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Bureaucracy of Dreams: Surrealist Socialism and Surrealist Awakening in Ismail Kadare's The Palace of Dreams
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
Abstract
Ani Kokobobo addresses the novel The Palace of Dreams (1981) by the Albanian writer Ismail Kadare, with a particular focus on the larger significance of the novel's dream project. Through fictional processes of dream collection, selection, and interpretation, Kadare meditates on two twentieth-century movements that either overtly or covertly incorporated dreams in their ideological platforms: surrealism and socialism. Kokobobo posits that as a political and aesthetic category the dream serves Kadare as the ideal epistemological vessel for investigating the interrelatedness of socialism and surrealism. Throughout the novel, Kadare emphasizes socialism's Utopian inclinations, the dislocation of political decisions from political realities in this system, and the mutual disturbance of both reality and the imagination that such a dislocation produces. At the same time, the dream narrative helps him launch a surrealist poetics and metapoetically counter the damage dealt to the imagination by political realities.
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1 I am grateful to Valentina Izmirlieva, Mark D. Steinberg, and the anonymous referees for Slavic Review for suggestions that gready improved diis article. I am referring to the original Albanian publication of the novel. Kadare, Ismail, Pallati i Ëndrrave (Tiranë, 1999), 16.Google Scholar All translations from the Albanian are my own. An English translation of the novel is available: The Palace of Dreams, trans. Barbara Bray (New York, 1998). This translation is based on the French translation of the Albanian original: Le Palais des revês, trans. JusufVrioni (Paris, 1990).
2 Kadare, Pallati i Ëndrrave, 18.
3 Mikhail Bakhtin considers the problem of “authorial surplus” and deems it to be “a zone that is fundamentally inaccessible to the consciousnesses of the characters.” Authorial surplus is a “surplus of meaning accessible to the author” that helps provides a work of art with a certain meaning that is not apparent to the characters. Bakhtin, , Problems of Dostoevsky's Poetics (Minneapolis, 1984), 72, 73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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5 The novel's Islamic setting is a fitting scenario for a dream-project. But though the idea of an enterprise for the interpretation of dreams has its roots in the Islamic practices of dream interpretation, the project conceived in The Palace of Dreams is far removed from that tradition. Dream interpretation was a very popular practice in the Ottoman empire, and the various types of dream interpretation involved assorted tripartite models. In the novel, the only tripartite model for dreams is the one that relates to the three types of dreams that need to be discarded. In general, Kadare more or less discards authentic Ottoman practices of dream interpretation. Indeed, we even get a clear sense of this rejection in the novel. Once Mark-Alem starts working in the Tabir he immediately rejects family rituals of dream interpretation and even insults his mother when she asks him to interpret her dreams. The moment with Mark-Alem's mother is significant because it is the only realistic representation of Ottoman dream interpretation practices. Dream interpretation in Islam was both fundamentally private and for the benefit of the individual and was almost always carried out by solitary seers who predicted a single individual's future for the benefit of that individual. Alternatively, the members of a household merely shared dreams with one another in the morning. In the United Ottoman States, dreams are no longer interpreted by inspired individuals in order to provide guidance for other individuals but are collected in mass and used for the sole benefit of the state.
6 Kadare, Pallati i Ëndrrave, 192.
7 Ibid., 53.
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39 Ibid., 91.
40 Ibid., 65.
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42 Kadare, Pallati i Ëndrrave, 88.
43 Ibid., 89.
44 See Vickers, Miranda, The Albanians: A Modern History (London, 1999), 24.Google Scholar For the background of this attack, see 11–31. Vickers connects the attack on the Albanians at Monastir with the growing distrust against Albanians in the Ottoman empire as a result of the independence shown by Albanian leaders of the period, like Ali Pasha.
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47 In many ways, Hoxha followed in the steps of King Zog who had begun a similar process of modernization in Albania. Fischer, “Enver Hoxha and the Stalinist Dictatorship in Albania,” 251.
48 This treatment of the Ottoman past goes back to the Albanian Renaissance of the nineteenth century. For a more in-depth discussion of Albanian orientalism, see Sulstarova, Enis, “Orientalizmi shqiptar”, Përpjekja, vol. 20 (2005): 42–60.Google Scholar As Sulstarova shows, Kadare himself also often subscribes to this orientalist discourse.
49 As Fischer notes, however, in Albania this Stalinist spirit was tempered by pro-found nationalism and the need for national unity. Though the regime presented itself as Stalinist, in reality it was more nationalist than Stalinist, and it borrowed the nationalist paradigm from King Zog. Fischer, “Enver Hoxha and the Stalinist Dictatorship in Alba-nia,” 251. Interestingly, Kadare does not criticize the nationalistic facet of Albanian socialism but instead often echoes it in his works through frequent artistic representations of Albanians as an ancient European people.
50 Enver Hoxha, Kur u hodhën themekt e Shqipërise së re, 187, available within www.enverhoxha.info/frame.htm (last accessed 1 june 2011).
51 For a discussion of orientalism in Kadare's Elegy for Kosovo, see my article “The ‘Curse’ of Eastern Blood in Kadare's, Ismail Elegy for Kosovo,” Ulbandus: The Slavic Revieiu of Columbia University, vol. 13 (2010): 79–93.Google Scholar
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57 Dobrenko, Political Economy of Socialist Realism, 5.
58 When he begins working in the Tabir, Mark-Alem is told to watch out for dreams made up by citizens desperate to fulfill their own career ambitions. Kadare, Pallati i Ëndrrave, 24.
59 Paradoxically enough, Kadare's most famous socialist realist work was a lyrical poem called “Industrial Dream” (1960).
60 Kadare, Dialog me Alain Bosquet, 156.
61 Marcuse, Herbert, Soviet Marxism: A Critical Analysis (New York, 1969), 25.Google Scholar
62 Breton, Manifestos of Surrealism, 128, 269.
63 Ibid., 260.
64 Kadare, Pallati i Ëndrrave, 31.
65 Ibid., 84.
66 Ibid., 88, 113.
67 Ibid., 101.
68 Ibid., 131.
69 This description of the surrealist object is provided by Salvador Dali, quoted in Breton, Manifestos of Surrealism, 274.
70 Ibid.
71 I am referring respectively to three paintings by Magritte: The Red Coal (where feet and shoes merge), Ship and Sirens (where a ship is made up of the sea), and The Grand Family (where a bird is made up of sky colors).
72 Quoted in Catharine Nepomnyashchy, Theimer, Abram Tertz and the Poetics of Crime (New Haven, 1995), 245–46.Google Scholar
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