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  • NYT; Turkish Writer Wins Nobel in Literature

    Turkish Writer Wins Nobel in Literature

    By SARAH LYALL
    Published: October 12, 2006

    LONDON, Oct. 12 - The Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk, whose exquisitely
    constructed, wistful prose explores the agonized dance between Muslims
    and the west and between past and present, won the 2006 Nobel Prize in
    Literature today.

    Announcing the award from Stockholm, the Swedish Academy said in a
    statement that Mr. Pamuk's `quest for the melancholic soul of his
    native city' had led him to discover `new symbols for the clash and
    interlacing of cultures.'

    Mr. Pamuk, 54, is Turkey's best-known and best-selling novelist but
    also an increasingly divisive figure in a nation pulled in many
    directions at once. A champion of freedom of speech at a time when
    insulting `Turkishness' is a criminal offense, he has run afoul of
    Islamists who resent his Western secularism, and Turkish nationalists
    who object to his unflinching, sometimes unflattering portrayal of
    their country.

    The Swedish Academy never offers nonliterary reasons for its choices
    and presents itself as being uninfluenced by politics. But last year's
    winner, the British playwright Harold Pinter, is a prominent critic of
    the British and American governments, and there were political
    implications once again in the choice of Mr. Pamuk.

    `You're beginning to notice a certain sensitivity to trends - they are
    giving the prize as a symbolic statement for one thing or another,'
    Arne Ruth, former editor-in-chief of the Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter,
    said in an interview. Of Mr. Pamuk, he said: `he is a symbol of the
    relationship between Europe and Turkey, and they couldn't have
    overlooked this when they made their choice.'

    Mr. Pamuk, who said in 2004 that he has begun `to get involved in a
    sort of political war against the Turkish state and the
    establishment,' is currently spending a semester teaching at Columbia
    University in New York.

    Nationalist Turks have not forgiven Mr. Pamuk for an interview with a
    Swiss magazine in 2005 in which he denounced the mass killings of
    Armenians by the Ottoman Empire in World War I and the killing of
    Kurds by Turkey in the 1980's. He narrowly escaped trial when the
    remarks were deemed anti-Turkish and a group of nationalists initiated
    a criminal case against him; the charges were dropped on a
    technicality last January. Accepting a literary award in Germany in
    2005, he said: "The fueling of anti-Turkish sentiment in Europe is
    resulting in an anti-European, indiscriminate nationalism in Turkey."

    Because of the deeply mixed feelings Mr. Pamuk inspires back home,
    some prominent Turks had to walk a fine line today, expressing pride
    while trying to play down the significance of his political views.

    `I want to believe that the Nobel Prize was given to him purely on his
    literary talents, but not political declarations,' Egemen Bagis, a
    member of Parliament from the ruling Justice and Development party,
    said. At the same time, Mr. Bagis said that the prize `shows how far
    Turkey has come in its contribution to the world's arts and
    literature.'

    In a brief interview with the Swedish newspaper Svenska Daglabet,
    Mr. Pamuk said today that he was `very happy and honored' and trying
    `to recover from the shock.'

    Born to a wealthy, secular family of industrialists in Istanbul in
    195, Mr. Pamuk originally meant to be an architect. But he defied
    family pressures, quit architecture school and became instead a
    full-time writer, publishing his first novel, `Cevdet Bey and Sons,'
    about three generations of a family, in 1982.

    Among his best known works is `My Name is Red.' The novel, first
    published in Turkey in 1998 and subsequently translated into 24
    languages, introduced Mr. Pamuk to a wider audience and cemented his
    international reputation. Set over nine winter days in 16th-century
    Istanbul, it is at once a mystery, an intellectual puzzle and a
    romance with a range of narrators, including a murder victim who opens
    the novel by saying, `I am nothing but a corpse now, a body at the
    bottom of a well.' In 2003, it won the $127,000 IMPAC Dublin literary
    prize.

    `Nothing changed in my life since I work all the time,' Mr. Pamuk said
    at the time. `I've spent 30 years writing fiction. For the first 10
    years, I worried about money and no one asked me how much money I
    made. The second decade I spent money and no one was asking me about
    that. And I've spent the last 10 years with everyone expecting to hear
    how I spend the money, which I will not do.'

    `Snow,' published in the United States in 2004, expands further on
    themes - alienation, religion, modernization, the hidden corners of
    Turkey - that Mr. Pamuk has explored over and over in his
    work. Writing in the New York Times Book Review, Margaret Atwood
    called the novel `not only an engrossing feat of tale-spinning, but
    essential reading for our times.' The Turkish public reads
    Mr. Pamuk's work, she said, `as if taking its own pulse.'

    Ms. Atwood continued: `The twists of fate, the plots that double back
    on themselves, the trickiness, the mysteries that recede as they're
    approached, the bleak cities, the night prowling, the sense of
    identity lost, the protagonist in exile - these are vintage Pamuk, but
    they're also part of the modern literary landscape.'

    Mr. Pamuk was quick to denounce the fatwa against Salman Rushdie over
    Mr. Rushdie's work `The Satanic Verses.' In 1998, he turned down the
    title of state artist in Turkey, saying, `I don't know why they tried
    to give me the prize.'

    Mr. Pamuk's Nobel comes at a particularly tricky moment for Turkey,
    whose efforts to join the European Union are viewed with suspicion by
    its own nationalists, by Europeans who worry about the country's high
    proportion of Islamists, and by European governments, who are
    insisting that it first adhere to Western standards in human rights
    and justice.

    Coincidentally today, a bill that would make it a crime to deny that
    the Turkish killing of Armenians from 1915 to 1917 constituted
    genocide was passed in the lower house of the French Parliament. And
    from Armenia, the foreign minister, Vartan Oskanian, praised what he
    said were Mr. Pamuk's courageous words about the past, in a statement
    that is bound to irritate Turkey.

    `Orhan Pamuk ventured into issues of memory and identity, and with
    intellectual courage and honesty, explored his own history, and
    therefore ours,' Mr. Oskanian said in an e-mail message to The New
    York Times. `We welcome this decision and only wish that this kind of
    intellectual sincerity and candor will lead the way to acknowledging
    and transcending this painful, difficult period of our peoples' and
    our countries' history.'

    Reporting was contributed by Ivar Ekman from Stockholm, C.J. Chivers
    from Moscow, Nina Bernstein from New York and Sebnem Arsu from
    Istanbul.
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