‘What makes city life meaningful is the things we hide’: a dialogue on existential urban space between Marshall Berman and Orhan Pamuk
‘What makes city life meaningful is the things we hide’: a dialogue on existential urban space between Marshall Berman and Orhan Pamuk
In this article we bring Marshall Berman’s writings on public space, politics and subjectivity into dialogue with a literary rendering of similar themes by Orhan Pamuk in his 2015 novel A Strangeness in my Mind. Our aim is to elaborate upon Berman’s undeveloped notion of ‘existential space’—first suggested in a review of an earlier Pamuk novel—through an extended encounter between the authors. This article begins by comparing the urban writings of Berman with Pamuk’s novel across three broad, overlapping themes: (1) the contingency of space; (2) authenticity and experience; and (3) openness, inclusivity and danger. In the analysis that develops out from this dialogue, we interpret existential space to imply any urban space—a room, a street, bar or square, for example—that is appropriated, in an act of struggle, by occupants or users as ‘an everywhere’: an inclusive place from which to connect with others and from where to pursue transcendent goals such as love, creativity, equality, justice or joy. This points to the fragile temporality of existential space, to how the meaning of the ‘present’ may be deferred or ‘hidden away in the back of the mind’ because such spaces are simultaneously concrete and preoccupied with another time (and place).
A Strangeness in My Mind, Istanbul, Marshall Berman, Orhan Pamuk, existential space, literary, public space
697-713
Millington, Gareth
33994040-4f2c-4a1c-932b-89b1ff689d76
Rizov, Vladimir
45f60f7b-f8c5-45c8-9d9e-22b8d2965ecc
February 2020
Millington, Gareth
33994040-4f2c-4a1c-932b-89b1ff689d76
Rizov, Vladimir
45f60f7b-f8c5-45c8-9d9e-22b8d2965ecc
Millington, Gareth and Rizov, Vladimir
(2020)
‘What makes city life meaningful is the things we hide’: a dialogue on existential urban space between Marshall Berman and Orhan Pamuk.
City: Analysis of Urban Trends Culture Theory Policy Action, 23 (6), .
(doi:10.1080/13604813.2020.1718961).
Abstract
In this article we bring Marshall Berman’s writings on public space, politics and subjectivity into dialogue with a literary rendering of similar themes by Orhan Pamuk in his 2015 novel A Strangeness in my Mind. Our aim is to elaborate upon Berman’s undeveloped notion of ‘existential space’—first suggested in a review of an earlier Pamuk novel—through an extended encounter between the authors. This article begins by comparing the urban writings of Berman with Pamuk’s novel across three broad, overlapping themes: (1) the contingency of space; (2) authenticity and experience; and (3) openness, inclusivity and danger. In the analysis that develops out from this dialogue, we interpret existential space to imply any urban space—a room, a street, bar or square, for example—that is appropriated, in an act of struggle, by occupants or users as ‘an everywhere’: an inclusive place from which to connect with others and from where to pursue transcendent goals such as love, creativity, equality, justice or joy. This points to the fragile temporality of existential space, to how the meaning of the ‘present’ may be deferred or ‘hidden away in the back of the mind’ because such spaces are simultaneously concrete and preoccupied with another time (and place).
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Millington Rizov_submitted
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Accepted/In Press date: 17 January 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 February 2020
Published date: February 2020
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© 2020, © 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Keywords:
A Strangeness in My Mind, Istanbul, Marshall Berman, Orhan Pamuk, existential space, literary, public space
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Local EPrints ID: 438547
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/438547
ISSN: 1360-4813
PURE UUID: c85c34a8-7b1c-4ac2-883c-94abb495fb77
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Date deposited: 16 Mar 2020 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:16
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Author:
Gareth Millington
Author:
Vladimir Rizov
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