Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: D'Angelo, Biagio
Data de Publicação: 2023
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Revista da ANPOLL (Online)
Texto Completo: https://revistadaanpoll.emnuvens.com.br/revista/article/view/1929
Resumo: Enriched with photographs, some of which taken by Ara Güler, and with reproductions of the Bosphorus panoramas by A. I. Melling, Orhan Pamuk’s Istanbul is a “self-portrait in the form of a city”. Inspired by Hugo’s oriental poetics or Baudelaire’s curiosity about Paris, Pamuk investigates Istanbul as a city of personal memory but also as an encyclopedic microcosm. One of the central chapters is devoted to the Istanbul Encyclopedia by Reçat Ekrem Koçu (1905-1975), a pseudo-encyclopedia of almost 11 volumes, where Koçu describes the Turkish city in many aspects since the Ottoman era. Pamuk, who holds Koçu in great esteem, puts forward the hypothesis that one of the reasons for the failure of this work is because of its melancholic and, therefore, incomplete encyclopedia. Istanbul is also seen by Pamuk as a melancholic landscape and a visual urban encyclopedia. Pamuk seems to continue Ekrem Koçu’s incomplete work and expands the perspective of the city into an encyclopedic microcosm, reconstructing it through the readings of renowned nineteenth-century travelers such as Nerval, Gautier and Flaubert, dazzled by the mirages of exoticism. Taking up the work of Ekrem Koçu, Pamuk describes Istanbul with a classifying passion. For him, the nostalgia that dominates Istanbul, the hüzün, is an interior landscape that marks a universe lost forever (the Ottoman Empire), from which the inhabitants bear the wounds. From Ekrem Koçu to Pamuk, the Istanbul encyclopedia enables an affective semiotics of the landscape, where space is configured as a complex and unlimited system of signs that the artist produces to interrogate and represent his memories and his present.
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spelling Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan PamukSemiótica afetiva da paisagem. A Enciclopédia de Istanbul de Reșat Ekrem Koçu a Orhan PamukSemióticaEnciclopedismoPamukKoçuSemioticsEncyclopedismPamukKoçuEnriched with photographs, some of which taken by Ara Güler, and with reproductions of the Bosphorus panoramas by A. I. Melling, Orhan Pamuk’s Istanbul is a “self-portrait in the form of a city”. Inspired by Hugo’s oriental poetics or Baudelaire’s curiosity about Paris, Pamuk investigates Istanbul as a city of personal memory but also as an encyclopedic microcosm. One of the central chapters is devoted to the Istanbul Encyclopedia by Reçat Ekrem Koçu (1905-1975), a pseudo-encyclopedia of almost 11 volumes, where Koçu describes the Turkish city in many aspects since the Ottoman era. Pamuk, who holds Koçu in great esteem, puts forward the hypothesis that one of the reasons for the failure of this work is because of its melancholic and, therefore, incomplete encyclopedia. Istanbul is also seen by Pamuk as a melancholic landscape and a visual urban encyclopedia. Pamuk seems to continue Ekrem Koçu’s incomplete work and expands the perspective of the city into an encyclopedic microcosm, reconstructing it through the readings of renowned nineteenth-century travelers such as Nerval, Gautier and Flaubert, dazzled by the mirages of exoticism. Taking up the work of Ekrem Koçu, Pamuk describes Istanbul with a classifying passion. For him, the nostalgia that dominates Istanbul, the hüzün, is an interior landscape that marks a universe lost forever (the Ottoman Empire), from which the inhabitants bear the wounds. From Ekrem Koçu to Pamuk, the Istanbul encyclopedia enables an affective semiotics of the landscape, where space is configured as a complex and unlimited system of signs that the artist produces to interrogate and represent his memories and his present.Enriquecido de fotografias, algumas das quais realizadas por Ara Güler, e das reproduções dos panoramas sobre o Bósforo de A.I. Melling, Istanbul de Orhan Pamuk é um “autorretrato sob forma de cidade”. Inspirando-se à poética oriental de Hugo ou à curiosidade de Baudelaire sobre Paris, Pamuk indaga Istanbul como cidade da memória pessoal mas também como microcosmo enciclopédico. Um dos capítulos centrais é dedicado à Enciclopédia de Istanbul de Reșat Ekrem Koçu (1905-1975), uma pseudo-enciclopédia de quase 11 volumes, onde Koçu descreve a cidade turca sob inúmeros aspectos, desde a era otomana. Pamuk, que tem Koçu em grande consideração, avança a hipótese que uma das razões para o fracasso dessa obra é porque é uma enciclopédia melancólica e, portanto, incompleta. Istanbul é vista também por Pamuk como paisagem melancólica e como enciclopédia urbana visual. Pamuk parece continuar a obra incompleta de Ekrem Koçu e amplia a perspectiva da cidade em um microcosmo enciclopédico reconstruindo-a por meio das leituras de renomados viajantes do século XIX como Nerval, Gautier e Flaubert, deslumbrados pelas miragens do exotismo. Retomando a obra de Ekrem Koçu, Pamuk descreve Istanbul com paixão classificatória. Para ele, a saudade que domina Istanbul, o hüzün, é uma paisagem interior que marca um universo perdido para sempre (o Império Otomano), do qual os habitantes carregam as feridas. De Ekrem Koçu a Pamuk, a enciclopédia de Istanbul possibilita uma semiótica afetiva da paisagem, onde o espaço configura-se como um sistema complexo e ilimitado de signos que o artista produz para interrogar e representar suas memórias e seu presente.ANPOLL2023-12-29info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttps://revistadaanpoll.emnuvens.com.br/revista/article/view/192910.18309/ranpoll.v54i1.1929Revista da Anpoll; Vol. 54 No. 1 (2023); e1929Revista da Anpoll; v. 54 n. 1 (2023); e19291982-78301414-756410.18309/ranpoll.v54i1reponame:Revista da ANPOLL (Online)instname:Associação Nacional de Pós-Graduação e Pesquisa em Letras e Lingüística (ANPOLL)instacron:ANPOLLporhttps://revistadaanpoll.emnuvens.com.br/revista/article/view/1929/1405Copyright (c) 2023 Revista da Anpollhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessD'Angelo, Biagio2024-01-30T23:45:03Zoai:ojs.revistadaanpoll.emnuvens.com.br:article/1929Revistahttps://revistadaanpoll.emnuvens.com.br/revista/indexONGhttps://revistadaanpoll.emnuvens.com.br/revista/oairevistadaanpoll@gmail.com1982-78301414-7564opendoar:2024-01-30T23:45:03Revista da ANPOLL (Online) - Associação Nacional de Pós-Graduação e Pesquisa em Letras e Lingüística (ANPOLL)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk
Semiótica afetiva da paisagem. A Enciclopédia de Istanbul de Reșat Ekrem Koçu a Orhan Pamuk
title Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk
spellingShingle Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk
D'Angelo, Biagio
Semiótica
Enciclopedismo
Pamuk
Koçu
Semiotics
Encyclopedism
Pamuk
Koçu
title_short Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk
title_full Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk
title_fullStr Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk
title_full_unstemmed Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk
title_sort Affective Semiotics of Landscape. The Istanbul Encyclopedia from Reșat Ekrem Koçu to Orhan Pamuk
author D'Angelo, Biagio
author_facet D'Angelo, Biagio
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv D'Angelo, Biagio
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Semiótica
Enciclopedismo
Pamuk
Koçu
Semiotics
Encyclopedism
Pamuk
Koçu
topic Semiótica
Enciclopedismo
Pamuk
Koçu
Semiotics
Encyclopedism
Pamuk
Koçu
description Enriched with photographs, some of which taken by Ara Güler, and with reproductions of the Bosphorus panoramas by A. I. Melling, Orhan Pamuk’s Istanbul is a “self-portrait in the form of a city”. Inspired by Hugo’s oriental poetics or Baudelaire’s curiosity about Paris, Pamuk investigates Istanbul as a city of personal memory but also as an encyclopedic microcosm. One of the central chapters is devoted to the Istanbul Encyclopedia by Reçat Ekrem Koçu (1905-1975), a pseudo-encyclopedia of almost 11 volumes, where Koçu describes the Turkish city in many aspects since the Ottoman era. Pamuk, who holds Koçu in great esteem, puts forward the hypothesis that one of the reasons for the failure of this work is because of its melancholic and, therefore, incomplete encyclopedia. Istanbul is also seen by Pamuk as a melancholic landscape and a visual urban encyclopedia. Pamuk seems to continue Ekrem Koçu’s incomplete work and expands the perspective of the city into an encyclopedic microcosm, reconstructing it through the readings of renowned nineteenth-century travelers such as Nerval, Gautier and Flaubert, dazzled by the mirages of exoticism. Taking up the work of Ekrem Koçu, Pamuk describes Istanbul with a classifying passion. For him, the nostalgia that dominates Istanbul, the hüzün, is an interior landscape that marks a universe lost forever (the Ottoman Empire), from which the inhabitants bear the wounds. From Ekrem Koçu to Pamuk, the Istanbul encyclopedia enables an affective semiotics of the landscape, where space is configured as a complex and unlimited system of signs that the artist produces to interrogate and represent his memories and his present.
publishDate 2023
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2023-12-29
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dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Revista da Anpoll; Vol. 54 No. 1 (2023); e1929
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