Dalkey Archive have release fifteen works as part of the “Library
of Korean Literature” the latest being “The Republic of Uzupis” by Haijli. Haijli
graduated from Chung-Ang University with a degree in Creative Writing and left
Korea at age 28 to study in France. He has published poetry in both English and
French and has twelve published novels in Korea where he now works as a
professor in Seoul, at the University of Donguk.
Our novel opens with our protagonist Hal (is this a
reference to HAL, the sentient computer from “2001: A Space Odyssey”?) .
arriving in Lithuania and explaining to the immigration officials that he is
there to visit “The Republic of Uzupis”. To his amazement he is given 48 hours
on his Visa and told he has to report to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs if he
wants to stay longer. He finds a taxi only to
be informed that the Republic of Uzupis cannot be found, he is
eventually dropped at the Hotel Uzupis. A mysterious gathering accept Hal into
their fold and he is informed that nobody knows how the place received its
name, but that it is over 200 years old as Napoleon stopped there on his way to
invade Russia.
Uzupis the mysterious Republic:
“The people of this city call
this particular area Uzupis – it means ‘the other side of the river.’ It is the
most run-down area in Vilnius. As a joke, the struggling artists who live here
began calling it the Republic of Uzupis. They even wrote a Declaration of
Independence and established April Fool’s Day as their Independence Day. Every
year they celebrate it – the entire city knows about it – the Lithuanian
president himself takes part in the festivities. So we could not help laughing
when you said you were going to the ‘republic.’”
This is a mysterious work, one where characters and scenes
overlap, as Hal delves further and further into his journey to find Uzupis. He
simply wants to deliver his father’s ashes in the country of his birth, in a
place he told does not exist, this exchange taking place when he meets a man
called Shatunovsky who walks with a limp:
“It appears that each person has
different memories from the next. My father remembered a man named Shatunovsky
who walked with a limp, but you don’t remember my father. And I have clear
memories of the Republic of Uzupis, but you and many others say you don’t.
Perhaps we could say that people can be differentiated on the basis of their
memories.”
Full of bizarre threads, in the opening pages Hal sees a farmer
carrying a goose close to his chest, a man in the abandoned part of town
carrying a grandfather clock on his back, and these two examples reoccur
throughout.
During Hal’s visit to the lounge of his hotel, and later at
a party, Hal meets the mysterious Vilma, who he later learns works at the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs. When Hal goes there she interprets for him,
however Hal believes the Minister is speaking Uzupis and approving his marriage
to Vilma, her translation (from Lithuanian) says that he has an extension to
stay in the country. To add to the mystery Hal has been violently told to avoid
Vilma, by a man who is in love with her.
Is this a Korean or Lithuanian novel? The back cover says “In
this unique and melancholic work author Hailji, while appearing to shun Korea,
is in fact examining the yearnings and dislocation of his contemporary Koreans,
and posits the idea that freedom and nationhood themselves may be just a dream.”
The city was still overcast, and
today it was shrouded as well, with barely thirty feet of visibility in any
direction. Pedestrians emerged coughing from the fog to Hal’s left and coughed
their way back into the fog on his right. The sodden chill that characterized
the weather here must have made the local people susceptible to pneumonia.
Before he realized it, Hal was coughing along with them.
Not just dreamlike but full of references to marginalised
peoples, icons and displacement this is indeed a “melancholic” work. The women
of Uzupis are all left-handed?
Left-handed are the poets of a colonized
land.
Left-handed the eat
Left-handed they drink
Left-handed they love
Left-handed they masturbate.
But their watches, of course,
they wear on the right.
The lovemaking of the left-handed
poets lacks completion
Leaving all their daughters mute
Singing silent songs
Crying soundless tears.
But their watches, of course,
they wear on the right.
The lovemaking of the mute
daughters lacks completion
Leaving all of their husbands
blind
Whispering into the night’s ears
Sleeping in the night’s bosom.
But their watches, of course,
they wear on the right.
Left-handed are the poets of
colonized lands everywhere
Left-handed they write their
poems
Left-handed they nurture their
mute daughters
Left-handed they greet their
blind sons-in-law
But their watches, of course,
they wear on the right.
A work that questions the true nature of patriotism. What is
patriotism? Are our loyalties to a nation, just another place on the planet,
simply a misguided trick of the brain? Have we been hoodwinked, by ourselves,
into believing we have a homeland?
Hal sees the same photograph over and over (he even carries
a copy), it is shown to him by different people, but each time he doesn’t
realise he’s seen it before. The same occurs with marble busts, postcards.
There is no reality to Hal’s time and place
“Memories are like fields at
dusk: the ones in the distance are the first to disappear.”
As Hal says the above the memory by older version of Jurgita
(another female character) starts to reappear and she can remember the English
language.
What is language? Is it like patriotism?
1 comment:
This'll probably be the next one I try - lots of good things said about it from all corners :)
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