Опубликован

28.06.2024

Выпуск

№ 1, Vol. 4 (2024): URBIS ET ORBIS

Раздел

Статьи


From Constantinople to the South Caucasus: Deciphering the urban landscape in John Dos Passos’s travel memoir “Orient Express”

 

DOI: https://doi.org/10.34680/urbis-2024-4(1)-93-104

 

Albert Makaryan
Yerevan State University, Yerevan, Armenia
[email protected]

ORCID: 0000-0001-5111-5412

 

 

Thomas Charles Toghramadjian
Yerevan State University, Yerevan, Armenia
[email protected]

ORCID: 0009-0009-6207-6960

 

 

ABSTRACT

This article examines a highly-regarded but little-studied work of the major American novelist John Dos Passos, the travel memoir Orient Express (1927), the account of a 1922 journey from Constantinople, through the South Caucasus and through Iran and Iraq to the Levant. Situating Orient Express within the development of Dos Passos’s distinctive brand of experimental, modernist prose culminating in the U.S.A. trilogy (1930–1937), attention is drawn to the visual and auditory landscapes of the text. Dos Passos’s use of various modernist devices in his portrayal of Near Eastern cities — including the use of overlapping perspectives, interacting planes of light and color, the observer-in-motion, and the superimposition of real and imagined city landscapes — approach what has been termed the “proto-cubist” or “proto-expressionist” effect typical of his urban American novels. Orient Express is also characterized by its unique auditory landscape, a patchwork of overheard speech which prefigures Dos Passos’s mature conception of a fragmentary, “objective” art in which authorial agency consists primarily in ordering various strands of external discourse. These verbal and material planes, image and history, intersect in a crucial meditation on material artifacts abandoned by their owners in the wake of the Red Army’s invasion of Georgia, which reflects a conception of the “the writer’s vital role in opposing the dehumanizing impact of mechanization,” and provides important context for the much remarked-upon transition in Dos Passos’s political views toward the end of the 1930s.

 

KEYWORDS: John Dos Passos, Orient Express, travel literature, Constantinople, Georgia, Yerevan, Bolshevik revolution, American modernism, multivocality.

 

 

References


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Information about the authors
Albert A. Makaryan
Dr. Sci., Professor, Head of Chair
Chair of History and Literary Theory
after Academician Hr. Tamrazyan
Yerevan State University
1, Alex Manoogian St., Yerevan, 0025, Armenia
ORCID: 0000-0001-5111-5412
Scopus Author ID: 58601287200
e-mail: [email protected]

 

Thomas Charles Toghramadjian
Master of Philology
Research Fellow
Yerevan State University
1, Alex Manoogian St., Yerevan, 0025, Armenia
ORCID: 0009-0009-6207-6960
e-mail: [email protected]


For citation:
Makaryan, А., & Toghramadjian, T. Ch. (2024). From Constantinople to the South Caucasus: Deciphering the urban landscape in John Dos Passos’s travel memoir “Orient Express”. Urbis et Orbis. Microhistory and Semiotics of the City, 4(1), 93–104. https://doi.org/10.34680/urbis-2024-4(1)-93-104