Blindness (novel)

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Title Blindness
Cover for the U.S. edition
1999 Harvest paperback edition cover
Author José Saramago
Original title Ensaio sobre a cegueira
Country Portugal
Language Portuguese
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher The Harvill Press
Released 1995 (Portuguese)
October 1997 (English)
Media type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 288 pp
ISBN ISBN 1-86046-297-9

Blindness (Portuguese: Ensaio sobre a cegueira) is a novel by Portuguese author José Saramago. It was published in Portuguese in 1995 and in English in 1997. It is one of his most famous novels, along with The Gospel According to Jesus Christ and Baltasar and Blimunda.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Blindness is the story of an unexplained mass epidemic of blindness afflicting nearly everyone in one (unnamed) city, and the social breakdown that swiftly follows. The novel follows the misfortunes of a handful of characters who are among the first to be stricken and centers around a doctor and his wife, several of the doctor’s patients, and assorted others, thrown together by chance. This group bands together in a family-like unit to survive by their wits and by the (also unexplained) good fortune that the doctor’s wife is one of only a few individuals who has escaped the blindness. The sudden onset and unexplained origin and nature of the blindness cause widespread panic, and the social order rapidly unravels as the government attempts to contain the apparent contagion and keep order via increasingly repressive and ineffective measures.

The first part of the novel follows the experiences of the central characters in the increasingly crowded and filthy asylum where they and other blind people have been quarantined. Hygiene, living conditions, and morale degrade horrifically in a very short period, mirroring the society outside, which is also disintegrating. Fights over food, rapes, and atrocities accumulate. When the army can no longer maintain the asylum (because most of the soldiers have gone blind too), the inmates escape and join the throngs of nearly helpless blind people outside who wander the devastated city and scrabble to survive.

The story then follows the doctor and his wife and their impromptu “family” as they attempt to survive outside, cared for largely by the doctor’s wife, who still sees (though she must hide this fact). The breakdown of society is near total. Law and order, social services, government, schools, etc., no longer function. Families have been separated and cannot find each other. People scrounge for food and shelter; violence, disease, and despair have overwhelmed human coping. The doctor and his wife and their new “family” eventually make a permanent home and are establishing a new order to their lives when the blindness lifts from the city en masse just as suddenly and inexplicably as it struck.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Major themes

More than simply commenting on the basest facets of human nature as they emerge in a crisis of epidemic (as can also be seen in Albert Camus's The Plague, P.D. James's Children of Men and, perhaps more notably, John Wyndham's 1951 novel The Day of the Triffids, where most of the population is also blinded), "Blindness" shows the deep humanity of those who are forced to rely on one another when their natural senses have left them. The white glare of the blindness illuminates the perceptions of the main characters, and the tale becomes not only a record of the physical survival of the blind masses, but also of their spiritual lives and the dignity to which they cling. "Blindness" also questions the notion of humanity, as characters repeatedly make compromises in what they consider civility and increasingly degrade themselves hygienically and socially.

[edit] Style

As in most works by Saramago, the novel itself is written in long sentences, with absolutely no quotation marks. Rather, the back-and-forth dialogue is separated only by commas, with sentences often lasting half a page, and sometimes exceeding a full page.

Another notable mark of Saramago's style is the lack of names in the book; characters are referred to by descriptive appellations such as "the doctor's wife," "the car thief," or "the girl with the dark glasses." Given the blindness they face, some of these names are sharply ironic ("the squinting boy.") In fact, the country afflicted by the blindness is never named, and very few references to present-day technology add some element of timelessness as well as universality to the novel. The few definite identifiers of culture portrayed may hint that the country is Saramago's homeland of Portugal; the main character is shown eating chouriço, a spicy sausage, and some dialogue uses the familiar 'tu' second-person singular verb form (a distinction which does not exist in English, but does in Portuguese). The lack of proper nouns is a feature in many of Saramago's novels (e.g. All the Names or The Cave).

[edit] Connections

  • Saramago wrote a sequel to Blindness in 2004, entitled Seeing (Ensaio sobre a lucidez). It was written in Portuguese and has been translated into English. The new novel takes place in the same unnamed country as the first and features several of the same characters.