Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Nobel Winner Pamuk Recounts Thirty Years of Writing

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

  • Nobel Winner Pamuk Recounts Thirty Years of Writing

    Harvard Crimson, MA
    Oct 20 2007

    Nobel Winner Pamuk Recounts Thirty Years of Writing

    Published On Friday, October 19, 2007 3:13 PM

    By ALISON S. COHN
    Crimson Staff Writer

    `I think that most of fiction is autobiographical,' Turkish novelist
    Orhan Pamuk reflected before a packed Memorial Church audience last
    Friday night, exactly one year to the date of his winning the Nobel
    Prize in Literature. `The art of the novel is that in writing, you're
    talking about yourself while making people believe you're talking
    about herself, himself.'

    During the Harvard Book Store event, Pamuk used excerpts from `Other
    Colors,' a new collection of `essays and a story' he has written over
    the last 30 years, as a jumping-off point for a freewheeling
    discussion of precocious melancholy, the calling to literature, and
    the political necessity of open communication. `This book is full of
    slices of life, things that I have experienced,' he said.

    Pamuk read aloud a cluster of short lyrical essays originally written
    for the Turkish political humor magazine `Oküz' (`Ox'). `I'm Not
    Going to School,' a gently sardonic dramatic monologue, detailed a
    child's dislike of school (`The teacher gives me a nasty look, and
    she doesn't look too good to start with. I don't want to go to
    school.'). `When Rüya is Sad' offered a novelist-father's more
    self-reflective perspective.

    `Does she have a stomachache? Or maybe she is discovering the taste
    of her melancholy. Let her be, let her be sad, let her lose herself
    in solitude and her own smell. The first aim of an intelligent person
    is to achieve unhappiness when everyone around her is happy,' he
    read.

    A self-characterized graphomaniac and author of seven novels
    including `Snow' and `My Name is Red,' Pamuk reminisced about the
    burgeoning of his compulsion to write.

    `I argue that just like some people need a pill every day, I need
    some time to be alone in a room...to write every day. If I do that,
    I'm okay. If I don't do that, I'm upset,' he said.

    Pamuk was asked by an audience member for his thoughts on the
    proposed condemnation of the Armenian Genocide by the United States
    Congress.

    `You know, I was expecting this question. Don't worry, I will get out
    of it!' he quipped.

    Charges against Pamuk of `insulting Turkish identity' for remarks he
    made to a Swiss newspaper about the mass killing of Armenians in
    Turkey during World War I were later dropped in January 2006
    following an international outcry.

    `Firstly, it is a moral issue. For me, it is a Turkish issue. And
    unfortunately, now it is getting to be more and more of an
    international issue. For me, it is an issue of free speech in Turkey,
    that the Turks should be able to talk about this, no matter what you
    say...I think it is upsetting that this issue can be an arm-wrestling
    issue internationally, rather than a moral issue of freedom of speech
    in Turkey,' he replied, to applause.

    Pamuk, whose works have been translated into over fifty languages,
    spoke to the universal power of literature.

    `A sentence is a sort of an episteme, a sort of a composition of
    meanings and melody. Translation, I believe, depends on the essential
    translatability of prose. And I also believe that poetry may
    sometimes be untranslatable, but I write in prose. [In prose] there
    are acknowledged universal meanings and they can be translated,' he
    said.

    Reading an excerpt from his Nobel Lecture reprinted in `Other
    Colors,' Pamuk attempted to answer simply that question often posed
    to authors: `Why do you write?'

    `I write because I have never managed to be happy,' he said. `I write
    to be happy.'

    http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=52016 9
    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X