There are many different ways to interpret Haushofer's novel. In one, the book can be understood as fairly radical criticism of modern civilization: the protagonist is forced to return to a more natural way of life, showing how useless cultural goods become in situations such as the one described in the novel and how life in the city makes people "unfit for living in harmony with nature." For example, the
Mercedes-Benz automobile in which she arrived slowly becomes overgrown by plants, and the "wall" seems to protect her, giving her the opportunity to change and rethink her priorities.
Nobel Prize winner
Doris Lessing writes:
The Wall is a wonderful novel. It is not often that you can say only a woman could have written this book, but women in particular will understand the heroine's loving devotion to the details of making a keeping life, every day felt as a victory against everything that would like to undermine and destroy. It is as absorbing as
Robinson Crusoe. In her autobiographical novel for children,
Himmel, der nirgendwo endet, written in 1966, Haushofer describes the increasing distance between a daughter and her mother as a "wall" between them that cannot be broken through easily; from this perspective,
The Wall could be considered a metaphor for the loneliness of human beings. Academic Lisa Cornick notes that the novel is an example of "premise fiction," wherein Haushofer introduces a "single extraordinary premise by revising the realism of the imaginary wall, but does let everything else in the story conform to what one might expect in the real world." Dagmar Lorenz, in a 1998 article on the relationship between humans and animals, refers to the novel as "anti-speciecist", says the narrator "becomes the matriarch of animal survivors, and kills the last surviving human male." Critic Maria-Regina Kecht considers Haushofer, along with
Ingeborg Bachmann, to be a forerunner for a generation of German-language women writers including
Elfriede Jelinek,
Barbara Frischmuth, and others. Kecht points out that Haushofer and Bachmann published their important works before the international women's movement caught on in Austria, and that the two of them portrayed the fate of women in a male-dominated society, and criticized a system that favored the rights of the strong over the weak. == Influence ==