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Orhan Pamuk And The Idea Of The Novelist

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  • Orhan Pamuk And The Idea Of The Novelist

    ORHAN PAMUK AND THE IDEA OF THE NOVELIST

    The Times
    March 19, 2008
    UK

    Orhan Pamuk and the idea of the novelist

    In his new book, the Nobel Laureate has revealed more about himself
    than he intendedChristopher de Bellaigue.

    In 1988, a little-known writer called Orhan Pamuk was struggling
    to complete The Black Book, his fourth and most ambitious novel to
    date. "As the writing progressed", Pamuk remembers in Other Colours,
    his new collection of essays and stories, "and the book grew broader,
    the pleasure of writing it grew deeper." This was small consolation,
    for "the novel refused to end". Pamuk found himself alone with his
    obsession, unshaven and slovenly, "clutching a mangled plastic bag
    and wearing a cap, a raincoat that was missing a few buttons, and
    ancient gym shoes with rotting soles. I'd go into any old restaurant
    or lunch counter and wolf down my food, casting hostile looks about
    me". He bore, he writes, an "air of ruination". Put that Orhan Pamuk,
    the squinting nonentity his disapproving mother always predicted he
    would become, alongside the accomplished literary figure we recognize
    today, and you get an idea of his achievement. Born into a culture
    unsure of itself and lacking creative invention, suffocating in the
    "small literary world" of insecure, distrustful republican Turkey,
    the young Pamuk was bold enough to try his hand at a foreign art
    form that few Turks had adopted with much success. And the rest -
    the best-selling novels, a highly regarded memoir, Istanbul, and the
    2006 Nobel Prize for Literature - hardly needs elaboration.

    In Istanbul, an exploration of Pamuk's relationship with the city that
    inspired him, and now in Other Colours, Pamuk gives us an insight,
    in the prime of his writing life, into the way he sees himself and
    would like others to see him. The essays here, which range from
    autobiographical vignettes and sketches to literary criticism and
    journalism, reinforce three formative images, first impressed on
    the pages of Istanbul: Pamuk's charming, rakish father, forgiven
    his absenteeism because he encouraged his son to follow his heart
    and write; the city of Istanbul and the fascination it exerts; and
    finally those dead novelists with whom, even in youth, Pamuk formed
    a precocious brotherhood.

    Although he has expressed himself on politics and history - most
    famously in 2005, when he observed that many Armenians and Kurds
    had been killed in Turkey, for which unremarkable statement he was
    unsuccessfully prosecuted on charges of "insulting Turkishness" -
    Pamuk is an introspective writer. Indeed, it might be said that the
    sum of his novels constitutes one of the most sustained, if elliptical,
    autobiographies in literature. His Nobel acceptance speech, reprinted
    here, is whispered and personal, a striking contrast to the genial
    broadside that Doris Lessing delivered last December. And when he
    writes of the authors who influenced him, summoning the reverence he
    felt for them as a young man, it is not so much Dostoevsky, Stendhal,
    Camus and Nabokov that we see as Orhan Pamuk reading Dostoevsky,
    Stendhal, Camus and Nabokov.

    Of these, Dostoevsky is the most important, and this surely has
    much to do with what Pamuk sees as the Russian's "familiarity
    with European thought and his anger against it, his equal and
    opposite desires to belong to Europe and to shun it". The Turkish
    Republic that Kemal Ataturk set up in the 1920s has never settled the
    question of its political and cultural status in relation to Europe,
    and Pamuk has devoted himself to examining the tensions, between
    faith and rationalism, and between the parochial and the worldly,
    that have flowed from this omission. When he writes that Dostoevsky
    "hated seeing Russian intellectuals seize upon an idea just arrived
    from Europe and believe themselves privy to all the secrets of
    the world", one is reminded of Pamuk's disdain for the Kemalists'
    similarly uncritical reception of European ideas. These ideas, it
    may be assumed, found a literary voice among those "half-witted,
    mediocre, moderately successful, bald, male, degenerate writers"
    whose masterpieces, amusingly slighted in a chapter called "How I
    got rid of some of my books", Pamuk takes much pleasure in throwing
    away. Unlike Dostoevsky, Pamuk has never been directly involved,
    at least not in a sustained way, with the politics of his country,
    and it is easy to see why. Subtly contemptuous of the Kemalists, he
    is no more inclined towards those pious patriots - analogous to the
    Slavophils of nineteenth-century Russia - who recall with nostalgia
    the Ottoman Empire and its presiding certainties, the greatness of the
    Turk and the glory of God. Political agnosticism, and a wide-ranging
    literary gaze, have made Pamuk a loner in his native land. If he has
    peers, they are younger Turkish writers - Perihan Magden is one -
    who write thoughtful novels in modern, inventive Turkish, and whose
    complaint about Kemalism is not that it is too Western, but not Western
    enough; in effect, that it doesn't trust democracy or pluralism.

    Perhaps inevitably for a book that has been put together from diverse
    sources, Other Colours is patchy and uneven. The writing on Istanbul,
    including chapters on fast food, Bosphorus ferries and earthquakes,
    is never less than diverting, but some good sections from the Turkish
    original, including an appreciation of the neglected Turkish writer
    Ahmet Hamdi Tanpinar, have been omitted, apparently for no better
    reason than to avoid alienating the Western reader. They have been
    replaced by obvious crowd pleasers such as a section, called "Views
    from the Capital of the World", about New York. Pamuk is a better
    novelist than essayist. In a ponderous description of the effect that
    the Brothers Karamazov had on him as a boy, for instance, he takes
    a page to say what the arresting first line of his novel, the New
    Life, says in a sentence: "I read a book one day and my whole life
    was changed". These infelicities are not lessened by Maureen Freely's
    rather flat translation.

    Brighter spots include a short story called "To Look Out the
    Window". In this melancholy gem, Pamuk evokes the pre-adolescent
    listlessness he felt and the adult regret he observed while growing
    up, the scion of an affluent Istanbul family, in the 1950s. Other
    Colours also includes three fine speeches that he wrote for foreign
    audiences. In one, he describes the deadening effects his trial
    had on his creativity. In the second, he justifies his political
    abstinence in a country of passionate politics, his desire to "aspire
    to nothing but to write beautiful novels", and his distrust of strong
    opinions, because "most of us entertain contradictory thoughts
    simultaneously". The last chapter here, Pamuk's Nobel acceptance
    speech, starts with a tribute to his father and ends up listing the
    reasons why he writes - as contradictory and human, and as full of
    altruism and egoism, as the author himself.

    In Other Colours, Pamuk has revealed more about himself than he
    intended.

    His situating himself so close to the likes of Dostoevsky and
    Nabokov strikes a discordant note, at once aspirational and
    unadventurous. Orhan Pamuk does not, as Christopher Hitchens has
    acerbically observed, wear his learning lightly, and this may be
    because the process of acquiring it was a trying one, pitting him
    against the tepid philistinism of 1970s Istanbul and his mother's
    displeasure. Other Colours shows him to be a solitary, determined
    autodidact, prone to self-indulgence and morbidity; it contains only
    hints of his greatness as a novelist.

    Christopher de Bellaigue is the author of In the Rose Garden of the
    Marytyrs: A memoir of Iran, 2005, and, most recently, The Struggle for
    Iran, 2007. He is the Alistair Horne Fellow at St Antony's College,
    Cambridge.
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