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Pamuk's Dazzling New Novel "The Museum of Innocence"

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  • Pamuk's Dazzling New Novel "The Museum of Innocence"

    Pamuk's Dazzling New Novel "The Museum of Innocence"
    Obsession With Objects
    By CHARLES R. LARSON

    http://www.counterpunch.org/larson12042009 .html
    Weekend Edition
    December 4-6, 2009

    Think of all the great stories that have dealt with frustrated
    love - unrequited, lost, unacknowledged, unfulfilled, one-sided;
    painful, agonized, obsessive--so many unhappy characters you'd think
    there wouldn't be the need for one more. I'm referring to the
    characters we've invested our reading lives in: Romeo and Juliet,
    Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale, Gatsby, Molly Bloom, Tom Jones,
    Emma Bovary, Pip in Great Expectations. The list goes on forever, not
    only in fiction but also in epics and drama, even poems. That said,
    it's difficult to recall a literary character as obsessive and fixated
    on another as the hero of Orhan Pamuk's devastating and astonishing
    new novel, The Museum of Innocence.

    Kemal is thirty years old at the beginning of the story and twice that
    by the end. The rollercoaster ride he takes us on--relentlessly
    recording the minutest details of his inability to let go of his lost
    love--is related in the first-person, though there's a caveat about
    that narration that I will reveal later. But, first, it's necessary
    to provide a couple of basic facts necessary about the novel.

    Chapter one begins: `It was the happiest moment of my life, though I
    didn't know it. Had I known, had I cherished this gift, would
    everything have turned out differently?' Though that second sentence
    is an ominous question, the rest of the initial paragraph explains
    Kemal's happiness. It's May 26, 1975, and he's making love to his
    distant cousin, eighteen-year-old Füsun, from the poorer side of his
    extended family. Kemal is thirty, and in three weeks everyone who is
    important in Istanbul will attend a party to celebrate his engagement
    to Sibel (from another prominent family) at the newly-opened Hilton
    Hotel.

    Days earlier, Kemal ran into his cousin, a shop girl in an exclusive
    store whom he hadn't seen in years. Her extraordinary beauty
    immediately swept him away, so much so that he all but ignored his
    approaching engagement to Sibel. Füsun resisted Kemal's approaches
    briefly but then gave in - not exactly a common occurrence in Turkey at
    the time. Even more unlikely, given Islam's rigid protection of
    women, is the fact that Kemal also took Sibel's virginity. But in her
    case, since the engagement party is imminent and will be followed by
    their wedding, it was not unknown for upper-class young women to
    engage in intercourse before marriage.

    Everything will soon fall apart. Kemal knows that the engagement
    party should be called off but is unable to make that decision.
    Daringly, he even invites Füsun and her parents to the party for
    hundreds of the city's elite. The longest chapter in the novel and
    easily the most riveting is given over to the party and the gavotte in
    which Kemal engages, first avoiding Füsun and then even flamboyantly
    dancing with her, as he gives in to the utter agony of the unbearable
    realization that he is going to marry the wrong woman.

    Not too long after the engagement party, months actually, Kemal throws
    Sibel to the vicious scandal mongers who know that she has not only
    been dumped but is no longer a virgin and is, thus, relegated to a
    kind of cultural limbo. Kemal knows that Füsun loves him. In his
    naiveté, he believes that all he needs to do is return to her and then
    the two of them can get married.

    This is where things become complicated, barely a fourth of the way
    into the story.

    Füsun is nowhere to be found. When Kemal finally locates her, he
    discovers that she's married, pressured into the arrangement by her
    parents to disguise the shame of her lost virginity. All of these
    events are narrated by Kemal, all fairly quickly and convincingly.

    His belated realization that it is only Füsun who can make him
    happy - that she is the only person he can ever love - is related with
    such exquisite artistry that it's difficult not to be captivated by
    Kemal's story. How can this story end happily?

    After he discovers that Füsun and her boorish husband, Feridun, are
    living with her parents, Kemal begins visiting them several times a
    week, eating his evening meal with the newly-weds and her parents
    Feridun wants to make films, and Füsun wants to become an actress.
    Kemal has the money, so he can produce the movies they hope to make.
    What he really wants is for Füsun to divorce her husband and return to
    him - something that her mother tells him that Füsun also desires.

    Over eight years while he humors Füsun, her husband, and her family,
    while spending most evenings with them, Kemal begins stealing objects
    from their house--objects that Füsun has touched. It's a time in
    Turkey when everyone seemed to smoke. Thus, Kemal takes the 4213
    cigarette butts which have touched her lips - lips he hasn't touched
    since before the engagement party - back to his own apartment. He also
    absconds with dozens of other household items which she has come into
    contact with, as the story shifts from realism to a kind of psychotic
    obsession with objects.

    This is also where Kemal's story and Orhan Pamuk's own life merge into
    one--so blurring the two that it becomes impossible to separate them.
    Kemal, the character, tells the reader that he is no writer so he
    seeks out Pamuk the novelist to write the story that he will relate to
    him. Thus, Pamuk becomes a minor presence in the novel that
    identifies him as the writer. And stranger yet, Pamuk - who lives part
    of each year in Istanbul - is currently in the process of building a
    `Museum of Innocence' in the city he has celebrated so often in his
    work, including his previous book, Istanbul, his love song to the city
    of his birth. There's even a ticket printed in the novel that will
    provide entry without charge to Pamuk's museum, once it opens,
    sometime in 2010.

    So what is `the museum of innocence' - a novel or a museum? Something
    stranger that fiction? In chapter eighty-one, also called `The Museum
    of Innocence,' Kemal expostulates on his `dream of telling my story
    through objects.' Later, he observes, `I remembered again why some
    museums had the power to make me shudder: They induced the feeling
    that I had become suspended in one age while the rest of humanity
    lived in another.' Kemal confesses to having visited 5723 museums
    around the world since the day he first realized that he would need to
    build his own museum.

    In a recent interview in The New York Times Magazine, Orhan Pamuk
    identifies many of the objects that will be on display in his museum
    once it opens. They include lottery tickets, oddly shaped doorknobs,
    keys, a tricycle, even a set of false teeth in a glass three-quarters
    full of water. When asked if he is, in fact, Kemal, Pamuk responded,
    `No, I am not Kemal, but I cannot convince you that I am not Kemal.
    That is being a novelist.'

    How do we separate writer from novel? We don't. We accept the fusion
    of the two, acknowledging that in several of Pamuk's earlier novels,
    the story is often about youthful love, an era of the past, a time of
    innocence for writers and their characters - but also the cities and the
    countries of their birth. The Museum of Innocence - sui generis in
    every way - is a paean to the past. Time cannot be recaptured, but the
    objects that dominated it can always be put on display. How fitting
    that for once these objects are not busts of the famous, inventions of
    the geniuses of those eras, or cultural oddities belying the worst
    excesses of a given time. Instead, they are personal artifacts,
    fetishes, emotive items that we are surrounded with every day of our
    lives, guilelessness recaptured.

    What a dazzling novel.

    The Museum of Innocence
    By Orhan Pamuk
    Knopf, 536 pp., $28.95

    Charles R. Larson is Professor of Literature at American University,
    in Washington, D.C.
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