This article by Professor Tony Hughes-d'Aeth, Chair of Australian Literature at The University of Western Australia, originally appeared in The Conversation on 15 May 2024.
Ceridwen Dovey’s Only the Astronauts is a book of stories about the fantasies that have caused humans since the 1950s to launch items – including themselves – into outer space. The stories are whimsical and, to differing degrees, factual.
This is what gives them their piquancy. The absurdity of the scenario is punctured by the realisation that this – or something very much like this – actually happened. The effect is a little like the work of W.G. Sebald, although in a broadly comic register.
The first story is about a cherry red sportscar that has been launched into space with a mannequin named Starman strapped into the driver’s seat. The premise is patently ridiculous, except that in 2018 Elon Musk did exactly this. The car is, as we speak, slowly orbiting the sun a little further out than earth. It takes 557 earth days for Musk’s Tesla Roadster to complete its solar orbit.
What makes Dovey’s stories intriguing is not just that they are grounded in historical reality, but that they tell a subaltern history. The narration erupts from the position of history’s remainder, as if an obscure footnote has come to life and captured the main narrative.
Interestingly, these quaint extras to history’s main performance bear no ill will to those who have placed them in the shade. In fact, they typically show a passionate loyalty to their more vaunted companions.
Like those in Kazuo Ishiguro’s novels, Dovey’s narrators are trapped in a derangement of transference – or Stockholm Syndrome – where they must believe their master loves them even when all evidence points in the opposite direction. Starman speaks breathlessly to his master:
I am caught between categories, between outsider and insider, the living and the undead; between odyssey and oddity, between trying too hard and playing hard to get. Between astronaut and freak. Yet my allegiance lies with you, my alpha, and I will do whatever it takes to claim my place at your side.
Another story, Fallen Astronaut, centres on a tiny statuette placed on the moon to commemorate astronauts and cosmonauts who died in the space programs of the USA and USSR. This would also be a slightly outlandish premise, were it not for the fact that this was exactly what happened on August 2, 1971, when David Scott from Apollo 15 placed a nine centimetre astronaut figurine in the soft lunar dust of the Hadley Rille crater
In Dovey’s story, the object has come to house the ghost of Neil Armstrong, who relates his life after his “one small step” and how his space adventures left him oddly estranged from the people in his life.
In this instance, there is a direct equivalence between an unquestionable star of human history – the first human to walk on the moon – and the object lying half-buried on the lunar surface. The reduction of Armstrong’s life to the demand that he endlessly retell one event finds its dismal emblem in the forgotten statuette. In effect, the figurine says to Armstrong’s ghost: welcome home, I have been waiting for you all this time.
Excessive loyalty
Only the Astronauts is a follow-up to Dovey’s earlier collection, Only the Animals (2014), published a decade ago to general acclaim. In the earlier book, animals, rather than space junk, emerged from the obscurity of history’s footnotes.
Each story in Only the Animals was narrated by the “soul” of an animal that had perished in the shadow of human conflict. Again, the subversiveness of these animals comes not from their rebelliousness, but rather from their heartbreaking loyalty to their masters. A story narrated by the soul of a dog killed in Poland in 1941 begins in a voice that sounds much like Starman’s:
How do I begin to describe my beloved Master and my life with him before I was exiled to the woods?
The excessive loyalty of Dovey’s narrators imbues them with a reliable unreliability. We hear their elaborate apologia in the echo chamber of historical irony.
Dovey is also an aficionado of anticlimax. Her eyes and ears are attuned to the quiet moments that follow the public spectacle. In the detritus of fantasy – in the cast-off objects that embarrass us with their stubborn persistence – she finds all the things that are not captured in the overt action.
In Starman’s plaintive faith that he will be one day reunited with his sublime maker, we can recognise the infantile complement of Musk’s gesture. Launching one of his Tesla sportscars into solar orbit is not just, as he might have it, a “cool” thing to do – and a brilliant publicity stunt for his SpaceX company – but an act in the service of a simple wish: that his father might love him.
Not all of Dovey’s stories quite hit their mark. Some can feel like a joke that stretches on for a bit too long. The premise of The Tamponauts is that, in 1982, NASA thought astronaut Sally Ride would require 100 tampons for the seven days she would be in orbit. For a mission where every gram counted, the suggestion that she would need such a comically large endowment of tampons was a measure of just how terrifying a woman’s period was to NASA’s engineers.
In Dovey’s story, the fictional granddaughter of Rider decides to honour her grandmother’s pioneering work by writing a play in which the key players are menstrual hygiene products (two different kinds of tampon and a latex menstrual cup) that have embarked on the world’s first mission to Mars.
The centrepiece of Dovey’s collection is a long story called Requiem. It is narrated by the International Space Station – once again, endowed with a characteristic childlike sentience – in the last days of its existence. The station’s last crew is making final preparations for its decommissioning, which will involve sending it into earth’s atmosphere and hoping that the larger debris falls in the ocean.
The Space Station reflects on all the people that have come and gone through the years of its active life. Its narration is interspersed with diary entries from various astronauts who made its pressurised modules their home over the decades.
The station exhibits a cosmic sympathy for these astronauts, who were, on the one hand, living every child’s dream, but on the other hand were struggling with all the difficulties that come from the extreme conditions of space life. It speaks from the position of a servant, observing its masters going about their business, but also seeing their private frailties, their dirty underwear, their antidepressant medication.
The final story in Only the Astronauts follows the Voyager One spaceship as it traverses the Oort Cloud at the extreme limit of the solar system. This most distant of terrestrial emissaries is due to reach the cloud in about 300 years.
In Dovey’s story, Voyager has arrived and been granted residency on a micro-planet inhabited by enigmatic metallic beings. There, at the limit of things, Voyager meets the other objects we have seen in the earlier stories. Starman is there. So is Plautus, a tortoise launched into space by the Russians in the 1960s, which featured in Dovey’s earlier collection Only the Animals.
In the Stygian darkness of the Oort Cloud, we reach a utopian moment that might be called the solidarity of objects. Finally beyond the reach of their master’s fantasy, these objects find they have an autonomy in their desire, and a capacity to form relations with others.
Dovey’s Only the Astronauts is an aching and profound book. The moments of farce and pathos highlight the vanity of space, where billionaires and superpowers go to flex. In the background there is Earth, which seems a perfectly good planet. Dovey’s book suggests that, no matter how far we fly, we never really leave it, or the mortal determinations that make life meaningful.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.