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Norman Manea - The Fifth Impossibility: Essays on Exile and Language

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Norman Manea The Fifth Impossibility: Essays on Exile and Language
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Deported to a concentration camp from 1941 until the end of the war, Norman Manea again left his native Romania in 1986 to escape the Ceausescu regime. He now lives in New York. In this selection of essays, he explores the language and psyche of the exiled writer. Among pieces on the cultural-political landscape of Eastern Europe and on the North America of today, there are astute critiques of fellow Romanian and American writers. Manea answers essential questions on censorship and on linguistic roots. He unravels the relationship of the mother tongue to the difficulties of translation. Above all, he describes what homelessness means for the writer. These essays many translated here for the first time are passionate, lucid, and enriching, conveying a profound perspective on our troubled society.

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Norman Manea

The Fifth Impossibility: Essays on Exile and Language

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Exile, first published in On Clowns (New York: Grove Press, 1992).

A Friend in Berlin, first published in Chattahoochee Review, winter/spring 2009.

Empty Theaters? first published in World Policy Journal, spring 1993.

Writers and the Great Beast, first published in Partisan Review, 1 (1994).

The Incompatibilities, first published in New Republic, April 20, 1998.

On Clowns: The Dictator and the Artist, first published in On Clowns (New York: Grove Press, 1992).

Happy Guilt, first published in New Republic, August 5, 1991.

Blasphemy and Carnival, first published in World Policy Journal, Spring 1996.

Cioran, first published in Conjunctions, 31 (1998).

Through Romanian Eyes: A Half Century of the NRF in Bucharest, first published in Salmagundi, spring 2010.

Berenger at Bard, first published in Partisan Review, 4 (2000).

Made in Romania, first published in the New York Review of Books, February 10, 2000.

An Exile on September 11 and After, fragment from an interview first published in Partisan Review, 2 (2002).

The Walser Debate, first published in Partisan Review, 3 (1999).

Some Thoughts on Saul Bellow, first published in Salmagundi, 148/149 (fall 2005winter 2006).

The Exiled Language, first published in The Writer Uprooted: Contemporary Jewish Exile Literature, ed. Alvin H. Rosenfeld (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2008).

Casa Minima, first published in Abitare, 479 (2007).

Monuments of Shame: Twenty Years after the Berlin Wall, first published in the William Phillips Lecture Series (New York: The New School for Social Research, 2009).

The Silence of the Eastern Bloc, first published in Jerusalem Post, May 5, 1989.

A Lasting Poison, first published on Project Syndicate, November 20, 2008 (copyright Project Syndicate/Institute for Human Sciences, 2008).

Crime and Punishment, Refugee Style, first published on Project Syndicate, November 15, 2007 (copyright Project Syndicate/Institute for Human Sciences, 2007).

Revolutionary Shadows, first published on Project Syndicate, September 3, 2011 (copyright Project Syndicate/Institute for Human Sciences, 2011).

Against Simplification, first published on Project Syndicate, August 15, 2011 (copyright Project Syndicate/Institute for Human Sciences, 2011).

Another Genealogy, first published in Adevarul (adevarul.ro) in 2011.

The Dada Capital of Exiles, first published on Project Syndicate, August 31, 2005 (copyright Project Syndicate/Institute for Human Sciences, 2005).

THE FIFTH IMPOSSIBILITY: ESSAYS ON EXILE AND LANGUAGE

Part I

EXILE

The increased nationalism and religious fundamentalism all around the world, the dangerous conflicts between minorities in Eastern Europe, and a growing xenophobia emphasize one of the main contradictions of our time: between centrifugal, cosmopolitan modernity and the centripetal need (or at least nostalgia) for belonging. We are reminded again and again of the ancient yet constant predicament of the foreigner, the stranger.

It seems that although he is taught to love his neighbor, man fails to love his neighbor as he loves himself, and fails also to love a stranger like a neighbor. The stranger has always been perceived as different, but often also as a challenge, even a downright threat which undermines the unifying traditional and conventional structures of society. The very premise of the strangers existence presupposes re-evaluation and potential competition.

We find ourselves in a world in which the concepts of citizen and citizenship migrate far beyond any borders designated at birth an instant global reality created through intense world air traffic and which, via satellite, invades everyones home TV screen. And todays world of rapid migration and instantaneous communication is also a world on the threshold of a revolution which it still is, rightly, afraid to acknowledge. I refer to the genetic revolution which could create a new meaning for our human destiny. Stupendous means of genetic manipulation may force mankind to reconsider on a dramatic scale its morality and its laws, with unforeseeable consequences for the future of the human race. And if we add to this our conquest of outer space, we must ask ourselves again, what do they mean in this context: the event called homeland, the challenge called foreigner, the reality called exile? And how do we perceive from the vantage point of our unstable, transitory, and pathetic domicile called human life the tension between the particular and the general? The modern world faces its solitude and its responsibilities without the artifice of a protective dependency or of a fictive utopian coherence. Fundamentalist and separatist movements of all kinds, the return of a tribal mentality in so many human communities, are expressions of the need to re-establish a wellordered cohesion which would protect the enclave against the assault of the unknown, of diversity, heterogeneity and alienation. A dismembered Soviet Union and a united Europe are only two obvious examples of the kinds of contradiction that convulse our present and, certainly, will convulse our future. There is, on the one hand, the need to do away with restrictive barriers and achieve a democratic, multinational, economically efficient system; on the other hand there is the desire to replace the totalitarian state, the center of tyrannical power, with a conglomerate of states, each with its own center of power, of uncertain democracy.

Recent debates about the canon in American universities are highly significant for the persistence in our post-industrial modern world of a tension harbored in all of us between centrifugal and what are centripetal, nostalgic tendencies.

When discussing the question of the foreigner one should not forget the phenomenons of colonialism and proselytism. Who, in these cases, is the stranger? The colonizer and the missionary, ruling and converting? Or the native, centered in his exotic refuge, historically marginal, for whom assimilation into a unifying civilization is an alienation, an incomprehensible mutilation?

One must ultimately search for substance and meaning in ones own experience, ones own limited biography. The present biography bears a European imprint in a century that has loaded its biography with terrible sufferings. Europe means not only the cradle of Western democracy but also the tragic totalitarian experiments of fascism and communism.

I was five years old when in 1941 I first left Romania, sent to death by a dictator and an ideology. In 1986, at 50, by an ironic symmetry, I left again, because of another dictator, another ideology. Holocaust, totalitarianism, exilethese fundamental experiences of our contemporaneity are all intimately related by a definition of the stranger and of estrangement.

The National Socialist doctrine proposed a totalitarian centripetal model, centered on the idea of a pure race and the nationalist state as the embodiment of the will to power. It was an idea which found many advocates and adherents, since the Nazis came to power through free elections and ruled through a relative coherence of ideal and fact. The National Socialist state embodied the most violent negation of, and the most brutal aggression against, the stranger. A suspect citizen with impure roots and dangerous opinions, the stranger became the demonic embodiment of evil. The very premises of humanity were placed under a dark question mark. Not only has the Holocaust entirely reversed the terms of a debate about assimilation and the stranger, it has also reiterated, with gloomy precision, as Saul Bellow put it, the old question, with

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