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Orhan Pamuk and the Good of World Literature

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Gloria Fisk traces the terms of Orhan Pamuk's engagement with a literary market dominated by the tastes of its Anglophone publics and the instrumental use of literature as a source of crosscultural...
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  • 13 February 2018
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When Orhan Pamuk won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2006, he was honored as a builder of bridges across a dangerous chasm. By rendering his Turkish characters and settings familiar where they would otherwise seem troublingly foreign, and by speaking freely against his authoritarian state, he demonstrated a variety of literary greatness that testified also to the good literature can do in the world.

Gloria Fisk challenges this standard for canonization as “world literature” by showing how poorly it applies to Pamuk. Reading the Turkish novelist as a case study in the ways Western readers expand their reach, Fisk traces the terms of his engagement with a literary market dominated by the tastes of its Anglophone publics, who received him as a balm for their anxieties about Islamic terrorism and the stratifications of global capitalism. Fisk reads Pamuk’s post-9/11 novels as they circulated through this audience, as rich in cultural capital as it is far-flung, in the American English that is global capital’s lingua franca. She launches a polemic against Anglophone readers’ instrumental use of literature as a source of crosscultural understanding, contending that this pervasive way of reading across all manner of borders limits the globality it announces, because it serves the interests of the Western cultural and educational institutions that produce it. Orhan Pamuk and the Good of World Literature proposes a new way to think about the uneven processes of translation, circulation, and judgment that carry contemporary literature to its readers, wherever they live.

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Price: $65.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Literature Now
Publication Date: 13 February 2018
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231183260
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / Semiotics & Theory, LITERARY CRITICISM / Middle Eastern

Gloria Fisk has written an important and challenging book. Using the work and career of Orhan Pamuk, she has set out to understand the complex and not always benign forces that go into the making of a worldwide literary superstar. Not for or against Pamuk, this book is with him in his attempt to enter the gates of the Western canon without at the same time losing his soul.
Gloria Fisk is an associate professor at Queens College, CUNY. Her work has been published in New Literary History, n+1, and The American Reader, among other places.

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Slippery Words: Orhan Pamuk, Good, and World Literature
1. A Novel Can Teach You About Other People
2. A Novel Can Teach You About Other People’s History
3. Orhan Pamuk as Political Gadfly: “The Armenian Issue”
4. Orhan Pamuk as Exile: Pamuk and Auerbach in Istanbul
5. Orhan Pamuk Wins the Nobel Prize: The Cases of Orhan Pamuk and Mo Yan
6. World Literature as an Artifact of the University in the United States: The Part About the Critics
Coda: Now, What?
Notes
Bibliography
Index