Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Stamboul Train full of writers

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

  • A Stamboul Train full of writers

    A Stamboul Train full of writers
    Twenty European writers recently hopped on a train to Istanbul. What
    were they up to, wonders Michael Prodger

    By Michael Prodger

    Daily Telegraph/UK
    Published: 5:30AM GMT 06 Dec 2009

    The most evocative of destinations: Istanbul Photo: GETTY
    The journey to Istanbul by train has a venerable and generally
    murderous literary history: as Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient
    Express, Graham Greene's Stamboul Train, Ian Fleming's From Russia
    With Love found their way on to the bookshelves they also chugged into
    the subconscious. While the Orient Express covered the route with a
    thick layer of glamour and romance these novels added a frisson of
    danger. They ensured that emerging from a sleeper car in the Sirkeci
    station, the pink faux-palace on the edge of the Golden Horn that
    marks the end of the line, is still the most evocative way to arrive
    in the most evocative of destinations.

    Perhaps something of this rich history was in the minds of the British
    Council and Literature Across Frontiers when they dreamed up the Word
    Express project that took place in October. This saw some 20 young
    European writers embarking on trains in Ljubljana, Bucharest and
    Sarajevo and winding through the Balkans, stopping off along the way
    to give readings and supervise writing workshops. The three groups
    joined up in Thessaloniki before starting out on the last leg to
    Istanbul. Once there they met up with a cluster of Turkish writers and
    spent five day attending various literary events and taking part in
    the Istanbul Book Fair and the Tanpinar Literature Festival.

    Harmony was not necessarily assured. After all, the participants
    included writers from Serbia and Bosnia Herzegovina, Turkey, Greece
    and Armenia, Bulgaria and Israel ` states with a history of ethnic
    violence or mutual hatred and distrust. Something of the region's
    tangled animosities was hinted at by the novelist Ognjen SpahiÄ? who,
    at one event, announced he would be reading one of his short stories
    in his native Montenegrin: he then wryly pointed out that Montenegrin
    is the same as Serbian, Bosnian and Croatian but with the break up of
    the Balkans his countrymen felt they had to have their own language
    too.

    Of course, part of the idea of Word Express is to use the lingua
    franca of literature to calm national antagonisms. And among the
    individual authors themselves it was remarkably ` and speedily `
    effective. Days of close proximity - and the rocking of the trains -
    turned a disparate selection of poets, novelists, playwrights and
    filmmakers into an enthusiastic phalanx of mutually supportive
    writers. Their enthusiasm was for each other as well as their shared
    project.

    The project itself, while encompassing all those noble but nebulous
    supranational aims (building trust and understanding, encouraging
    collaboration, generating dialogue etc), is also designed to produce
    more concrete results. The writers have been pairing up and the
    results of their collaborations will be published as part of stage two
    next year ` new stories and dialogues emerging from the trip,
    translations of each other's work, film and video pieces. The profile
    of the project, it is hoped, will also help attract publishers for the
    other informal spin-offs that will emerge along the way.

    Although this seems a relatively modest outcome for such a big venture
    this is not, according to the Turkish novelist BariÅ? MüstecaphoÄ?lu,
    the way to judge its success. As he points out, Britain has exported
    the idea that the `creative industries' have real economic heft. And
    in Eastern Europe it is a valuable commodity because writers and
    artists there have far less access to funding and support than their
    British peers. Word Express, thinks MüstecaphoÄ?lu and others, is not
    just about introducing writers to each other but about introducing
    them to the decision makers of their own countries and showing that,
    whatever the worth of their work, they nevertheless have real economic
    worth.

    As a final destination it is harder to get to than Istanbul but Word
    Express has at least put it on track.
Working...
X