptions. But
    beneath the surface, some serious ideas are moving. Thurstan is the
    king's Purveyor of Pleasures. It is his job to find new sources of
    entertainment and bring them to Palermo: a job that lends itself to
    being combined with espionage and undercover activity. He works under
    Yusuf ibn Mansur in the finance department, or diwan of control, for
    Norman Sicily is a mixed culture of Normans, Byzantines, Arabs and
    Jews.

    In the 12th century, Western and Eastern Christendom had a heritage
    of mutual suspicion, which arose partly from ideology and politics,
    partly from fundamental cultural differences but, beyond that, Norman
    Sicily was an experiment in Christian and Muslim coexistence. For
    various reasons, Thurstan's world was an irritant to both Eastern and
    Western emperors, an experiment that many people wanted to see fail.
    This was the era of the crusades, and King Roger's realm was a direct
    affront to the Christian fundamentalists from the West, who insisted
    that Christians and Arabs were inescapably opposed, and any attempt
    at dialogue was not only doomed, but damned.

    There are lessons here for our own time, but Unsworth is not in the
    business of big statements. He addresses the problem of a genuinely
    multicultural society with subtlety, and asks the crucial question:
    can people whose cultural heritage is completely different ever
    really trust one another? Trust, not love, is at the heart of this
    novel. Thurstan is trusted by Yusuf, and proud to be so trusted, but
    Yusuf's mind proceeds along different tracks from Thurstan's; they
    understand one another up to a point, but only by a continuous effort
    of imagination, and there is much that Thurstan sees only when it is
    too late. Content to serve his king, he fails to see the depths of
    treachery and bad faith that surround the court at Palermo.

    When the novel opens, Thurstan sees the royal household as something
    that has risen above the petty strivings of ordinary mortals. To him,
    King Roger is a remote and glorious figure. By the time his story
    comes to an end, he has looked the king in the eye, and has come to
    understand that the strife between nations is larger and more cruel
    than that between factions within a society, but not intrinsically
    different.

    In an attempt to balance his various loyalties, Thurstan is driven to
    commit gross injustice and to betray one of the people he holds most
    dear. Ultimately, he has no choice but to walk away from everything
    he has ever valued - though in the process, he must make another leap
    of faith, in an unexpected direction. Love, trust and honour exist,
    he finds; but not where he has been taught to look for them.
Working...
X