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Identity formation in the novel : orientalism, modernity and Orhan Pamuk

The novelist Orhan Pamuk rose to prominence as a writer in the midst of the westernized, secular Turkish community in the late twentieth century. Pamuk has insisted that he has attempted to depart from the overtly political style of other writers in his generation. Instead, he strives for his work t...

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Main Author: Dollar, Cathlene Elizabeth
Other Authors: Tayob, Abdulkader
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Religious Studies 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Dollar, Cathlene Elizabeth
author2 Tayob, Abdulkader
author_browse Dollar, Cathlene Elizabeth
Tayob, Abdulkader
author_facet Tayob, Abdulkader
Dollar, Cathlene Elizabeth
author_sort Dollar, Cathlene Elizabeth
collection Thesis
description The novelist Orhan Pamuk rose to prominence as a writer in the midst of the westernized, secular Turkish community in the late twentieth century. Pamuk has insisted that he has attempted to depart from the overtly political style of other writers in his generation. Instead, he strives for his work to appear more poetic and personal. Pamuk's fiction is widely categorized by his experimental, sometimes postmodernist literary techniques. Pamuk's style is a stark departure from the more typical socio-political motifs that have characterized much of contemporary Turkish literature. Edward Said' s critique in Oriental ism and his later theory that the relationship between culture and empire is depicted in the novel in Culture and Imperialism forms one portion of the theoretical model which is used in this dissertation to analyze Pamuk's literature. Said's theory is appropriate because Pamuk's search for identity is strongly characterized by concepts of "East" and "West." Importantly, these concepts are often inextricably linked to other binaries such as .. religious/secular" and '·traditional/modem." The second portion of the theoretical model used for exploring Pamuk's literature is taken from Charles Taylor's essay Two Theories of Modernity, and his book Sources of the Self Alternative, or multiple modernities, in his view are inextricably linked to culture. Taylor also claims that the novel is a modem cultural form which relies on individual experiences in order to locate notions of the self. This forms an appropriate framework for exploring the way in which the concept of modernity influences Pamuk' s identity project in his novels. In a Turkish context, the ideology of equating '·West" with "Modernity" has had a profound effect on the way Turks view the process of modernization, which can be traced in the history of the novel in Turkey. The idea that the novel is a modern cultural form used to narrate identity is the common ground that Said and Taylor's theories share. Two of Pamuk's novels, namely The Black Book and The Museum of Innocence are analyzed in this dissertation in order to illustrate Pamuk's inclusion of religious/spiritual experiences as a central aspect in his search for identity. The ultimate conclusion is that the writing of novels for Pamuk is a kind of unique spiritual experience which is brought about by his use of Sufi motifs.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/13694 Identity formation in the novel : orientalism, modernity and Orhan Pamuk Dollar, Cathlene Elizabeth Tayob, Abdulkader Religious Studies The novelist Orhan Pamuk rose to prominence as a writer in the midst of the westernized, secular Turkish community in the late twentieth century. Pamuk has insisted that he has attempted to depart from the overtly political style of other writers in his generation. Instead, he strives for his work to appear more poetic and personal. Pamuk's fiction is widely categorized by his experimental, sometimes postmodernist literary techniques. Pamuk's style is a stark departure from the more typical socio-political motifs that have characterized much of contemporary Turkish literature. Edward Said' s critique in Oriental ism and his later theory that the relationship between culture and empire is depicted in the novel in Culture and Imperialism forms one portion of the theoretical model which is used in this dissertation to analyze Pamuk's literature. Said's theory is appropriate because Pamuk's search for identity is strongly characterized by concepts of "East" and "West." Importantly, these concepts are often inextricably linked to other binaries such as .. religious/secular" and '·traditional/modem." The second portion of the theoretical model used for exploring Pamuk's literature is taken from Charles Taylor's essay Two Theories of Modernity, and his book Sources of the Self Alternative, or multiple modernities, in his view are inextricably linked to culture. Taylor also claims that the novel is a modem cultural form which relies on individual experiences in order to locate notions of the self. This forms an appropriate framework for exploring the way in which the concept of modernity influences Pamuk' s identity project in his novels. In a Turkish context, the ideology of equating '·West" with "Modernity" has had a profound effect on the way Turks view the process of modernization, which can be traced in the history of the novel in Turkey. The idea that the novel is a modern cultural form used to narrate identity is the common ground that Said and Taylor's theories share. Two of Pamuk's novels, namely The Black Book and The Museum of Innocence are analyzed in this dissertation in order to illustrate Pamuk's inclusion of religious/spiritual experiences as a central aspect in his search for identity. The ultimate conclusion is that the writing of novels for Pamuk is a kind of unique spiritual experience which is brought about by his use of Sufi motifs. 2015-08-10T06:54:50Z 2015-08-10T06:54:50Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13694 eng application/pdf Department of Religious Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Religious Studies
Dollar, Cathlene Elizabeth
Identity formation in the novel : orientalism, modernity and Orhan Pamuk
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Identity formation in the novel : orientalism, modernity and Orhan Pamuk
title_full Identity formation in the novel : orientalism, modernity and Orhan Pamuk
title_fullStr Identity formation in the novel : orientalism, modernity and Orhan Pamuk
title_full_unstemmed Identity formation in the novel : orientalism, modernity and Orhan Pamuk
title_short Identity formation in the novel : orientalism, modernity and Orhan Pamuk
title_sort identity formation in the novel orientalism modernity and orhan pamuk
topic Religious Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13694
work_keys_str_mv AT dollarcathleneelizabeth identityformationinthenovelorientalismmodernityandorhanpamuk