Abstract
Elif Shafak's The Flea Palace (2004) exposes secularized Istanbul as a grotesque world. By establishing the apartment building as a synecdoche for the city and negotiating the characters' trajectories within the historical context of modernizing Istanbul, the novel presents their alienation as the sine qua non of the modern individual which is best confronted playfully or rather in the Sufi way. The argument is supported by the novel's complex employment of circles and lines as thematic and formal patterns which refer to Islamic ritual practice of the Mevlevi Sufis in numerous ways.
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Laschinger, V. (2020). Whirls of Faith and Fancy House Symbolism and Sufism in Elif Shafak’s the Flea Palace. Journal of World Literature. Brill Academic Publishers. https://doi.org/10.1163/24056480-00403100
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