1st Edition
Reading James Joyce and Orhan Pamuk A Modernist Bildung at Work
Reading James Joyce and Orhan Pamuk reveals how by embracing the idea that an individual subject and history (of a nation and the city) mutually shape identities as formative processes, James Joyce and Orhan Pamuk create “portraits” adapting bildung to chart the becoming of the protagonist alongside the development of a nation of people emerging from and redefining themselves in the waning years of the empire (as for Joyce) or some decades after the end of the empire (as for Pamuk). Their life narratives encompassing artistic formation act as metaphors for the emergence of an independent (in Joyce) or new (in Pamuk) nation from imperial rule, but in asserting a modernist standing, both Joyce and Pamuk, the latter from a metamodernist perspective with his emphasis on the hüzün, “beauty”, and “hidden symmetry” of the text, remind us of something else, too. To understand the literary work, one needs the frameworks of ideas contemporary and not only to it, but the reader of the present book will re/discover that modernism teaches us that the value and use of art are to do with appropriating individual inward in order to inform what is profoundly human, or art is dulce rather than utile advancing formalism rather than moralizing, or formalist artfulness diffusing pleasure of visceral, delightful artistic comprehension rather than monumentality. Ultimately, art sparks off beauty and is about perpetuating recognizable experiences, but modernism favours the use of the literary work to be also in its having always something new and different to say. Modernism advocates the value that the literary work has in the end to reside in its identity as a literary work (product of art), and this identity prevails over its task of offering as an informative or pedagogical tool, via verisimilitude of reconstructed historical documents and recordings, a mere surrogate of some reasserted meanings and essences for various personal and communal experiences.
Foreword
Preliminaries: Orhan Pamuk between Text and Context
1. The Bildungsroman: graphia, bios, autos, and bildung
2. Neo-Ottomanism and Nostalgia for the Empire
3. The Bildung Nonetheless Thriving: Modernist Reshaping and Metamodernist Rewriting
4. The City of a Psychogeographic Duality of Formation: Self and Nation
5. Literary Practice as Argument: Engaging the Bildungsroman Pattern
5.1 A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
5.2 Istanbul: Memories and the City
Concluding Reflections
Biography
Petru Golban holds his permanent position as Professor of English literature and critical theory at the Department of English Language and Literature, Tekirdağ Namik Kemal University, Turkey, and is currently an Associate member of staff of the University of Worcester conducts a research project on English and Turkish Bildungsromane.