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| Publications of Erdag Göknar :chronological combined listing:%% Books and Monographs @misc{fds355757, Author = {Tanpinar, AH}, Title = {A Mind at Peace}, Pages = {447 pages}, Publisher = {Archipelago}, Year = {2011}, Month = {March}, ISBN = {1935744194}, Abstract = {A Mind at Peace, originally published in 1949 is a magnum opus, a Turkish Ulysses and a lyrical homage to Istanbul.}, Key = {fds355757} } @misc{fds285141, Author = {Rahimi, A}, Title = {Earth and Ashes}, Pages = {96 pages}, Publisher = {Other Press, LLC}, Year = {2010}, Month = {August}, ISBN = {1590513924}, Abstract = {Atiq Rahimi, whose reputation for writing war stories of immense drama and intimacy began with this, his first novel, has managed to condense centuries of Afghan history into a short tale of three very different generations.}, Key = {fds285141} } @misc{fds349458, Author = {Cooke, M and Göknar, EM and Parker, GR}, Title = {Mediterranean passages readings from Dido to Derrida}, Pages = {399 pages}, Publisher = {The University of North Carolina Press}, Year = {2008}, Month = {October}, Abstract = {The Mediterranean is the meeting point of three continents-Asia, Africa, and Europe-as well as three major monotheistic religions-Islam, Judaism, and Christianity.}, Key = {fds349458} } @misc{fds285140, Author = {Goknar, E}, Title = {My Name Is Red}, Pages = {483 pages}, Publisher = {Everyman's Library}, Year = {2010}, ISBN = {0307593924}, Abstract = {Their task: to illuminate the work in the European style.}, Key = {fds285140} } @misc{fds355750, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {Nomadologies}, Pages = {90 pages}, Year = {2017}, Month = {April}, ISBN = {1933527870}, Abstract = {Moments lived between Turkey and America come together in this debut collection by the award-winning translator of Orhan Pamuk.}, Key = {fds355750} } @misc{fds220630, Author = {E. Göknar}, Title = {Orhan Pamuk, Secularism and Blasphemy: The Politics of the Turkish Novel}, Publisher = {Routledge}, Year = {2013}, Month = {March}, Abstract = {http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415505383/}, Key = {fds220630} } @misc{fds285143, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {Orhan Pamuk, secularism and blasphemy: The politics of the Turkish novel}, Pages = {1-314}, Publisher = {Routledge}, Year = {2013}, Month = {January}, ISBN = {9780203080108}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203080108}, Abstract = {Orhan Pamuk, Secularism and Blasphemy is the first critical study of all of Pamuk’s novels, including the early untranslated work.}, Doi = {10.4324/9780203080108}, Key = {fds285143} } %% Edited Volumes @misc{fds199908, Title = {"Türkçe'de Roman: Anlatı Geleneğinden Nobel Ödülu'ne"}, Booktitle = {Turkish Translation of Cambridge History of Turkey, Vol IV}, Year = {2011}, Month = {Spring}, Key = {fds199908} } %% Papers Published @article{fds285137, Author = {Goknar, E}, Title = {"From Steppe to Sea: The Blue Anatolia Literary Movement"}, Journal = {Turkish Studies Journal Special Issue Festschrift for Walter Andrews}, Publisher = {Harvard University}, Editor = {Kalpakli, M}, Year = {2010}, Month = {Winter}, Key = {fds285137} } @article{fds355751, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {"Mapping Pamuk onto the World Literature Syllabus"}, Booktitle = {Approaches to Teaching the Works of Orhan Pamuk}, Publisher = {MLA}, Editor = {Türkkan, S and Damrosch, D}, Year = {2017}, Key = {fds355751} } @article{fds285136, Author = {Goknar, E}, Title = {"My Name is Re(a)d: Translating Authority, Authoring Translation"}, Journal = {Translation Review}, Editor = {Wade, S}, Year = {2005}, Month = {Spring}, Key = {fds285136} } @article{fds285122, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {"Occulted Texts: Pamuk’s Untranslated Novels"}, Series = {Literatures & Cultures of the Islamic World}, Booktitle = {Global Perspectives on Orhan Pamuk: Existentialism and Politics}, Publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, Editor = {Afridi, and Buyze}, Year = {2012}, url = {http://www.amazon.com/Global-Perspectives-Orhan-Pamuk-Existentialism/dp/0230114113/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1355540055&sr=1-1&keywords=global+perspectives+on+Orhan}, Abstract = {Global Perspectives on Orhan Pamuk is an interdisciplinary collection of essays that explores Pamuk’s multifaceted approach to ordinary Turkish life. The contributors of this volume come from an array of international perspectives that place the reading of Pamuk into dynamic arenas of new interpretation and reflection. The themes of existentialism and politics are examined in illuminating essays through connections to nationalism, religion/secularity, traditional/modern, exile/home, and comparative readings of writers as Mohsin Hamid, Naguib Mahfouz, Italo Svevo, and Amitav Ghosh. This is an indispensable collection for understanding Pamuk, global literature, and crucial issues in today’s world.}, Key = {fds285122} } @article{fds285147, Author = {Goknar, E}, Title = {"Orhan Pamuk and the ’Ottoman’ Theme"}, Journal = {World Literature Today}, Volume = {80}, Number = {6}, Year = {2006}, Month = {November}, Key = {fds285147} } @article{fds285121, Author = {Goknar, E}, Title = {"The Turkish Novel: Modernity, Modernism, and Postmodernism"}, Booktitle = {Blackwell Encyclopedia of the Novel}, Year = {2013}, Key = {fds285121} } @article{fds199906, Title = {"The Turkish Novel: Modernity, Modernism, and Postmodernism"}, Booktitle = {The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the Novel}, Year = {2010}, Month = {Fall}, Key = {fds199906} } @article{fds285138, Author = {Goknar, E}, Title = {"The White Castle" and the Ottoman Legacy}, Journal = {Journal of Turkish Literature}, Editor = {Halman, T}, Year = {2011}, Month = {January}, Key = {fds285138} } @article{fds349457, Author = {Goknar, E}, Title = {Conspiracy Theory in Turkey: Politics and Protest in the Age of "Post-Truth"}, Journal = {Middle East Journal}, Volume = {73}, Number = {2}, Pages = {336-337}, Publisher = {MIDDLE EAST INST}, Year = {2019}, Month = {June}, Key = {fds349457} } @article{fds285148, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {Ottoman past and Turkish future: Ambivalence in A. H.Tanpinar's those outside the scene}, Journal = {South Atlantic Quarterly}, Volume = {102}, Number = {2-3}, Pages = {647-661}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Year = {2003}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0038-2876}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000183499700021&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Doi = {10.1215/00382876-102-2-3-647}, Key = {fds285148} } @article{fds327161, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {Reading Occupied Istanbul: Turkish Subject-Formation from Historical Trauma to Literary Trope}, Journal = {Culture, Theory and Critique}, Volume = {55}, Number = {3}, Pages = {321-341}, Year = {2014}, Month = {September}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14735784.2014.882792}, Abstract = {Abstract: The Allied occupation of Istanbul is a little-known historical event outside of Turkey and the Middle East. European powers occupied Istanbul between 1918 and 1923 to enforce the partition of the Ottoman Empire after WWI in the construction of the Modern Middle East. Almost 100 Turkish novels that address occupied Istanbul have appeared over the last ninety years, beginning even before Allied armies left Istanbul in 1923. Turkey's present Middle Eastern re-emergence and post-Kemalist reassessment of secular modernity has also led writers and intellectuals back to the occupation of Istanbul. To examine why Turkish authors return repeatedly to the trope of occupied Istanbul, this essay surveys the first canonised novels about occupied Istanbul written during the Kemalist monoparty period (1923–50): Shirt of Flame by the exiled feminist and nationalist Halide Edib (1884–1964), Sodom and Gomorrah by the Kemalist ideologue Yakup Kadri Karaosmanoğlu (1889–1974) and Outside the Scene by Turkey's first experimental, modernist author Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar (1902–62). As bilingual Istanbul intellectuals, all three made occupied Istanbul a central drama in their fictions. However, each represented it differently as a formative event in the construction and critique of the nation-state and of modern Turkish subject-formation.}, Doi = {10.1080/14735784.2014.882792}, Key = {fds327161} } @article{fds285145, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {Secular blasphemies: Orhan Pamuk and the Turkish novel}, Journal = {Novel a Forum on Fiction}, Volume = {45}, Series = {The Contemporary Novel: Imagining the Twenty-First Century}, Number = {2}, Pages = {301-326}, Publisher = {Duke}, Editor = {Nancy Armstrong}, Year = {2012}, Month = {June}, ISSN = {0029-5132}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000306887200009&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Abstract = {Turkish novelists have often contested the authoritarian tendencies of the republican state. Orhan Pamuk was charged with insulting Turkishness in 2005, emphasizing a long-standing opposition between author and state as well as between literature and secularism. Though Pamuk's trial gave him the status of dissident, it simultaneously ignored the formal innovations and political transgressions of his novels. This essay traces confrontations between Turkish literary modernity and secular modern state power in Pamuk's work and the Turkish novel. Such an analysis reveals that narratives of the nation-state (devlet), bound to the secularization thesis, have often been contested by Ottoman, Islamic, and Sufi contexts (signifying din). I argue that the unresolved opposition between the secular, material narratives of devlet and the sacred, redemptive narratives of din is productive of the modern Turkish novel and defines its literary modernity. Thus, Pamuk's dissidence also resides in modes of writing that contest the nation form and revise the secularization thesis through new representations of Turkish historiography, Istanbul cosmopolitanism, the Ottoman archive, political parody, and secular Sufism. Such literature that confronts representations of devlet with those of din constitutes the “secular blasphemies” that define the politics of the Turkish novel.}, Doi = {10.1215/00295132-1573985}, Key = {fds285145} } @article{fds285144, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {Turkish-islamic feminism confronts national patriarchy: Halide Edib's divided self}, Journal = {Journal of Middle East Women'S Studies}, Volume = {9}, Series = {Special Literature Issue}, Number = {2}, Pages = {32-57}, Publisher = {Duke University Press}, Editor = {Bonnie Schulman}, Year = {2013}, Month = {March}, ISSN = {1552-5864}, url = {http://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=PARTNER_APP&SrcAuth=LinksAMR&KeyUT=WOS:000319630800003&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=ALL_WOS&UsrCustomerID=47d3190e77e5a3a53558812f597b0b92}, Abstract = {This essay compares and contrasts Turkish author Halide Edib's novel The Shirt of Flame (Duffield & Company, 1921) to the second volume of her memoirs, The Turkish Ordeal (The Century Company, 1928). Both texts have female protagonists and parallel plots and take place during the Allied occupation of Istanbul (1918-23). Both texts are manifestations of an emerging Turkish national master narrative. By highlighting the tensions between the first-person narratives of the novel, the memoir, and the emplottment of the national master narrative, this essay offers an analysis of tensions between cosmopolitan Islamic feminism and secular nationalism. This essay describes how memoir (whether an actual memoir, such as The Turkish Ordeal, or a fictional memoir, such as The Shirt of Flame) constructs the object of its knowledge (the feminist self), and furthermore, how the feminist self can be read either as constitutive of national allegory (as in The Shirt of Flame) or as an allegorical critique of patriarchal nationalism (as in the English-language The Turkish Ordeal). The essay concludes by showing how Halide Edib's perspective allows for a gendered reading of the national master narrative and the Orientalist/nationalist binary upon which it is predicated.}, Doi = {10.1353/jmw.2013.0020}, Key = {fds285144} } %% Papers Accepted @article{fds167075, Title = {"The Turkish Novel: Modernity, Modernism, and Postmodernism"}, Booktitle = {Blackwell Encyclopedia of the Novel}, Year = {20010}, Month = {Fall}, Key = {fds167075} } %% Translations @misc{fds184944, Author = {Orhan Pamuk and E. Göknar (translator)}, Title = {Revised reissue of My Name is Red}, Pages = {500}, Publisher = {Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics}, Editor = {LuAnn Walther}, Year = {2010}, Month = {Fall}, Abstract = {Revised reissue of Pamuk's historical novel. Published as part of the Everyman's Library Contemporary Classics series.}, Key = {fds184944} } %% Other @misc{fds362592, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {"A Nomad Between Worlds: Mohed Altrad's _Badawi_"}, Journal = {Los Angeles Review of Books}, Year = {2016}, Month = {September}, Key = {fds362592} } @misc{fds355749, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {"A Turkish Woman in the Oedipus Complex: Orhan Pamuk's 'The Red-Haired Woman'"}, Year = {2017}, Month = {August}, Abstract = {The two dominant and competing myths come from ancient Greece and Persia (Greece and Iran today are Turkey’s Western and Eastern neighbors): the Oedipal myth from Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, where son unknowingly kills father, and the legend of Rostam and Sohrab from Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh, where father unknowingly kills son. The myths can be read as generational allegories about tradition and modernity, the East/West conflict, Islam and secularism, and even socialism and capitalism.}, Key = {fds355749} } @misc{fds199921, Author = {Seda Pekçelen}, Title = {"Interview with Erdag Göknar on Translation"}, Journal = {Time Out Istanbul Magazine}, Year = {2011}, Month = {Winter}, Key = {fds199921} } @misc{fds167076, Author = {Arzu Tascioglu}, Title = {"Interview with Erdag Goknar"}, Journal = {Turkish Book Review}, Volume = {2}, Year = {2008}, Month = {Summer}, Key = {fds167076} } @misc{fds355748, Author = {Göknar, E}, Title = {"The Light of the Bosphorus: Photography in Orhan Pamuk's 'Balkon'"}, Journal = {Los Angeles Review of Books}, Publisher = {Los Angeles Review of Books}, Year = {2019}, Month = {May}, Abstract = {ORHAN PAMUK’S PHOTOGRAPHS emerge from a specific and recurring moment. As much as they capture subtle aspects of Istanbul geography in and around the iconic confluence of the Bosphorus and the Golden Horn, they also reveal the moments when the writer stops writing and is drawn away from his desk. Taken during a period of self-described dissatisfaction with his work — perhaps verging on writer’s block — these images are linked obliquely to novel-writing.}, Key = {fds355748} } @misc{fds285139, Author = {Goknar, E}, Title = {"The Novel in Turkish: From Narrative Tradition to Nobel Prize"}, Volume = {IV}, Pages = {35-35}, Booktitle = {Cambridge History of Turkey: Turkey in the Modern World}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, Editor = {Kasaba, R}, Year = {2008}, Month = {Fall}, url = {http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521620963}, Abstract = {Turkey’s modern history has been shaped by its society and its institutions. In this fourth volume of The Cambridge History of Turkey a team of some of the most distinguished scholars of modern Turkey have come together to explore the interaction between these two aspects of Turkish modernization. The volume begins in the nineteenth century and traces the historical background through the reforms of the late Ottoman Empire, the period of the Young Turks, the War of Independence and the founding of the Ataturk’s Republic. Thereafter, the volume focuses on the Republican period to consider a range of themes including political ideology, economic development, the military, migration, Kurdish nationalism, the rise of Islamism, and women’s struggle for empowerment. The volume concludes with chapters on art and architecture, literature, and a brief history of Istanbul.}, Key = {fds285139} } | |
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