Confusion by Stefan Zweig

ConfusionDo you ever go to a bookshop and love the displays and feel of it so much that you want to buy something almost as a souvenir? I don’t often buy new books, but a morning browsing in the London Review of Books bookshop last September (when I had a lovely time with Rachel, incidentally) was so fun that I wanted to pick something to take home with me. And I couldn’t resist the beauty of Pushkin Press editions, and an author I’d been meaning to try for ages. Step forward Confusion (1927) by Stefan Zweig, translated from the German by Anthea Bell. I think the cover art was created by Petra Borner, as she gets a note on the jacket (“Her roots are prominent in her work, which often merges natural and magical elements, with bold lines and colours.”) It is definitely lovely.

Confusion is a novella, and I don’t think it’s particularly at the forefront of the Zweig’s literary reputation – but I thought it told a very interesting tale. It is from the perspective of a revered and ageing Languages and Literature Professor, Roland, who has (as his brief introduction explains) recently been given a Festschrift dedicated to him by his department; ‘nothing short of a complete biographical record’. It is this gift that makes him feel an oversight:

The carefully compiled index comprises two hundred names – and the only one missing is the name of the man from whom all my creativity derived, who determined the course my life would take, and now calls me back to my youth with redoubled force. The book covers everything else, but not the man who gave me the gift of language and with whose tongue I speak: and suddenly I feel to blame for this craven silence.

And that takes us to the rest of the book. One of my pet literary peeves is a book which starts with the present day and then leaps back to the past, to wind back to the present – but in Confusion the present day is really only a vantage for stepping back – and that backward glance only encompasses a short period of time. A period that was extremely influential in Roland’s life.

The story is simple, really. After a brief stint as a rather riotous student at one university, more interested in finding willing local girls to share his bed than fine minds to share his study, Roland is asked to leave. A little reluctantly, he enrols in another university – and eventually goes along to a lecture, not expecting very much.

He is immediately beguiled. The lecturer – I want to say that we never learn his name, but it’s equally possible that I just don’t remember it – weaves a tale around literature that captivates Roland. The way he delivers the talk transfixes Roland, introducing him to theories and perspectives and attitudes that leave him excited and desperate for more. (Sidenote: this is the sort of teaching experience one sees occasionally in fiction; I never had it – but I am certainly grateful to Mrs Walker, Miss Little, and Mr Brooks – the teachers who most excited me in my subject throughout high school. Thanks y’all, even though you’ll never see this. I’m not sure I ever had quite that touch-paper moment at university, but that’s perhaps because I didn’t need it; I was already in love with literature. And that, perhaps, dates back to Miss McGovern in Year One.)

But the relationship does not stay purely academic. Roland and the teacher become friends, and he is welcomed into their domestic life – meeting the teacher’s wife too. She is young, dignified, kind, and unhappy. Roland cannot help getting involved in their lives.

From then on I became attentive in a new way; hitherto, my boyish veneration of the teacher whom I idolized had seen him so much as a genius from another world that I had entirely omitted to think of his private, down-to-earth life. With the exaggeration inherent in any true enthusiasm, I had imagined his existence as remote from all the daily concerns of our methodically ordered world. And just as, for instance, a man in love for the first time dares not undress the girl he adores in his thoughts, dares not think of her a natural being like the thousands of others who wear skirts, I was disinclined to venture on any prying into his private life: I knew him only in sublimated form, remote from all that is subjective and ordinary. I saw him as the bearer of the word, and the embodiment of the creative spirit. Now that my tragicomic adventure had suddenly brought his wife across my path, I could not help observing his domestic and family life more closely; indeed, although against my will, a restless, spying curiosity was aroused within me.

Confusion is so brief that I don’t want to spoil the denouement, though it is a natural conclusion to what has gone before and certainly isn’t played for shock. But the way it is told is what is important – and Zweig’s writing (in the hands of Anthea Bell) is beautiful, rhythmic, and with the natural balance and sensitivity of the born storyteller.

So, Confusion probably isn’t regarded amongst Zweig’s foremost fictions – or, who knows, for all I know it is – but I certainly loved reading it. And now I need to resist the urge to buy all of his books in Pushkin editions and no other.

16 thoughts on “Confusion by Stefan Zweig

  • July 28, 2016 at 10:20 pm
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    I was really interested to read this review as Confusion is on my Le Monde’s 100 Books of the Century reading challenge, but I knew nothing about it. It sounds wonderful – I’ll treat myself to the Pushkin edition :-)

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    • July 30, 2016 at 9:00 pm
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      Hurrah! It is such a lovely little edition – and I feel like I’m in good company if it’s made the Books of the Century!

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      • July 30, 2016 at 9:01 pm
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        Oh, that was me – I wasn’t logged in :)

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  • July 28, 2016 at 11:57 pm
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    Sounds fascinating; I haven’t read anything by this author. I am reading a novel now about an English professor, “Straight Man” by Richard Russo, which makes me smile as I read about his tribulations.

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    • July 30, 2016 at 9:02 pm
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      I am very ready to read about English professors now – I couldn’t face reading about English academia when I was studying for my DPhil, but now all the recommendations are so welcome – so thanks!

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    • July 30, 2016 at 9:02 pm
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      It is precisely that!

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  • July 29, 2016 at 9:11 am
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    The LRB bookshop is quite lovely, isn’t it? (and the teashop is rather wonderful too). I always find it has unexpectedly wonderful finds, and the displays *are* lovely. So glad you got a Zweig – this was one of the first I read too and I loved it – his writing (as rendered by Bell, as you say) is so good. You have many treats to come – and they’ll be so beautiful in Pushkin editions too…. ;)

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    • July 30, 2016 at 9:03 pm
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      Oh I’ve been to that cake shop many a time! Very cosy, particularly for a big meet up, but a lovely space. And whoever does the bookshop selection is very talented.

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  • July 29, 2016 at 12:16 pm
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    “One of my pet literary peeves is a book which starts with the present day and then leaps back to the past, to wind back to the present” – I only have a problem with this when the protagonist / narrator is dead!! Lovely sounding book, anyway.

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    • July 30, 2016 at 9:04 pm
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      Ha! Well, that’s a niche area of this that I’ve yet to come across! I don’t mind authors being creative with timelines etc., but starting in the present and working up to it makes the whole novel feel like an anti-climax to me, usually.

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  • July 29, 2016 at 2:27 pm
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    Too bad you did not find Zweig’s collected novellas by the same publisher, you would have had Fear, Burning Secret, Confusion, A Chess Story and Journey Into The Past in one volume ! There’s another volume containing his short stories, among which the famous Amok and Letter From An Unknown Woman…Zweig’s stories are page-turning and absolutely beautiful and subtil.

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    • July 30, 2016 at 9:06 pm
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      I will hunt out those novellas – but I do have a prejudice about collected editions. Who even knows why – I just want all of them separately :)

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  • July 29, 2016 at 5:42 pm
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    I finished the Pushkin Press ‘Collected Stories’ the other day – highly recommended.

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    • July 30, 2016 at 9:06 pm
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      Thanks Jonathan – I am obviously in danger of becoming a Pushkin addict.

      Reply

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