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  • In The Margins

    IN THE MARGINS
    by Peter Koch

    Artvoice, NY
    www.justbuffalo.org
    http://artvoice.com/issues/v6n36/babel
    September 06, 2007

    Just Buffalo Literary Center has turned a corner this year with Babel,
    a dramatic upgrade to the previous If All of Buffalo Read the Same
    Book reading series. With four internationally prominent authors
    on the bill--Orhan Pamuk, Ariel Dorfman, Derek Walcott and Kiran
    Desai--including two Nobel Prize winners (Pamuk and Walcott), Babel
    promises to vault Just Buffaloto the level with UB's Distinguished
    Speaker Series.

    According to artistic director Mike Kelleher, "The idea of the series
    is really to bring global perspective to the literary discussion in
    Buffalo." This is much-needed perspective, especially as we approach
    the six-year anniversary of the September 11 attacks on the World
    Trade Center. In those years, our nation's foreign policy has grown
    increasingly aggressive and antagonistic, its people more xenophobic
    under the guidance of the Bush administration. But globalization
    will only force us into more and more frequent, and undoubtedly
    uncomfortable, encounters with the wide, unknown world. Kelleher offers
    this: "You can and should read history, and you can and should read
    the newspaper, but literature brings experience down to the personal
    level, and you, as the reader, see events from the inside through the
    eyes of a character. I think that's a crucial experience, in terms
    of learning to understand other cultures." Seeing the world through
    the eyes of other cultures by reading their greatest writers is a
    first step in that direction. Just Buffalo has recruited four such
    renowned writers, and they make up the Babel reading series.

    The series' title recalls the Biblical story of the Tower of Babel,
    in which all of humanity, united in language and purpose, attempts to
    build a tower to the heavens. When God witnesses man's arrogance, he
    resolves to confuse the uniform language of the earth so that humans
    can not understand one another, thereby preventing future attempts
    to build such a tower. He scatters the people across the globe, and
    the tower is abandoned. (A footnote: The tower is said to have been
    built in ancient Sumer, which many historians believe to be Biblical
    Shinar in modern Southern Iraq, today the world's most visible stage
    for cross-cultural misunderstanding.) The Tower of Babel has popularly
    become a representation of human beings' separation from one another by
    way of language (the Hebrew verb balal means "to confuse or confound")
    and culture. At the same time, it suggests the possibility of their
    coming together once again, which is where Just Buffalo's Babel series
    steps in. The four authors in the series could be said to be united
    by a single factor: duality. Each of them straddles multiple cultures,
    multiple ways of seeing and understanding the world.

    Though he's never left the wealthy district in Istanbul where he
    grew up, novelist Orhan Pamuk has been straddling worlds his entire
    life--Europe and Asia, wealthy and poor, secular and religious,
    popular and avant-garde. Such is the nature of life in contemporary
    Turkey, which for the past century has been experiencing a rocky
    transition from the Islamic Ottoman Empire to a secular, westernized
    democratic republic that began with the leadership of Mustafa Kemal
    Ataturk in the 1920s. While it's that new political system, along
    with its accompanying shift in values, that made his family rich
    (his grandfather built railroads in the 1930s), Pamuk has been openly
    critical of the government's suppression of free speech, as well as
    its violent civil war against Kurdish separatists and denial of the
    Armenian genocide of World War I. These radical ideas have landed
    him in hot water from time to time, most notably in 2005 when he was
    tried by the government for "blatantly belittling Turkishness."

    Pamuk has published seven novels, a screenplay, a book of essays and
    a memoir entitled Istanbul: Memories and the City. Snow, published
    in 2004, and the book chosen by Just Buffalo for his presentation,
    tells the story of Ka, a poet and political exile who's returned
    to Turkey for his mother's funeral. While in country, he travels
    to Kars (kar is Turkish for "snow"), a remote city in Anatolia,
    in search of Ipek, a beautiful woman he knew as a student who is
    recently divorced. Kars is isolated by a snowstorm, during which
    Ka investigates the recent suicides of girls forced to remove their
    headscarves by an occasionally brutal secular regime. Through this
    lens Pamuk dissects and examines the ongoing conflict in Turkey,
    and arguably the world beyond, between the forces of "Westernization"
    and fundamental Islam. Pamuk reads on Thursday, November 8 at 8pm.

    Argentinian-born Ariel Dorfman also operates at the borderlines,
    focusing much of his work on exploring the intersection of art
    and human rights. He has spent much of his life on the run from
    repression. Born to Jewish immigrants in 1942, his family fled to
    the US in 1945, due to anti-Semitism and political intolerance in
    Argentina. In 1954, however, in the age of McCarthyism, Dorfman's
    father was targeted as a communist threat, and the family fled once
    again, this time settling in Chile, where he gained citizenship. The
    peace he found there wouldn't last, though. On September 11, 1973,
    the American-backed General Augusto Pinochet led a violent coup
    against the democratically elected government of Marxist Salvador
    Allende. Dorfman, media adviser to Allende's chief of staff, was forced
    to run for his life, and he lived in exile in Brazil and Europe for
    17 years. Many of Dorfman's friends and political allies, however,
    didn't make it out of Chile. Their fate--torture and death--has
    shaped much of Dorfman's ongoing examination, and condemnation,
    of human rights abuses worldwide.

    As the political winds have blown Dorfman's life from exile to exile,
    he's had to struggle with reconciling his dual identities.

    Through the writing of countless works spanning nearly every genre
    (novels, plays, a memoir, a travel narrative and collections
    of poetry, short stories and essays) Dorfman has come to highly
    value that duality. By living in two worlds and borrowing from their
    "linguistic rivers," he believes he can unite distant communities. He
    strives to do this, just as he strives to keep human rights abuses
    at the forefront of the reading world's mind. His play Death and the
    Maiden tells the story of a Chilean woman who kidnaps the man she
    believes tortured her during the rule of Pinochet's regime. Dorfman
    reads Friday, December 7 at 8pm.

    West-Indian poet and playwright Derek Walcott has spent his career
    examining the conflict between the heritage of European and West
    Indian culture. Walcott was born in 1930 in St. Lucia, a small
    windward island in the Lesser Antilles that was then a British
    dependency. St. Lucia has been variously influenced by its original
    Amerindian inhabitants, 400 years of colonial rule by England and
    France, and by the African slaves brought over by the Europeans to
    work on the sugar cane plantations. Walcott, who is of mixed heritage,
    has dealt with his own duality partly by writing his plays in a mix
    of English and Creole patois, but is still defining his own role in
    the complex culture and history of St. Lucia.

    Walcott's poetry suggests an inner exile from both European and African
    cultures. Divided between the two, he can be accepted by neither. He
    is a nomad between cultures, trying to find the meaning of home, a
    way to reconcile the two. One of his first plays, Henri Christophe,
    is typically themed: The freed slave Henri Christophe helps Toussaint
    L'Ouverture liberate Haiti from French rule, but then himself becomes
    a despot. Walcott has published dozens of plays and numerous poetry
    collections in his time, and was awarded the 1992 Nobel Prize in
    Literature. He reads Thursday, March 13 at 8pm.

    Indian-born author Kiran Desai is a permanent resident of the US. At
    the relatively tender age of 35, she's also the youngest woman ever to
    win the Man Booker Prize, the highest honor bestowed upon a citizen of
    a British Commonwealth country. It's an honor that's somewhat ironic,
    given that the book which was awarded with the Booker, The Inheritance
    of Loss, is a sprawling examination of globalization, multiculturalism,
    economic inequality and fundamentalism. Much of this is seen, however,
    through the window of the postcolonial chaos and despair left by Great
    Britain on her homeland. A wide cast of characters is united by their
    common humiliation at the hands of the economic and cultural power
    of the West.

    For Desai, who affiliates strongly with both India and America, the
    book "was a return journey to the fact of being Indian, to realizing
    the perspective was too important to give up." She insists, however,
    that literature "is located beyond flags and anthems, simple ideas of
    loyalty. The vocabulary of of immigration, of exile, of translation,
    inevitably overlaps with a realization of the multiple options of
    reinvention, of myriad perspectives, shifting truths, telling of
    lies--the great big wobbliness of it all."

    It is a complex situation, being of two worlds, and perhaps the only
    way to sort it out is through writing. Desai will continue to do
    that. She reads Thursday, April 24 at 8pm.
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