Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Book Review: The Bastard of Istanbul

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Book Review: The Bastard of Istanbul

    The Washington Post
    February 4, 2007 Sunday
    Final Edition

    A Novel Indictment;
    Elif Shafak's novel almost got her thrown in jail for three years.

    by: Reviewed by Barry Unsworth

    THE BASTARD OF ISTANBUL
    A Novel
    By Elif Shafak
    Viking. 360 pp. $24.95

    Two extended families, one Turkish living in Istanbul, the other in
    San Francisco, part of the Armenian diaspora. Through the
    interactions among and between them, we trace the tragic patterns of
    blame, denial, suppression of memory that have characterized
    relations between the two peoples since the massacres and
    deportations suffered by the Armenians at Turkish hands in the early
    months of 1915, perhaps the first example in the 20th century of what
    has come to be called ethnic cleansing, and systematic enough to be
    regarded as a policy of genocide -- two out of three Armenians living
    under Ottoman rule were done to death. The Turkish state has yet to
    acknowledge these atrocities, in spite of ample historical
    documentation.

    Elif Shafak has chosen to write The Bastard of Istanbul in English, a
    decision to be applauded, though with mixed feelings. The novel
    deserves to reach a wide readership, for reasons not entirely
    literary. By putting into the mouths of her characters explicit
    reference to these events, for using the word "genocide," Shafak fell
    afoul of Article 301 of the Turkish penal code and was tried on a
    charge of "insulting Turkishness," which carries a prison sentence.
    It is only a few months since this charge was finally dropped. The
    case received wide press coverage both in the United States and in
    Europe and has served as a highly public -- and highly salutary --
    example of the lengths to which an insensate nationalism can go in
    the suppression of elementary freedoms. It has also, of course, acted
    as an extreme example of the denial that is a central theme of the
    novel.

    However, a novel is first of all a structure of words, and it has to
    be said that the structure is sometimes shaky in this one. Certainly
    we British must be on our guard against looking upon the English
    language as the last of our colonial possessions, quite failing to
    notice that it was lost long ago under the combined assault of a
    billion or so people all over the globe who regard it as theirs too,
    and often use it more vividly and inventively than we do. There is
    also the risk of being regarded as an inmate of a Home for Aged
    Pedants who has been let out for the day. All the same . . . "A
    tortuous moment," what can that be? How can a person's nose be called
    "blatantly aquiline"? How can you "listen to your Middle Eastern
    roots"? What does it mean to say that "sex is far more sensual than
    physical" or to describe a truth as "stringent and stolid"? These
    perplexities intensify at times to outright rebellion. No, no, no, a
    person cannot, at one and the same time, be "almost paralyzed" and
    "wallowing" in something. A gaze of mutual love cannot be called, in
    the same breath, "a prurient moment."

    These are just a few random samples. I am pretty sure Shafak would
    not write things like this in her native Turkish. Should it matter?
    Too large a question to deal with here. Irritation at the way the
    author seems sometimes to muffle up or undermine her own meanings is
    compounded with regret by the fact that a lot of the time the writing
    is very good, eloquent, bold, full of shrewd insights, with veins of
    satire and poetry and fantasy running through it, and turns of phrase
    that are witty and aphoristic, like the description of the way her
    family deals with the extremely difficult Auntie Feride: "They had
    figured out one way of dealing with insanity, and that was to confuse
    it with a lack of credibility."

    The narrative mode most resembles that of a storyteller in the oral
    tradition, leisurely and digressive and entirely arbitrary, moving
    from the horrors of the past to the pathologies of the present,
    through four generations, from Istanbul to San Francisco to Tucson,
    Ariz. Information is withheld from us until the moment is deemed
    ripe. Everything comes together finally in a resolution both powerful
    and moving, but this device of long-delayed information, which is
    employed throughout, can sometimes put a strain on our belief -- and
    on our patience. Early in the novel, the unmarried Zeliha, one of the
    Turkish contingent, announces to the assembled family that she is
    pregnant. Rage, consternation, abuse, tears. But not one of these
    five women thinks of asking her who the father is. A natural enough
    question, surely. We have to wait 300 pages to find out. Two-thirds
    of the way through the book and 19 years later, we are told quite
    casually that her daughter Asya has been having an extremely
    variegated and crowded sex life, going to bed with all and sundry. We
    have seen her grow up, we have been told all manner of things about
    her; why has this been kept from us? It is hard to see what purpose
    is served by these implausibilities of narrative.

    One of the great strengths of the novel is the sometimes caustic but
    always humorously tolerant treatment of the various family members,
    especially those in Istanbul. A relish for the quirks and
    eccentricities of character runs through and irradiates the whole
    book. Auntie Feride, who changes her hair color and style "at each
    stage of her journey to insanity," so that in the end the doctors, in
    order to understand her illness, start keeping a hair chart; Auntie
    Banu, who comes into her own as a clairvoyant and believes that she
    has a djinn on either shoulder, one wicked and one good; Auntie
    Zeliha, audacious and independent, the woman of the future.

    Recurrent throughout is the theme of past trauma and its effects in
    the present, the feeling of exile, the rooted sense of injustice, the
    rage at silence, the longing for a firm identity. Gradually the
    elements come together: the discussions online with fellow Armenians,
    the conversation of the strangely disembodied characters at the Café
    Kundera, the revelations of the evil djinn on Auntie Banu's left
    shoulder, and, above all, the friendship that develops between two
    girls from the different families. And we come to see that this need
    to confront the past, with all its load of error and guilt, is
    something that concerns not just Turks and Armenians but all of us,
    and that what is true between races and peoples is also true in
    individual lives. Throughout the novel, passing from one generation
    to the next, is a gold brooch in the shape of a pomegranate, a
    memorial to the unoffending victims and a symbol of continuity and
    reconciliation.

    It is this last word that one keeps coming back to. But there is no
    reconciliation without justice. Elif Shafak's novel brings the
    possibility of it a step closer, and we are all in her debt for this.
    *

    Barry Unsworth's most recent novel is "The Ruby in Her Navel."
Working...
X