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| | Description | Original title: Travnicka hronika Andric's sweeping novel spans the seven years 1807-1814, when French and Austrian consuls served alongside the Turkish Viziers in the remote Bosnian town of Travnik, distant outpost of the Ottoman Empire. Divided as the community is, Muslims, Cahtolic and Orthodox Christians, Jews and Gypsies all unite in a common contempt for their visitors. Isolated in a claustrophobic atmosphere of suspicion and mutual distrust, the consuls and Viziers vie with each other, following the fluctuations of their respective foreign policies. When international politics permit however, they console each other as best they can in this harsh and hostile land. Andric uses his native Bosnia as a microcosm of human society, stressing its potential for national, cultural and religious misunderstanding and conflict, and identifying the barriers of all kinds that hinder communication between individuals. Written against the, background of violence released in these mixed communities during the Second World War, the novel now has renewed and poignant relevance. |  |
| | Product Details | | Author: | Ivo Andric | | Hardcover: | 396 pages | | Publisher: | Dereta | | Publication Date: | 2008 | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 1 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 1 customer reviews )
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9 of 9 found the following review helpful:
Recreation of a whole world with deep insights into humanity Oct 31, 2000
By Ansgar von der Osten "The Days of the Consuls" is not an easily accessible book. The long and detailed narrative contains no real story - it begins with the arrival of the French consul Daville in the Bosniantown of Travnik in 1807 and ends with his departure seven years later. All this is set against the background of Napoleon's fall from the height of power, viewed from a European backwater. Bosnia is still under Turkish rule and part of the Osmanic empire. Its citizens are acultural mix of Turks, Jews and Christians. But most of all they are Bosniaks, distrustful towards all strangers, capable of much cruelty and deviousness as well as generosity and love, and a very stubborn people. Andric peoples his novel with a huge set of characters, all of them described with much insight into human nature. Foremost are Daville and his wife, the two Austrian consuls set up as counteragents against the French influence, three Turkish wesirs who rule Travnik consecutively, and a huge group of servants and aides to each of these. One of the main topics is the confrontation of modern, dynamic Europe with a culture weighed down by Turkish rule as well as harsh and bitter life conditions and infected with a sense of resignation and equanimity. Andric takes his time to make a comprehensive statement on this, breathing life into a fascinating and strange world often with the aid of small but detailed digressions from the fate of the main protagonists. There is so much in this book that it is hard to choose examples let alone highlights, but the ponderings of a sephardic Jew about the fate of his people towards the end will probably stay longest in my mind. This is a huge novel inscope and a fine achievement. It is brimming with historical, political, cultural and social wisdom and still full of care for every individual portrayed even if he or she makes only a short appearance. A great work of literary art that deserves a reprint!
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