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A Quick Guide to Orhan Pamuk

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  • A Quick Guide to Orhan Pamuk

    Newsweek
    Oct 6 2006

    A Quick Guide to Orhan Pamuk
    (So when they announce that he's won the Nobel Prize in Literature
    next week, you'll be totally up to speed).

    WEB EXCLUSIVE
    By Owen Matthews and Malcolm Jones
    Newsweek
    Updated: 4:53 p.m. ET Oct. 6, 2006


    Oct. 6, 2006 - Once again, Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk is rumored to
    be a leading candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature. The author
    of "Snow" and "My Name Is Red" has been here before, along with
    Philip Roth and Joyce Carol Oates, the writers most frequently
    mentioned as his competition. But this looks like the 54-year-old
    Pamuk's year (a bad year for a writer can be good for his Nobel
    chances-see below).

    In the interest of dispelling any Orhan Who? confusion, we're
    providing a crib sheet. So by the time the Nobel committee makes its
    announcement Oct. 12, you'll be up to speed. Of course, the more we
    say and the more you prepare, the worse his chances will probably
    get. On the other hand, he's someone you should know about whether he
    ever wins the prize or not. He's that good.

    Who is Orhan Pamuk?

    Pamuk is Turkey's greatest novelist-and its most controversial. Last
    year he sparked a furor when he told a Swiss newspaper that "a
    million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds were killed in this country
    [during World War I and between 1986 and 1999, respectively], and I'm
    the only one who dares to talk about it." In response,
    ultranationalist Turkish lawyers brought charges against Pamuk,
    accusing him of "insulting Turkishness." The charges could have
    landed him in jail if the case hadn't been thrown out. Even so, Pamuk
    received multiple death threats and was branded an "abject creature"
    by Hurriyet, Turkey's largest newspaper. In the process, though, he
    became an international hero of free speech. The European Union's
    enlargement commissioner called Pamuk's trial a "litmus test" of
    Turkey's commitment to the European values, and some of the world's
    top authors, including Gabriel García Marquez, Gunter Grass, Umberto
    Eco and John Updike publicly backed his stand.

    In the interest of dispelling any Orhan Who? confusion, we're
    providing a crib sheet. So by the time the Nobel committee makes its
    announcement Oct. 12, you'll be up to speed. Of course, the more we
    say and the more you prepare, the worse his chances will probably
    get. On the other hand, he's someone you should know about whether he
    ever wins the prize or not. He's that good.

    One of Pamuk's most enduring themes is the tension between the values
    of East and West. "Snow" (2002), his latest novel, is set in a
    snowbound city on the edges of contemporary Turkey-and, symbolically,
    on the margins of Western civilization. Its protagonist, a poet,
    finds himself caught in a web of conflicting ideologies, from
    religious extremism to totalitarianism-all the -isms that have
    stalked the Turkish Republic since it first emerged as a secularized,
    Westernized state out of the ruins of the Ottoman past a century ago.

    "Snow" takes place in the 1990s in the actual Turkish city of Kars,
    but while the story, packed with nationalists, socialists and
    militant Islamists, has a superficial currency, its reality is
    dreamlike. Snow falls for most of the novel, isolating the town,
    where a poet, called Ka, has come to investigate a series of suicides
    by teenage Muslim girls who refuse the secular government's order to
    remove their headscarves. Artistically blocked for years, Ka, a
    Westernized sophisticate, suddenly begins to write poetry again. He
    falls in love so deeply that he begins to betray everything-even his
    own scruples-to preserve his happiness. Because he believes in
    nothing beyond his own desire, he is marked for tragedy.

    In "Istanbul" (2005), which is both an autobiography and a brilliant
    portrait of modern Turkey, Pamuk uses his native city-which is
    located literally on the geographical dividing line between the
    Christian West and the Muslim East-as a metaphor for a culture that
    wants to look forward but can't help simultaneously looking
    backward-with melancholy and a terrific sense of loss-at the glories
    of its past civilization. It is also a very sensual, almost
    street-by-street celebration of a very real place. Few writers mix
    ideas with the grittiness of the real world better than Pamuk, who
    has always identified with the outsider, the observer, the recording
    angel: the "imaginative exploration of the other, the enemy who
    resides in all our minds" is a novelist's most important function, he
    says.

    What's his writing like?
    Here's a sample, from "Istanbul":

    To see the city in black and white is to see it through the tarnish
    of history: the patina of what is old and faded and no longer matters
    to the rest of the world. Even the greatest Ottoman architecture has
    a humble simplicity that suggests an end-of-empire gloom, a pained
    submission to the diminishing European gaze and to an ancient poverty
    that must be endured like an incurable disease. It is resignation
    that nourishes Istanbul's inward-looking soul. To see the city in
    black and white, to see the haze that sits over it and breathe in the
    melancholy its inhabitants have embraced as their common fate, you
    need only to fly in from a rich western city and head straight to the
    crowded streets; if it's winter, every man on the Galata Bridge will
    be wearing the same, pale, drab, shadowy clothes. The Istanbullus of
    my era have shunned the vibrant reds, greens and oranges of their
    rich, proud ancestors; to foreign visitors, it looks as if they have
    done so deliberately, to make a moral point. They have not-but there
    is in their dense gloom a suggestion of modesty. This is how you
    dress in a black-and-white city, they seem to be saying; this is how
    you grieve for a city that has been in decline for a hundred and
    fifty years.

    --Boundary_(ID_xIuiyQJgsxriZ0kes4L2wQ)--
    From: Baghdasarian
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