The Death Ship by B. Traven
reviewed by P.M.
Sadly, these days B.Traven and his many novels have been assigned to 
relative obscurity in the world of literature and politics. Traven was but 
one of the many aliases used by this mysterious author, adventurer and 
revolutionary. Many historians have tried to uncover the secret behind 
Traven's identity, linking him from the illegitimate son of Kaiser Wilhelm 
II to a theology student from Cincinnati. Whatever the case, Traven always 
shied away from the spectacular role as author as superstar, preferring to 
let his novels be judged by the ideas contained within.
Traven's wish for privacy and anonymity can be witnessed by the number of 
different assumed names he went under to disguise his identity. Over the 
years he went under many different guises such as Ret Marut, Traven Torsvan 
and Hal Croves. Our interest in Traven begins with his earliest proven 
incarnation as Ret Marut. Marut was an aspiring German actor who later 
became involved in anarchist politics and also edited an anarchist/pacifist 
magazine "Der Ziegelbrenner", "The Brick burner."
Marut wasn't just an armchair revolutionary though. He actively 
participated in the insurgent Bavarian Republic of Councils in 1919 as 
chief censor of the bourgeois press, keeping the latter day Andrew Bolt's 
in their place. Marut was active in the Bavarian capital, Munich, and 
narrowly escaped summary execution when the revolutionary fervor was 
crushed by nascent fascist Friekorps and 'loyal' troops sent in by the 
German equivalent of the Labor party, the Social Democrats. Understandably, 
Marut went underground after the White reaction destroyed the Council 
Movement in May 1919. Up until September there were still executions of 
revolutionaries taking place to avenge the middle classes who had had power 
temporarily wrenched away from them by the proletarian class. Marut later 
resurfaced in Chiapas, Mexico in the early 1920's under the name Traven 
which he wrote his first, and in my humble opinion, greatest novel, "The 
Death Ship."
The Death Ship is the story of a horrendous chain of events that befall an 
American sailor appropriately named Gerard Gales. Gales loses his identity, 
humanity and right to existence when his ship sails without him with his 
sailor's card and passport still on board in his jacket pocket. Stranded on 
foreign shores, our sailor is systematically persecuted by the authorities 
of various European countries he has no desire to even be in. Gales is 
frequently jailed, deported and even sentenced to death simply for the 
crime of being a worker without papers. Needless to say he is treated with 
respect only by fellow workers who share what little they have with him.
Bereft of a sailor's card, Gales cannot secure a job on a ship to go home 
to New Orleans. To further complicate matters, the American consulate won't 
supply him with the necessary papers because he has no proof of his 
identity. Gales travails with bureaucracy assume truly Kafkaesque 
proportions in his attempts to prove his American citizenship; while 
wealthy fellow travelers obtain the necessary documents within minutes 
provided by obsequious officials who make ordinary folk wait around like 
cattle.
Desperate to escape his precarious situation, Gales reluctantly accepts a 
job on the Yorikke , a rusting hulk rumored to have been built in the times 
of the ancients. Gales fellow crewmates are all in the same unfortunate 
position, unable to secure passage on a decent ship with Union conditions. 
The Yorikke is truly a death ship. The work regime is torturous and simply 
unsustainable with sailors jumping overboard or murdered by the captain, 
unable to keep pace with the hellish amount of work. Not much can be said 
for the health and safety conditions either with sailors frequently burning 
themselves in the antiquated steam room, and even the ships rats won't 
touch the swill doled out to the hapless and perennially hungry sailors.
Some critics have dismissed The Death Ship and Traven's body of work as 
being hopelessly dated and idealistic because Traven makes explicit attacks 
on the dehumanizing aspects of capitalism and unfettered greed. Indeed, the 
last few decades have seen popular literature retreat either into general 
misanthropy or even worse, the glossolalia of post modernism. These days 
novels that articulate the premise that any positive change from below is 
possible are as rare as hen's teeth. Indeed we are expected to consume 
defeatist literature which not only depicts the working class as boorish, 
uncultured thugs, schooled in misogyny and mired in xenophobia and 
self-hatred, and yet we are given no plausible reasons for such outlandish 
stereotypes.
Traven was cut from much different cloth compared to the current crop of 
defeatists and out right reactionaries masquerading as serious authors so 
popular today. While Gales and his fellow sailors often faced 
insurmountable odds put in their way by the real axis of evil, the bosses, 
cops and the state, they always fight back using solidarity and mutual aid 
as the only weapons they have. While The Death Ship is a truly terrifying 
book to read, it is also full of black humor, the inventiveness of which is 
truly astonishing. There are also numerous references to the Industrial 
Workers of the World and the Russian Revolution which remind the reader of 
a time not so long ago when the ruling class was in collective retreat and 
world wide revolution seemed just around the corner.
In the current political climate, The Death Ship serves to remind the 
reader of the plight of seafarers, particularly those from Majority world 
(Third world) countries who sail on modern day death ships which are 
registered under flags of convenience so the owners can circumvent 
environmental, health and safety, and pay conditions hard fought for by 
previous generations of sailors. At the moment in Australia, ships that 
operate in Australian waters are being reflagged, the crews sacked and then 
replaced by Ukrainian sailors on only $20,000 a year. Needless to say, the 
Ukrainian crews will be forced to work much harder for much less than their 
now unemployed Australian class brothers and sisters as transnational 
capital seeks to push wages and conditions down in the global race to the 
bottom. Hopefully sailors, who have traditionally been the most 
revolutionary sector of the working class, will not fall for the 
fratricidal myth that their jobs are being stolen by cheaper Third world 
labor. This blame the victim mentality only serves to disguise the role 
that governments in conjunction with shipping companies have played in 
decimating the working conditions of sailors.
Likewise, comparisons can be drawn between The Death Ship and the current 
plight of workers wishing free movement across borders worldwide. Not much 
has changed since Gales was locked up for being an illegal alien in the 
1920's to Australia in 2002 where workers are put in camps in the desert 
simply for the crime of arriving without the necessary documentation. In 
fact authorities would prefer that undocumented workers died in their quest 
to reach the workers paradises of America, Australia and Europe. Who mourns 
the 2000 Latin Americans who have died in the last 10 years trying to cross 
the militarized border between Mexico and the U.S.A, or the 351 Afghans and 
Iraqis who drowned trying to reach Australia in an area under constant 
military surveillance? Not to forget the Moroccans washed up on Spanish 
beaches, Chinese suffocated in shipping containers en route to Britain or 
Gypsies murdered by racists everywhere?
Every time a Union leader blames 'foreigners' for taking jobs this serves 
as justification for the unabated pogrom committed against workers without 
papers everywhere. Adopting the rhetoric of the masters only makes workers 
more despicable slaves when they swallow wholesale the bile spewed forth by 
their rulers. To be a patriot is to be an assassin especially when a fellow 
worker is at the other end of sights. Now more than ever, workers of the 
world have to realize that national boundaries are no more than lines a 
cartographer has drawn on a map. Capital knows no boundaries, so why should 
we continue to self-administer the poisons of nationalism and racism which 
divide us rather than unite us. "Workers of the world, you have no country!"
http://www.infoshop.org/inews/stories.php?story=02/08/26/1409178

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