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Hardcover Seeing Book

ISBN: 0151012385

ISBN13: 9780151012381

Seeing

(Book #2 in the Blindness Series)

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Book Overview

"The clarity and compassion of [Saramago's] vision make Seeing worthy of its name." --Washington Post ​"I have never read a novel that gets so many details of the political behavior that we for... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Very Interesting, and Well-Written as is Saramago's Tradition

Seeing is a terrific book, particularly if you're interested in politics- the gritty type of politics, that is; the kind not broadcast on television or reported on by any journalist. The reader sees the inner workings of government trying to contain an outbreak of blank votes submitted by a vast majority of the citizens of the capital. The scapegoat which the politicians order their controlled media outlets to attack happens to be our hero, the lady group leader, from Saramago's "Blindness". However, this isn't some sort of statement that all politicians are evil- we see a minority of them revolt against the majority leaders, disgusted by the limits to which their colleagues will go to sink a problem which, when carefully considered, isn't that great of an issue. How the public views this ruling class is one of the main factors in the ministry's decisions, yet they seem to care very little for their actual actions and the results therof. This stands as a very interesting inside observation of democracy. Mind you, the book isn't all some episode of "West Wing"; we also see as police agents penetrate the capital in an attempt to retrieve reports for the forementioned ministers, and get a lot of well-earned closure to the story begun in "Blindness". On the other hand it's not at all required for readers of "Seeing" to read "Blindness" first. In fact, looking back, it might be even MORE interesting to read them in opposite order, since that might fulfill the somewhat unsatisfying conclusion to "Blindness", and sometimes knowing what to expect can be nice. There's obviously reason to support not entitling "Seeing" as "Blindness 2".

Brilliant And Horrifying Vision

Things start to go dreadfully wrong when more than two thirds of the country's voters turn in blank ballots; in a hastily arranged repeat election, the percentage is even higher. The government is not amused, and responds as to a treasonous threat to democracy. One after the other, bad decisions are taken, leading to measures that are progressively worse. Somehow the phenomenon of the blank votes is connected to the epidemic of blindness that swept the country four years earlier (in Saramago's previous novel, Blindness), and the government begins to focus its suspicions on the one person who didn't go blind--a courageous woman who kept a small group of people alive through unspeakable horrors. A police superintendent is sent out with a small team to investigate this woman--and to find her guilty. Author Jose Saramago writes brilliantly, with wit, wisdom and humor, building inexorably to a horrific ending. His manner of writing, as always, takes some getting used to. Long, rambling paragraphs with minimal punctuation, as though you were simply overhearing the whole thing. Author Saramago has a dark view of human institutions, and of leaders who have to be right at any cost. In Seeing, he has written a brilliant, dark, and persuasive parable of modern life. I recommend this book highly, but be sure to read Blindness first. Reviewed by Louis N. Gruber.

Is Seeing Any Less Blind?

In this sequel to Saramago's Nobel winning book "Blindness" the reader is presented with an almost opposite situation. Saramago's books, are political metaphors and commentaries which look deeply into the human spirit and soul. In his first book, the author helps the reader understand how a world would look if all social stability and government broke down and the populace was left blind and helpless. The picture is very ugly and very painful. Yet, it has a realism that can not be ignored. "Seeing" asks an instrumental operative question: "Are those who see, less blind than those who don't?" Here Saramago again creates a sociological and political microcosm to illustrate his points. There are many points he makes, but one of his central ones is that citizens can be recognized by "standing up and refusing to be counted." This act seems to those in control as a giant insurrection. Additionally, when people spontaneously choose to make such a statement; what should the government do about it? And they can make it unilaterally, without a movement or a leader, per se. Saramago also gives the reader an interesting and experimental writing style. He dispenses with much normal grammar, yet rarely does this impede the reader's ability to glean complete understanding, or close to it, of what is happening in the story. Novelistically, the book is extremely well written and engaging. In many senses, Saramago conveys his feeling that people, events and beliefs can be manipulated. But they can only be manipulated so far. If Saramago is speaking of any specific country, he takes care not to reveal it. He almost jests that he is talking about Portugal, but indicates that this is clearly just to give substance to the contentions of his story, to ground the reader in some basis of mundane reality. Perhaps one imposes the concept on whatever country they live it, because the points Saramago is making are universal. The government can influence the way things happen, how they appear, what is believed and what becomes history. They do have the power to do that, but they do not have the power to control the electorate. And if and when they take things too far, the electorate can stand up and be counted. Change is just around the corner in all Democratic Countries. This book is recommended to all who want to see the kinds of things that Governments can do when motivated to do so. It is a very educational and impressive book. It is recommended to all people of voting age.

Another first-rate Saramago novel

I thoroughly enjoyed "Seeing," Saramago's latest novel to be translated into English. This is a first-rate addition to the upper tier of his works. *** Spoiler alert: the following paragraphs reveal a few elements of the plot. *** In the Nov. 8, 2004, issue of "The American Conservative" magazine, the managing editor, Kara Hopkins, advocated not voting in the pending presidential election. "Silence is a profound expression," she argued, "and enough unraised voices eventually turn even the most partisan heads." "Elections," she contended, "maintain the illusion of opposing parties exchanging ideas rather than political animals competing for power. Selling voting as the ultimate expression of citizenship . . . legitimizes the process that keeps them in control and makes the public docile by enforcing the notion that we rule ourselves." Whether or not one agrees with Hopkins, she offers a perspective that Saramago might endorse, to judge by "Seeing." In "Seeing," some 70 percent of the residents of the capital of an unnamed country turn in blank ballots in an election, refusing to vote for the Party of the Right, the Party of the Center, or the Party of the Left. The government, dominated by unsavory and unprincipled authoritarians, is horrified that the rituals of democracy have generated a challenge to the government's legitimacy and orders the election to be reheld. But the percentage of blank votes is higher than before. The government's reaction, though often fumbling, is vicious and lethal. It uses various Orwellian techniques and, as it deems necessary, violence to punish the capital's residents and try to get them to appear to respect the available choices, regardless of their true feelings about the three parties. This is a fable. It is not intended to be entirely realistic, and the reader must suspend disbelief at times. After all, a modern Western democracy ("Seeing" appears to take place in western Europe) that took Draconian measures against its citizens for refusing to vote would be subject to external pressure and would have to relent. And it would be unlikely to take such measures in the first place. Western democracies are famously tolerant of political dissent--for example, from 1993-1997 Canada tolerated having as the federal government's official opposition party the Bloc Quebecois, whose goal is to separate Quebec from the Canadian federation. But Saramago is so masterly a writer that he makes the implausible possible. The reader does soon ask, "Why would any government that observes the forms of democracy behave this way?" A plot twist that appears in the middle of the novel provides an answer. In "Seeing," Saramago continues his charming dance with the Portuguese language (I read the book in Portuguese). He narrates events at a languid pace (and occasionally with deceptive calmness by bringing forth a horrible revelation only at the end of an otherwise disarmingly anodyne paragraph). And his characters speak a Portug

A Brilliant Parable of Democracy Delivered at Gun Point

In the unnamed capital city of an unidentified democratic country, election day morning is marred by torrential rains. Voter turnout is disturbingly low, but the weather breaks by midafternoon and the population heads en masse to their voting stations. The government's relief is short-lived, however, when vote counting reveals that over 70% of the ballots cast in the capital have been left blank. Baffled by this apparent civic lapse, the government gives the citizenry a chance to make amends just one week later with another election day. The results are worse: now 83% of the ballots are blank. The two major political parties - the ruling party of the right (p.o.t.r.) and their chief adversary, the party of the middle (p.o.t.m.) - are in a panic, while the haplessly marginalized party of the left (p.o.t.l.) produces an analysis claiming that the blank ballots are essentially a vote for their progressive agenda. Is this an organized conspiracy to overthrow not just the ruling government but the entire democratic system? If so, who is behind it, and how did they manage to organize hundreds of thousands of people into such subversion without being noticed? When asked how they voted, ordinary citizens simply respond that such information is private, and besides, is not leaving the ballot blank their right? Thus begins Jose Saramago's brilliant new book, SEEING. The setting is the same unnamed country where, four years earlier, a plague of contagious but temporary "white blindness" afflicted first the capital city, then spread throughout the country. The resulting breakdown of civic institutions and reversion of life to the basest instincts for control and survival were magnificently chronicled in Saramago's earlier novel, BLINDNESS, undoubtedly the author's most powerful and approachable work to that date. The events surrounding that epidemic proved so shameful that the entire country tacitly agreed in the aftermath not to speak of or analyze what happened. Now, however, the blank white ballots bring back haunting memories of the white blindness. Perhaps the citizenry's refusal to cast marked ballots augurs some sort of political epidemic that could spread to the rest of the country. What makes SEEING such a remarkable work is the picture Saramago draws of a right-wing government under duress, with eerie echoes (intentional or otherwise) of the current Bush Administration's "war on terror" and its imposition of democracy on Iraq. Unsure how to respond to a benign protest but certain that an anti-democratic conspiracy exists, Saramago's ruling government quickly labels the movement "terrorism, pure and unadulterated" and declares a state of emergency, allowing the government "to suspend at a stroke of a pen all constitutional guarantees." Five hundred citizens are seized at random and disappear into secret interrogation sites, and their status is coded red/red for secrecy. Their families are informed in Orwellian style not to worry about the lack o
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