How bad could it get? America’s ugly election



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The Economist - UK 2020-09-05

Family man

The Iconoclast.

By Tobias Harris. 

Hurst; 

392 pages; $29.95 and £25



74

Books & arts

The Economist

September 5th 2020

2

purpose of self-defence).



Mr Abe may have drawn on his grand-

father’s ideas but he learned his trade at his

father’s side. Shintaro visited 81 countries

in the 1980s; the younger Mr Abe served as

his secretary. “His father’s globe-trotting

personal diplomacy impressed upon his

son the importance of building trust with

foreign leaders,” Mr Harris writes. That has

been one of Mr Abe’s main achievements

(see Leader). He also inherited his father’s

unfinished business: Shintaro died of can-

cer while trying to settle a territorial dis-

pute with the Soviet Union in 1991.

After Mr Abe followed his father into the

Diet, Mr Harris shows how he came to be a

leader of a “new conservative” movement.

He argued for a more equal alliance with

America in which Japan could bear a great-

er burden, and latched on to the cause of

Japanese citizens abducted by North Korea

to prove his bona fides as a defender of his

country. He also engaged in some appalling

whitewashing of Japan’s wartime

atrocities. Mr Abe’s allegiance to the new

conservative ideas helped doom his first

short-lived term as prime minister in

2006-07, which became bogged down in

ideological battles over the past. 

Belonging to a political dynasty gave Mr

Abe a big head start. He rose fast despite

having been an average student who

whizzed around in a red Alfa Romeo and

played a lot of mahjong. Yet it has also been

a heavy burden. The reader cannot help but

quake alongside Mr Abe when his mother

tells him, “The 

ldp 

of the present was made



by my father Kishi Nobusuke, and you

must never forget those great footprints.”

His mother is an enduring presence: they

live in the same apartment building, and

even as prime minister, he and his wife,

Abe Akie, ate breakfast with her.

That, in part, explains why changing Ja-

pan’s constitution was so important to Mr

Abe. He cited his failure to do so as one of

his biggest regrets when he announced his

resignation on August 28th. Yet history will

remember Mr Abe more fondly for his

readiness to subsume his ideology in fa-

vour of a pragmatic approach to national

interests during his second stint in office.

(Such as with his conciliatory statement on

the 70th anniversary of the end of the sec-

ond world war.) Even what Mr Harris dubs

an “Abe Doctrine”—building up Japan’s de-

fence capabilities and ties with other re-

gional powers—is less a break with the

Yoshida Doctrine than an offshoot. 

As Mr Harris notes, Mr Abe was a keen

reader of the German sociologist Max We-

ber. “With regard to what one should do as a

politician, my grandfather consistently

acted according to ‘responsibility for con-

sequences’,” he wrote in 1996. “That is, Max

Weber’s ‘ethic of responsibility’.” Mr Abe

was too kind to his grandfather. The de-

scription fits him better. 

7

“I



n the west

the economy was not

working well, mental illness was rife,

and social classes were still locked in strug-

gle.” This familiar diagnosis comes from

“Three to Kill”, a French noir novel by Jean-

Patrick Manchette, published in 1976. As he

wrote, far-left terrorists in Europe were

bombing and kidnapping their way to-

wards revolution. He turned this unrest

into a series of politically engaged pulp fic-

tions as smooth as a well-oiled revolver. 

In his youth Manchette, who died in

1995, had been a left-wing activist. Inspired

by this milieu, he created a cast of assas-

sins, anarchists and ideologues. Martin

Terrier, the hit-man at the heart of “The

Prone Gunman” (published in 1981 and

adapted into a film starring Sean Penn in

2015), is trying to go clean after a decade of

profitable murder, only to be pursued by

old enemies. Georges Gerfaut, the militant

turned middle-manager in “Three to Kill”,

stumbles into a bitter vendetta involving

an old fascist from the Dominican Repub-

lic. Manchette’s tightly wound plots move

inexorably towards bloody denouements.

Along the way he portrays a society riven by

a class war that has devolved into a grisly

procession of tit-for-tat murders.

Manchette wastes no time on psycholo-

gy. His books are all action, unfolding with

a laconic efficiency that would make his

killers proud. One minute Gerfaut is enjoy-

ing a dip in the sea, the next a killer in

swimming trunks is punching him “mat-

ter-of-factly in the solar plexus”. Man-

chette dispatches his victims with grim

specificity: a woman’s chest becomes “a

glob of crushed bone, pulped flesh, frag-

ments of bronchial tubes”. His characters’

interests are narrow but deep—in particu-

lar, what bullets do to bodies and the weap-

ons that fire them. 

Flashes of lyricism illuminate the

murk. Manchette describes a burning

house collapsing “just as matter collapses,

or so they say, in the hearts of distant stars”.

There are touches of black comedy. As Car-

lo and Bastien, a pair of bickering assas-

sins, trail a target to the south of France,

Bastien plans a holiday excursion: “We can

stop at Le Lude,” he says. “It’s charming, Le

Lude. It has a delightful castle.” When Bas-

tien dies in a shoot-out, Carlo’s eulogy is a

passage from “Spider-Man”. 

The blend of action, ideology and hu-

mour comes together best in “Nada” (1973).

The most overtly political of Manchette’s

novels, it tells of a ragtag group of left-wing

terrorists planning to kidnap the American

ambassador to France. Manchette skewers

its members—only one is a true believer;

the rest are there for the kicks—as well as

the quarrelsome vanity of left-wing fac-

tions. Needless to say, the group’s plan goes

awry in a stupendously violent way. Just

when you think all the corpses have

dropped, another head explodes. 

7


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