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Darkness at Noon

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Darkness at Noon
File:Darkness at Noon cover.jpg
Cover of Darkness at Noon
AuthorArthur Koestler
LanguageGerman
GenreNovel
PublisherBantam Books
Publication date
1940
Published in English
1941
Pages224 pp (paperback edition)
ISBNISBN 0-553-26595-4 Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character
Preceded byThe Gladiators 
Followed byArrival and Departure 

Darkness at Noon is the most famous novel by Hungarian-born British novelist Arthur Koestler. Published in 1940, it tells the tale of Rubashov, a Bolshevik old guard and 1917 revolutionary who is first cast out and then imprisoned and tried for treason by the Soviet government he once helped create.

The novel is set in 1938 during the Stalinist purges and Moscow show trials. It reflects the author's personal disillusionment with Communism and Stalin's destruction of the revolution; Koestler knew some of the defendants at the Moscow trials. Although the characters have Russian names, neither Russia nor the Soviet Union are actually mentioned by name as the location of the book. Joseph Stalin is described as "Number One", a barely-seen and menacing totalitarian leader.

Due to Koestler's complex life, the novel was originally written in German and translated into English. However, the original German text has been lost, and German versions, published under the title Sonnenfinsternis (literally "solar eclipse") are back translations from English. Darkness at Noon is actually the second part of a trilogy, the first volume being The Gladiators about the subversion of the Spartacus revolt, and the third Arrival and Departure about a refugee in World War II. The Gladiators was originally written in Hungarian and Arrival and Departure in English. Of these two, only The Gladiators has had much success.

Characters

Several inspirations have been suggested for Rubashov. According to George Orwell, "Rubashov might be called Trotsky, Bukharin, Rakovsky or some other relatively civilised figure among the Old Bolsheviks".[1]

Koestler arguably drew on his own experience of being imprisoned by Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War. Like Rubashov, he was in solitary confinement, expected to be executed, paced his cell constantly, was permitted to walk in the courtyard in the company of other prisoners, was not beaten himself but knew that others were beaten.

Plot summary

Rubashov has been one of the leading forces in the Bolshevik revolution, and has been active in supporting Communist parties in other countries. He is roused in the middle of the night and arrested. This brings back memories of his previous arrest in Germany, when he was tortured under interrogation. He is taken to a new prison and placed in a cell. There he is almost isolated as a leading member of the party, but he makes unsatisfactory contact with the prisoner in the neighbouring cell, who is unsympathetic towards him.

His first interrogation is by an old friend, Ivanov, who tries persuading him to consider signing a false confession. In due course, Rubashov shows willingness to admit to certain crimes. However, Ivanov is arrested in the meantime, ostensibly for being "too soft" on Rubashov. Rubashov is then subjected to ruthless interrogation by Gletkin — a representative of the new-type Party official.

As Rubashov is forced to confess to false charges, he thinks of all of the times he betrayed agents in the past — the young German, Richard; the Dutch, Little Loewie, who hanged himself and his secretary-mistress. Rubashov recognises that his treatment is carried out with the same ruthless logic as that which he himself employed. Ultimately, his commitment to following his logic to its last conclusion--and his own lingering dedication to the Party--lead him to confess fully and publicly. The novel ends with Rubashov's execution.

Influence

The novel's French title is Le Zéro et l'Infini ("Zero and Infinity"). Like the English title, "Darkness at Noon", it reflects Koestler's life-long obsession with the meeting of opposites, and dialectics. Le Zéro et l'Infini sold more than 400,000 copies in France.

American screenwriter and Communist Party USA member Dalton Trumbo bragged in The Worker newspaper that he had prevented Darkness at Noon, among other anti-Stalinist books, from being produced into a Hollywood movie. [2]

In 1954, at the end of a long inquiry and a show trial, Communist Romania sentenced to death former high-ranking Romanian Communist Party member and government official Lucreţiu Pătrăşcanu. [3][4] According to his collaborator Belu Zilber — himself a victim of the trial —, Pătrăşcanu read Darkness at Noon in Paris while envoy to the 1946 Peace Conference, and took the book back to Romania. [3][4]

In April of 2005, gypsy folk-rock band A Hawk and a Hacksaw named an album of theirs Darkness at Noon, after the book; that album was released on The Leaf Label.

References

External links