discourse, an apocalyptic language, can do justice to his themes. Yet Steiner's messianism runs deepest not in any allusion or reference but in the way the novel unblinkingly poses questions of ultimate evil and justice. As the work unfolds, with chapters focusing on the Israelis interspersed with chapters revealing the thoughts and responses of the various national types confronting the growing possibility of A. H.'s reality, we are gradually prepared for the apocalyptic moment of Hitler's speech, a moment when finally we are able to hear this language of negation, whatever the risk. As is the case with In Bluebeard's Castle, we face a terrible reversal of transcendental justice and the most excruciating of human failures. But in The Portage we do not simply understand this disaster as we do in Steiner's criticism; we experience its representation.
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Nevertheless, even this disastrous moment, which some have read as an ironic triumph for Nazism in Steiner's work, remains radically open. Saul Friedlander, in what is perhaps the most subtle critique of the novel, implicates Steiner in "the new discourse about Nazism," what he calls "a kitsch of the apocalypse." 49 According to Friedlander, The Portage, like the other recent books and films which he examines (and unlike Language and Silence ), is a dangerous work because it aestheticizes and thereby neutralizes some of the worst aspects of Nazism. "Eloquence,'' says Friedlander, "the real eloquence of the pseudo-Hitlermay reach deeply into those murky labyrinths of present day fantasies about Nazism or the Jews." 50
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Compelling and important as Friedlander's general argument is, I still believe that Steiner is justified in the risks taken by his novel. As we have seen, Steiner has long been aware of the dangers involved in dealing with Holocaust material, yet believes that no responsible artist or critic can avoid them. Furthermore, Steiner's apocalyptic sensibility is, arguably, free of the element of kitsch which Friedlander accurately locates in work such as Michel Tournier's The Ogre or the memoirs of Albert Speer. Jewish messianism, including Steiner's, is never merely a matter of apocalyptic destruction, which in itself can certainly be perverted into a kitsch of death. Apocalyptic but still lacking the debased romanticism of annihilation, messianic works, including The Portage, partake equally in the openness of utopian thought.
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The Portage does not end with Hitler's speech. As Joseph Lowin has pointed out, the monologue is followed by the appearance of the helicopters. We do not know who has sent them nor what they will do: "The answer one gives to the question raised by
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