This collection of new essays brings together scholarly examinations of a writer who-despite
the prestige that the Nobel Prize has earned him-remains controversial with respect to his
place in the literary tradition of his home country. This is in part because the positioning of
Turkey itself in relation to the cultural divide between East and West has been the subject of
a debate going back to the beginnings of the modern Turkish state and earlier. The present
essays written mostly by literary scholars range widely across Pamuk's novelistic oeuvre
dealing with how the writer often adding an allegorical level to the personages depicted in
his experimental narratives portrays tensions such as those between Western secularism and
traditional Islam and different conceptions of national identity.