'When you meet your double, so legend has it, you die' (Warner Bros./The Shining)

A TV interviewer once asked an astronomer whether he thought there was life elsewhere in the universe. āLook,ā replied the astronomer, āsomewhere in the universe at this very moment, someone looking very much like you is asking that question of someone looking very much like me.ā So it isnāt so much a question of āAre we alone?ā as āAre youĀ alone?ā
If there is an infinity of universes, as some scientists speculate, the cosmos may contain an infinite number of Russell Brands. It follows that if there is a God, he must surely be a malevolent one. There is, however, an upside to this nightmare. Several million of these Brands are at this very moment being torn limb from limb on various women-governed planets, while several million others are being hung upside down from lamp-posts.
Doubling has its comic aspects. If a monstrously fat man in pink tights and a sombrero crosses a stage, and a moment later another monstrously fat, similarly dressed man does the same, the audience are likely to laugh. In Freudian terms, they can avoid the mental labour of coping with difference, and by economising on psychical energy in this way they can release it in the form of laughter. Most humour involves a sense of incongruity, and in this case, ironically, it is sameness which is incongruous in the sense of out of step with the way things usually are.
If this were to happen in real life, however, it would probably be more eerie than funny. I was once on a flight to Sydney, waiting for the aircraft to take off, when an enormously tall Japanese man, not a common sight, entered the plane. He was followed almost immediately by another Japanese man well over six foot tall, and he by another, and so on until fifteen or so of them had lumbered down the aisle. This was pretty spooky until I discovered that it was the Japanese basketball team en route to the Australian Olympics.
Pure repetition is unnerving. Exact identities donāt happen in everyday life, which is why Nietzsche thought that words such as āleafā were fictional because they implied that all leaves are the same. Itās also why identical twins have a sacred status in some cultures, āsacredā meaning both blessed and cursed. The fact that the alien children in John Wyndhamās novel The Midwich Cuckoos all look the same is part of what makes them so sinister. We are speaking of the uncanny, which means something both strange and familiar ā familiar because itās exactly like something else we know, but strange because this repetition is creepy.
One reason we enjoy rhythms and rhymes is that they combine difference and repetition, thus avoiding a monotonous thud on the one hand and a disorientating diversity on the other. āBaa baa black sheepā is fine, but āBaa baa black bullā has a surfeit of sameness. Pure identity is tedious, while pure difference would be unintelligible. Hell is traditionally thought to be less agonising than boring. It has the eternal sameness of shit.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe