This is the first novel in Zola’s Rougon-Macquart series. It’s recommended that readers begin with this book and follow a logical sequence, but that’s not the road I travelled. About 50 years ago, I picked up a copy of L’Assommoir at a local bookstore. I had seen the classic film adaptation, Gervaise, with Maria Schell, and was so intrigued by it I decided to read the novel. Zola’s writing made a deep impression on me; I admired his naturalistic method of characterization, meticulously detailed descriptions, strong narrative structure, intricate plotting and social consciousness. I read every Zola novel I could get my hands on. At that time, early 1970’s Chicago, the selection of Zola’s novels was limited, so I chose among those available that were of particular interest to me: Nana (as a follow-up to L’Assommoir); Germinal (late 19th century labor movement); La Débâcle (The Franco-Prussian War); La Bête Humaine (19th century railways and sexually obsessed murderers—don’t ask me to explain 😉).
I’ve returned to Zola following a hiatus of more than 40 years, having read L'Œuvre, La Curée, L’Argent, and now, at last, the novel I ought to have read first.
Zola’s preface sets forth his Naturalistic method of characterization, incorporating heredity and environment according to the scientific theories of his time. His approach to literature and history was influenced by the positivist philosophy of Saint-Simon, Comte and Taine, Darwin’s theory of evolution and perhaps, to a certain extent, Hegelian and Marxian historicism.
‘The great characteristic of the Rougon-Macquarts, the group or family which I propose to study, is their ravenous appetite, the great outburst of our age which rushes upon enjoyment. Physiologically the Rougon-Macquarts represent the slow succession of accidents pertaining to the nerves or the blood, which befall a race after the first organic lesion, and, according to environment, determine in each individual member of the race those feelings, desires and passions—briefly, all the natural and instinctive manifestations peculiar to humanity—whose outcome assumes the conventional name of virtue or vice.”
At their best, the characters’ “ravenous appetites” come forth in a positive manner, as joie de vivre, in creativity and productivity; at worst, the same appetites lead to avarice, gluttony, sexual promiscuity and, in morbid extremes descend into madness, addiction and crime. Environment plays a role as well as heredity. One member of the family, born and raised in relative comfort and security might succeed in business, politics or the professions, while a cousin with similar traits, born in poverty, might pursue a life of crime. On the other hand, those brought up in poverty can be honest and decent while those raised in comfort can be criminals. There’s determinism in Zola, but not without the operation of chance.
This edition contains a family tree, a good thing to have if you want to keep track of who in the extended family is doing what to whom and why. The Fortune of the Rougons is primarily concerned with the first three generations, Adélaïde Rougon, née Fouque, her husband Rougon, her lover Macquart, and their children and grandchildren. The Mouret line of cousins are also introduced. Silvère Mouret, the son of a respectable tradesman and Ursule Macquart, one of Adélaïde’s illegitimate children, plays an important role.
Zola’s overarching theme throughout the Rougon-Macquart series is concerned with the rise and fall of the Second Empire of Napoleon III compared to the fortunes and misfortunes of characters representing the upper, middle and lower classes. In the first novel, Adélaïde, a bourgeois, inherits her father’s land and his madness. She marries Rougon, a wily peasant gardener who jumps at the chance of marrying above his station and controlling the estate. Adélaïde is for the most part timid, kindly and very eccentric. She suffers from fits that might be cataleptic or epileptic; Zola never provides us with a definitive diagnosis. Despite her apparent timidity, she has a scandalous affair with Macquart, a notorious smuggler who is eventually killed by a gendarme. Thus, the legitimate Rougon line begins with an eccentric, possibly mad, middle-class woman and her crafty, social-climbing peasant husband and the illegitimate Marquarts come from the same woman and her violent, criminal lover.
History provides the background. France experiences three revolutions, 1789, 1830, and 1848, the decline and fall of the Bourbons, The Republic, The Consulate, The First Empire, The Bourbon/Orleans Restoration, The Second Republic, and The Second Empire. Decades of war and socio-economic upheaval. But along with much misery and suffering there is also progress and opportunity.
Most of this novel’s action takes place before, during and shortly after Louis Napoleon’s coup d’état of December, 1851. The scene is set in an around the fictional town of Plassans, a place based on Zola’s home town of Aix-en-Provence. The three classes, who are divided into three sections of the town, ostensibly choose sides. The bourgeoisie, including the Rougons, side with the Bonapartists; the workers and some layabouts like Macquart support the Republic, and the aristocracy tends to remain on the sidelines ready to come out on the side of the winners. Needless to say, there is much intrigue, scheming and last- minute switching of sides prior to the final outcome.
The novel isn’t all plotting and skullduggery. There’s a teenage romance between Silvère Mouret, an idealistic young workman who supports the Republic, and Miette, the daughter of a poacher sentenced to life imprisonment for killing a gendarme in a shootout. The star-crossed romance, with allusions to the myth of Pyramus and Thisbe, Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, and perhaps Nicholas Poussin’s memento mori, Et in Arcadia Ego, involves the young lovers in an insurrection in support of the Republic that ends badly.
As for the Rougons, Zola sets the stage for the rest of his series:
“These wild, insatiate beasts, who had only just begun to satisfy their appetites, acclaimed the birth of the Empire and the rush for the spoils. The coup d’état, which had retrieved the fortune of the Bonapartes, had also laid the foundation for that of the Rougons.”