Abstract

This paper aims at locating complex patterns of ambivalence in the narratology of Daniel Silva’s Second World War thriller, The Unlikely Spy, published in 1996, by contending that it recreates a historically justifiable picture of the 1940s in a manner that highlights the typical historicist episteme of the 1990s. This is because its plot retains an apparent structural wholeness as far as the atmospheric evocation through archival research is concerned in spite of the fact that its narratorial focus is informed by characteristic postulates of postmodernist historiography. The argument's theoretical exposition of the latter depends, through an emphasis on notions of simulations, evasions and self-deconstruction, on Jean Baudrillard's proclamation that history’ is no longer possible. The paper employs techniques of qualitative discourse analysis for studying the novel’s narratological patterns and historicist constructs. It shall be seen how, along with narrativity that combines motifs of linearity and temporal-spatial chaos, the text philosophically problematizes the ‘reality’ of the War through an ambivalent intermingling of confrontation and evasion by metonymically representing the entire War-dynamic – completely dispensing with any first-hand account of the uniformed soldiers’ battlefield – in devious circles of executive offices and spies stalking the streets during the blackout. It is further contended that the novel’s historicist vision draws attention to, and even symbolically represents, the ambivalent nature of the relationship between modernism and postmodernism.

Highlights

  • This paper aims at analyzing Daniel Silva’s espionage thriller The Unlikely Spy (1996/1997) toAs a late twentieth century publication set in the times of World War II, the poetics of its narrativity shall be seen as a comment on the problematic epistemological relationship between modernism and postmodernism

  • This paper aims at locating complex patterns of ambivalence in the narratology of Daniel Silva’s Second World War thriller, The Unlikely Spy, published in 1996, by contending that it recreates a historically justifiable picture of the 1940s in a manner that highlights the typical historicist episteme of the 1990s

  • This is because its plot retains an apparent structural wholeness as far as the atmospheric evocation through archival research is concerned in spite of the fact that its narratorial focus is informed by characteristic postulates of postmodernist historiography

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Summary

Introduction

As a late twentieth century publication set in the times of World War II, the poetics of its narrativity shall be seen as a comment on the problematic epistemological relationship between modernism and postmodernism. Apropos of the truism that postmodern fiction challenges “traditional ideas of narrative construction, verisimilitude and historical truth” (Malpas, 2005: 101), The Unlikely Spy (hereafter TUS) subtly subscribes to this dictum in “treat[ing] history ironically as a site of fragmentation rather than a progressive structure” (Malpas, 2005: 101) like typical postmodern fiction, but achieving this irony through subtexts rather than a categorical rejection of historicity Before proceeding with this analysis, a condensed listing of TUS’s most significant characters and events seems pertinent for the sake of refreshing the reader’s memory: An exceptionally gifted German spy Anna Steiner, entering England before the War, is inert for years as a “sleeper” (329) with a fabricated identity as Catherine Blake, until she is ordered by Vogel, her Berlin-based control officer, to steal the secret of the site of the Allies’ invasion of France in 1944 by seducing a widower American naval engineer, Peter Jordan. These plans included a simulated projection of MI5’s inefficiency through Vicary’s ignominious dismissal from his post

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