What essentially a novel does is create a set of individual consciousnesses that are distinct from one another and project a complex whole. The overarching consciousness in this novel is Menon’s, who is both a victim and a perpetrator, or at least a potential perpetrator, someone whose flaws flows from both within and without, and everybody else is designed to subserve his complexity.
I have always believed that one of the chief responsibilities of novel as an art is to practise the radical sensitivity of humanising the perpetrators and The Menon Investigation was conceived with that particular intent.
The idea for this novel was triggered by a sentence that I’d read in Running Dog, one of the early works of Don DeLillo which goes like this: ‘At the end of all our long and obsessive searches, in her view, was some vital deficiency on the part of the individual in pursuit.’ By this he meant that there is something within us that keeps us from reaching our goals. While this sentence doesn’t necessarily inform the philosophy behind the novel itself, I was reminded of so many other related ideas I’d read in other books. I remembered, for example, Carl Jung who, in his Psychology and Religion: West and East, said, ‘The acceptance of oneself is the essence of the whole moral problem and the epitome of a whole outlook on life. That I feed the hungry, that I forgive an insult, that I love my enemy in the name of Christ—all these are undoubtedly great virtues...But what if I should discover that the least amongst them all, the poorest of all beggars, the most impudent of all offenders, yea the very fiend himself—that these are within me, and that I myself stand in need of the alms of own kindness, that I myself am the enemy who must be loved—what then?’ I remembered Schopenhauer who, in his Parerga and Paralipomena, said, ‘The world is hell and men on the one hand are tormented souls and on the other the devils in it.’ I remembered Blaise Pascal’s words in his Pensées, ‘The embarrassment wherein he finds himself produces in him the most unjust and criminal passions imaginable, for he conceives a mortal hatred against that truth which blames him and convinces him of his faults.’ I happened to remember William Gaddis who opened his A Frolic of His Own with the famous words, ‘Justice? You get justice in the next world, in this world you have the law.’ I remembered lots of other stuff but, most important, I remembered the words of Prophet Nathan in 2 Samuel in the Tanakh, the Hebrew Bible, where he offers King David a scenario by way of a parable and asks him to pronounce judgement upon the sinner in that particular story. King David says I will punish him with death and Nathan, in a stunning response which both alarms and embarrasses the king, says that ‘You are that man,’ words which serve as the epigraph to the book. Now this maxim, to call it that, may not be a literal truth. But its near-truthness lends a radical access to our interiority. The novel suggests that human capacity to be authentic is deeply strained by diverse social and psychological factors, that a serious investigation into the self most likely would leave us staring into the mirror. To this end the novel supposes that the Varna system is intact, that there is no serious dent to the notions of bodily pollution and purity even among those who consider themselves emancipated, and it instrumentalises stereotypes to achieve this.