Close encounters.
Extract from
the novel
Viimeinen syli

Pirjo Hassinen
Photo
Irmeli Jung
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The novelist Pirjo Hassinen's subjects are
men, women
and death. Particularly, in her new novel, Viimeinen
syli
('The last embrance'), death.
Interview by Leena Härkönen
The blizzard to end all blizzards is tearing Finland apart. The railway
system is in a mess, and the heating system in our building has stopped
working. There is no way I can leave Helsinki for Jyväskylä,
the town in central Finland, 300 kilometres away, where Pirjo Hassinen
lives. I am obliged to interview her on the telephone, although
she says she loathes talking on the phone, and I too would prefer
to meet her face to face.
The day I ring Hassinen, Lapland achieves
a record low of –51 Celsius. Even on the south coast the mercury
sinks well below –20, and a freezing wind makes the frost almost
unbearable. The entire country is as white and cold as – death.
It is an easy comparison, for it is death that is the theme of Pirjo
Hassinen's latest novel. The main character of Viimeinen syli
('The last embrace'), which was published last autumn, is an undertaker,
transporting bodies. There is a lot of death in the book: two suicides
plus an accidental one. According to Hassinen, her subject matter
is the conclusion of a logical development.
'I deal with whatever concerns me most
at a given moment and whatever I feel I can say something about.'
In her first novel, Joel (1991),
Hassinen depicted a new man, a handsome body-builder, whom a woman
takes as her lover. In Yön kentät ('In the fields
of night', 1992), a wife and her sister remember a dead man. The sister
returns to the experiences of her childhood, while the wife kills
her grief by exploiting men. In Voimanaiset ('Power-women',
1996), a thirty-something woman liberates herself from her mother
and, despite her protests, chooses a man for herself.
Hassinen has generally been praised
by the critics. She has been called a chronicler of women's history
and development, as well as of eroticism, a hypnotic writer who grasps
phenomena labelled as superficial and uses them skilfully and to
serious purpose. Voimanaiset was shortlisted for Finland's
biggest literary award, the Finlandia Prize. Viimeinen syli
was on the shortlist for the Runeberg Prize.
Woman and man, woman and mother, woman and love. Why these themes?
'Even as a child I always drew children,
never, for example, landscapes. In particular I drew female forms,
trying to make them better and better. I have always gravitated toward
people. People are at the centre of everything,' Hassinen says.
But woman and death? When one reads
Hassinen's novels one after another, one realises that death is always
present in one form or another. It's like the children's game of blind
man's buff. For Hassinen, the dancers in the ring are contemporary
people seeking their place in the world, and the blind man in the
centre, groping for them, is death. In Viimeinen syli, he has
finally attained the central role.
For Hassinen, the idea is interesting,
although she does not see the trend quite so clearly. She suspects
it is because she does not like to read her own books or remember
them afterward. For her, that would be as dull as looking at old photographs.
'Of course I do know and remember that
death has always been in some way present. And of course it's the
most terrible thing there is, just as love is the most beautiful.'
I ask more about death, because the subject is close to me, too. I
had dealings with it last year when I wrote a magazine article about
what happens to the dead on earth. For me, as a journalist, death
was a commission, a brief, but Hassinen has chosen her subject herself.
It becomes clear that the reason is a mid-life crisis. Hassinen turned
forty a year and a half ago, and her crisis was real and profound.
'It was terrible to realise that bloody
hell, half of life is lived already. And even if there is still another
half to go, who is to say it will be the better half?'
I am about the same age, and do not
remember having experienced any such crisis, but when Hassinen begins
to describe how aging (or slow death) is visible physically, I know
what she is talking about. We begin a kind of competition in comparing
how ugly our hands, in particular, look and how horrible it is to
peer into the mirror in the mornings. At such moment it isn't much
help trying to persuade yourself of the power of experience and perspective
on the world.
'In an existential sense, a change takes
place at this age,' Hassinen continues, when we have finished talking
about hands. 'I'm certainly not young, but I still feel greedy for
life. When you're younger, you don't think about your limitations.
Now you realise them, but you can't accept them.'
When I was writing the magazine article,
I realised that death really is taboo for us. We do not wish to speak
about it, and in writing for the general public one must be careful
not to hurt one's readers. The creative writer has greater freedom,
and Hassinen dives straight into the core of the taboo. In her novel,
she describes a body as it is: blue-green, sewn up, the scalp crooked
after a post-mortem examination. In the crematorium, flesh glows and
skin boils. There are sex scenes in the hearse, and an erection is
compared to rigor mortis. Some critics have asked whether less might
have been enough.
'No,' Hassinen replies, indicating the
artistic and intrinsic demands of the novel. No, even though rummaging
around in death has sometimes felt so repugnant that the writer sometimes
wished she had chosen an easier subject. Among other things, she drove
to hospital in a hearse to see how a corpse is prepared for the coffin.
The experience was nightmarish and frightening, 'as if I had sacrificed
myself on behalf of the readers'.
In Viimeinen syli, physical death is juxtaposed with the death
of love. The former wife, Erja, of the novel's main character, Mikael,
will not admit that love can die. She fastens herself to Mikael, takes
a job with his funeral company and begins to write unusual memorial
verses. In them, relatives say what they really think: 'Someone said
it is a journey to the stars. Stop and come back to my arms, darling!
Or, resentfully, You died for me a long time ago....' Mikael is irritated
by Erja's symbiotic need for closeness: after all, he married her
out of sheer guilt. When they were younger, Mikael and his friends
had enticed Erja to play a naked Virgin Mary in a Christmas tableau,
although their ulterior motive was to exploit her. To atone for his
deed, Mikael married Erja.
The opposite of dependent Erja is Mikael's
second wife, Rhea. For her husband, with his dislike of closeness,
she is ideal: a successful career woman who is in control of her life
and her feelings. The director of a social welfare office, Rhea is
a Teflon person. She is not touched by anything, not even when a disturbed
man takes some of her staff hostage, kills one of them before Rhea's
eyes and then commits suicide. Rhea seems like a typical contemporary
survivor. She is like yet another member of the coven of power-women
whom Hassinen is said to describe. Hassinen is of a different opinion.
'Just as I have thought that in my next
novel no one will die, after Voimanaiset I had enough of over-strong
women. Even there, women are power-women in a very ironic sense: as
if they don't need a man. That way of thinking is a gaol. Rhea, too,
is anything but a power-woman. She is s superficial person, a modernist,
and stylishly of the present, but never in the grip of terror.'
Rhea takes as her lover Pauli, a successful
television reporter with whom she moves through the surface of the
urban jungle. Hassinen's description of celebrity circles and the
media world is giddy satire which, despite its exaggeration, feels
both true and familiar. Hassinen mocks the media's enthusiasm to grasp
trends which are thrashed to death and then forgotten. In the novel,
hypocrisy reaches its climax when Pauli interviews Rhea on television
about the welfare office tragedy. The entire situation is a great
preparation for an act – foreplay watched by an audience of
a million.
'Nothing, nothing gave rise to such
delicious conversation as the media debate about the media's guilt
for the murder. Did we really have such power?! Power to decide over
human life and death? Am I a god?!' In the novel, the reporters are
excited by the idea that the media have caused a human death. That
was the way, after all, that the media reacted to the death of Princess
Diana, which was followed by unprecedented self-scourging and hypocrisy.
But, Hassinen comments, the leading
commercial television channel in Finland can screen programmes such
as a recent interview with the murderer of two policemen and, as if
that were not enough, give voice to a paedophile convicted for the
murder of two children. Hassinen did not watch either programme. 'I
boycott them, although it's like clenching your fist in your pockets.
But you have to draw the line somewhere.'
Hassinen's novels are set in the present and make reference to current
events, including social trends. In Viimeinen syli, one of
these is unemployment. The novel's Erja is out of work, although she
does odd jobs at the funeral parlour. Encouraged by a friend, she
joins an unemployed action group called the Red Army of the Heart,
which harbours plans to murder the prime minister. Meetings of the
group, its leader's incendiary speeches and a ridiculous survival
weekend in the forest make ironic comment on all sorts of salvation
prophets in addition to the trendy survival games practised in big
business.
Hassinen says she has no clear stance
on unemployment. She is more interested in the hatred that irresponsible
leaders can shamelessly channel for their own causes. The most loathsome
demonstration of this is, according to Hassinen, the point where the
group's sadistic male leader praises his women: 'You have a great,
ennobled rage. You have the capacity for slaughter, girls.'
'In principle the Red Army people are
terrorists, but their acts of terror are directed against themselves,'
Hassinen says. 'They have been driven into a state of profound despair,
and they have no other option but to sacrifice themselves.' In this
case the victim is one of the women in the group, Eeva, a person who
is pitiable in every respect. Her legs are like the legs of an elephant,
and, hungry for company, she gazes at the others 'as if a great droopy
breast were offering fatty milk to everyone who was thirsty'. Eeva
is so pathetic that the reader feels compassion. What was the need
for a woman character of that kind?
'I thought about what the most rejected
person might be like: an overweight, unemployed social sciences graduate.
In describing Eeva I'm crueller than I am in real life. It was really
painful to write like that.' Eeva manacles herself to the wall of
the welfare office and commits suicide by setting fire to herself;
the act is not heroic, but desperate. Erja, on the other hand, has
a childlike belief in her own omnipotence, which is nevertheless proved
illusory. As a last resort, she tries to awaken Mikael's pity and
casts herself under the wheels of the hearse. Her intention is only
to frighten him, but despite all her precautions Erja dies. She is
buried just before the turn of the millennium.
'There are women like Erja,' Hassinen
says. 'Women who, after divorce, are bitter and withered. Erja felt
that half of her had disappeared. She had no other possibility; there
was no way that her life could be imagined to continue.'
'All Rhea was wearing was her stockings, which were attached to her
thighs with tight rubber kisses. For a moment the man was there like
a ski-jumper leaning into the wind.'
Pirjo Hassinen writes in such a way
that things can be smelled and tasted. She continually invents new
words to describe, for example, intercourse; but she omits to say
what sex feels like. She has almost nothing to say about her characters'
appearance. Hassinen says that when you have written countless romantic
novels for young girls, as she has, you have to learn to describe
the same old things in different ways.
'I see human figures as existences or
entities rather than characters. It would be hard to drag around adjectives
describing people's appearance. In sex, on the other hand, what you
feel is so personal that when I write in the third person I prefer
to allow the feeling to develop in the reader's mind.' Hassinen has
sometimes wondered why she is considered a portrayer of eroticism.
'My reputation might be to some extent justified for Joel.
After the reviews of Ennustaja, I had to open the book and
look to see whether there was anything erotic. And of course there
was, even though I hadn't realised it myself.' She is amused: 'All
the same, I haven't considered surprising my readers with a completely
sexless novel. If I write about an intimate relationship, sex is always
somehow present. And, after all, simply eating ice-cream can be a
sensual experience.'
Hassinen says that every time she finishes a novel she feels she has
succeeded, but that this does not mean anything. The reviews are decisive.
'Waiting for the reviews in the country's biggest newspaper is just
as awful as what is supposed to be the worst thing in a woman's life,
waiting for the results of tests on the amniotic fluid during pregnancy.
You have to wait for two weeks to know whether the child is handicapped,
whether the pregnancy can continue or what will happen.' Feedback
from readers is also interesting. 'When someone says they love the
language in a novel, I am a little bit disappointed. I would like
my readers almost to faint. The best feedback I had for Viimeinen
syli was when one of my friends said it had induced a panic attack.
I had conflicting feelings: I was terribly shocked, but happy.'
We have, without noticing it, been speaking for almost two hours.
My mouth is dry and the telephone receiver is hot. As we are finishing
our conversation, I remember something else. I do not bother Hassinen
with it, but the same evening on my way home I stop in the hosiery
section of a department store.
I have loathed tights for as long as
I can remember. They are, I think, the most awkward and unsexy garment
that has been invented for women, and I have not used them for a couple
of decades. But I began to think of them in a new way after reading
what Hassinen writes about them:
'The knees of a grieving widow gleam
through them on the front seat of the hearse. Ankles rub against each
other in them under the dinner table. Undressing, a woman throws them
at the man's head, and the gusset is still warm. They squeak softly
on the back seat of a taxi when a woman has picked up a man and is
taking him home.'
I study deniers, choose from the shelves
gloss and matt, fine and thicker, black and midnight blue. At home
I try a pair on. What a pity that it is too cold to wear just them.
Luckily a thaw is promised for next week.
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