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Intimacies (2021)

por Katie Kitamura

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
6283837,249 (3.7)71
Fiction. Literature. HTML:A NEW YORK TIMES TOP 10 BOOK OF 2021
LONGLISTED FOR THE 2021 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD IN FICTION
ONE OF BARACK OBAMA??S FAVORITE 2021 READS
AN INSTANT NATIONAL BESTSELLER

A BEST BOOK OF 2021 FROM Washington Post, Vogue, Time, Oprah Daily, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Atlantic, Kirkus and Entertainment Weekly
??Intimacies is a haunting, precise, and morally astute novel that reads like a psychological thriller?. Katie Kitamura is a wonder.? ??Dana Spiotta, author of Wayward and Eat the Document
??One of the best novels I??ve read in 2021.? ?? Dwight Garner, The New York Times
A novel from the author of A Separation, an electrifying story about a woman caught between many truths.

An interpreter has come to The Hague to escape New York and work at the International Court. A woman of many languages and identities, she is looking for a place to finally call home.
 
She's drawn into simmering personal dramas: her lover, Adriaan, is separated from his wife but still entangled in his marriage. Her friend Jana witnesses a seemingly random act of violence, a crime the interpreter becomes increasingly obsessed with as she befriends the victim's sister. And she's pulled into an explosive political controversy when she??s asked to interpret for a former president accused of war crimes.
 
A woman of quiet passion, she confronts power, love, and violence, both in her personal intimacies and in her work at the Court. She is soon pushed to the precipice, where betrayal and heartbreak threaten to overwhelm her, forcing her to decide
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Mostrando 1-5 de 38 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
I like that Kitamura seems to tell us how to interpret this novel in the title she gives it. Granted, it’s not an always foolproof measure (the first blurb on the back of the hardcover states confidently that it is “a novel about the ruthlessness of power…”, which, no its not) but I think here it accurately lets the reader know that the novelist’s primary concern in the work is to do with intimacy and intimacies.

When you think of “intimacy” a relationship with physical geography probably isn’t what first springs to mind, though given how basic and integral the idea of “home” is to identity for many of us, I can see it being a base for other intimacies. The novel begins with this intimacy - our narrator has left New York, where her immigrant family had lived and which she lacked a connection with - and moved to The Hague, where she wonders “if I could be more than a visitor here.” Unaware of it, a late reveal shows that she has an early and intimate connection with the city, which subconsciously may have helped direct her there, early roots producing a shoot.

Interpersonal intimacies are presented in varying forms. Friendship and romantic love, of course, are craved by almost all of us, including the narrator. These pass by mostly uninterestingly in my reading here. Sometimes you accidentally become party to a stranger’s as you go about town on your own business: “On occasion, I found myself stumbling into situations more intimate than I would have liked…”

More interesting is the presentation of intentionally forced intimacy. A strong passage in the novel relates to Judith Leyster’s 1631 painting “Man Offering Money to a Young Woman”, in which there are two figures in a candlelit room, a man leaning down over a seated woman who is working on a handicraft and staring straight down, while he holds out money in one hand and pulls on her with the other. The intimate closeness he forces on her is most unwelcome. In parallel there is a man whose attentions towards the narrator are also trying to force an unwanted intimacy, and who has financial power over her.

Then most interestingly there is conflicted intimacy, compromising intimacy, that our narrator is led into through her work. Shades of grey are always the most interesting, eh? Working as a translator at the International Criminal Court she provides undoubtedly necessary and useful services in translating court and lawyer’s proceedings for defendants charged with murder on a statecraft scale. But by necessity providing services for one person brings you into a sort of intimate relationship with them. You are there for that one person’s benefit. Speaking to them. Even whispering quietly into their ear while seated next to them.

About halfway into the novel (unfortunately not sooner!) this mostly comes into play when the narrator becomes interpreter for an ex-President of an African nation charged with atrocities committed while trying to hang onto power:

I was close enough to observe the texture of his skin, the particularities of his features, I could smell the scent of the soap he must have used that morning.
[…]
I sometimes had the unpleasant sensation that of all the people in the room below, of all the people in the city itself, the former president was the person I knew best. In those moments, out of what I can only describe as an excess of imagination, he became the person whose perspective I occupied. I flinched when the proceedings seemed to go against him. I felt quiet relief when they moved in his direction. It was disquieting in the extreme, like being placed inside a body I had no desire to occupy. I was repulsed, to find myself so permeable.


“I was repulsed to find myself so permeable.” It’s a fascinating insight. How solid are our own selves, and how much altered could they be by the intimacies we inhabit, voluntarily or not, positive or not. I only wish the novel had spent much more time on this question, and cut out other parts of the novel, unmentioned here, that I don’t feel contribute much to it. ( )
  lelandleslie | Feb 24, 2024 |
The character descriptions were kind of long to the point where I couldn't just breeze through the book. I like the idea and the topic was new to me. ( )
  brozic | Jan 27, 2024 |
Very nice. A very good book. Interesting subjects, moving depiction of a certain alienation and quiet search for belonging. A lovely ending that feels right. There can be no intimacy in a world committed to…the neutrality of professionalism.
  BookyMaven | Dec 6, 2023 |
Good writing; but a weak story line; translator at the Hague; relationship with a married man who wouldn’t leave his family ( )
  JosephKing6602 | Nov 24, 2023 |
3.5⭐️ rounded up!

“The fact that our daily activity hinged on the repeated description—description, elaboration, and delineation—of matters that were, outside, generally subject to euphemism and elision.”

Our unnamed protagonist (who is also our narrator) has recently taken up a one-year contractual position as an interpreter with the International Criminal Court in The Hague, moving from New York to The Hague, and is still in the process of adjusting to her new life. She is professionally tasked with interpreting for the high profile case of a former West African President, who is being tried for horrific war crimes. Her interaction with the former President was not just limited to her removed presence behind a glass-fronted soundproof booth. She is also required to sit in and interpret for him during his private meetings with his legal counsel.

"The Court was run according to the suspension of disbelief: every person in the courtroom knew but also did not know that there was a great deal of artifice surrounding matters that were nonetheless predicated on authenticity."

On the personal front, she is involved with Adriaan, a married man separated from his wife, yet to be divorced. She also befriends Jana, a curator of an art gallery. Her personal relationships do not appear to be particularly stable, her friendship with Jana feels fragile and Adriaan seems conflicted over the future of his marriage. She also befriends an art history teacher whose brother was recently mugged in the vicinity of Jana’s apartment building but who does not divulge his reasons for being in that area. The novel follows our protagonist as she navigates her personal relationships and professional commitments all the while learning to fend for herself in a new city. The plot of the novel revolves around the varying degrees of intimacy in her professional and personal experiences and how they impact her as an individual and as a professional.

Katie Kitamura‘s Intimacies is a quiet novel, direct and lacking embellishment. The narration at times lacks a ‘personal component’ despite being narrated in the first person by our protagonist. I loved the scenes depicting the proceedings in the Court and found the detailed look into the responsibilities of the translators /interpreters very interesting. The tone of the novel feels so impersonal that I found it very difficult to feel any connection with the protagonist. The novel gives us a look into her personal life – romantic relationships and friendships, the superficial nature of all her personal relationships is very subtly portrayed. In fact, the only point in the novel where the protagonist shows any vulnerability is in the course of her work while interpreting for the former President on trial, a vulnerability that makes her uncomfortable with the very nature of her work.
“It was disquieting in the extreme, like being placed inside a body I had no desire to occupy. I was repulsed, to find myself so permeable.”

This is a unique novel with a very interesting setting and elegant prose but an unconventional plot structure. It is an interesting read, but I think many would find it hard to connect with the protagonist due to the dispassionate tone of the novel and in that it may not appeal to many readers.

"It is surprisingly easy to forget what you have witnessed, the horrifying image or the voice speaking the unspeakable, in order to exist in the world we must and we do forget, we live in a state of I know but I do not know." ( )
  srms.reads | Sep 4, 2023 |
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Trasferirsi in un paese nuovo non è mai semplice, ma a dire la verità ero felice di aver lasciato New York.
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Quasi tutti miei colleghi avevano vissuto in vari paesi ed erano cosmopoliti di natura, la loro identità inscindibile dalle loro risorse linguistiche. Io non ero molto diversa. Ero fluente in inglese e giapponese per nascita, grazie ai miei genitori, e in francese grazie all'infanzia trascorsa a Parigi.
[...] Ma la fluidità era soltanto la base di qualsiasi lavoro d'interpretariato, che richiedeva soprattutto un'estrema precisione, e spesso pensavo che a rendermi una brava interprete fosse la mia naturale inclinazione verso quest'ultima, più che un talento per le lingue. In un contesto legale la precisione era ancora più importante, e dopo una settimana di lavoro alla Corte devo imparato il suo vocabolario al tempo stesso specifico e arcano, con terminologia ufficiale fissata per ogni lingua e scrupolosamente osservata da tutti gli interpreti. Il motivo era ovvio: tra le nostre parole, o tra due o più lingue, sono in agguato voragini che possono spalancarsi senza preavviso.
In quanto interpreti, il nostro compito era gettare ponti attraverso le voragini. Questa navigazione - che oltre all'accuratezza richiedeva un certo grado di innata spontaneità, perché a volte bisognava improvvisare per aggirare una frase sconosciuta o intraducibile, in perenne lotta con l'orologio - era più importante di quanto potesse apparire.
[...]Chi andava alla sbarra presentava vari tipi di immagine: le testimonianze venivano pesantemente plasmate sia dalla difesa sia dall'accusa, le persone condotte davanti alla Corte per interpretare un ruolo. La Corte funzionava in base alla sospensione dell'incredulità: in aula, tutti sapevano e al contempo ignoravano che i testimoni erano preparati, che c'era un bel po' di artificio introno a questioni basate sull'autenticità.
Era in gioco nientemeno che la sofferenza di milioni di persone, e davanti alla sofferenza non si poteva parlare di messinscena. Eppure, la Corte era per natura un luogo di grande teatralità. Non solo nelle testimonianze accuratamente forgiate delle vittime. [...] Anche gli imputati - capi militari e politici - erano spesso personaggi pomposi, arroganti e insieme autocommiserativi, gente abituata a stare su un palco e ad ascoltare il suono della propria voce. Gli interpreti non potevano rifuggire del tutto quel teatro, il nostro lavoro non consisteva solo nel tradurre le parole pronunciate dal soggetto, ma anche nel rendere l'atteggiamento, le sfumature e le intenzioni sottostanti.
[...]L'accuratezza linguistica non bastava. L'interpretariato era una questione di enorme sottigliezza, un termine dalle molte sfumature: anche un attore interpreta un ruolo, e un musicista interpreta un pezzo musicale.
C'era un certo grado di tensione intrinseco alla Corte e alle sue attività, una contraddizione tra la natura intima del dolore e l'arena pubblica in cui veniva sbandierato.Un processo er un completo insieme di performance che ci coinvolgeva tutti, nessuno escluso. Un interprete non doveva solo dichiarare o tradurre, ma anche ripetere l'indicibile. Forse er quella, la vera ansia che aleggiava nella Corte e tra i miei colleghi. Il fatto che la nostra attività quotidiana dipendesse dalla continua descrizione - descrizione, elaborazione e precisazione - di faccende che, fuori dalla Corte, erano in genere soggette a eufemismi ed elisioni.
I luoghi hanno un che di bizzarro quando se ne capisce la lingua solo in parte, e in quei primi mesi la sensazione era stata particolarmente strana. All'inizio brancolavo nel buio, i discorsi introno a me erano impenetrabili, ma tutto era diventato meno sfuggente quando avevo cominciato a capire le singole parole, poi le frasi e adesso perfino interi brani di conversazione, certe volte mi imbattevo in situazioni più private di quanto avrei voluto, la città non era più il luogo innocente che era sta al mio arrivo.
Era facile scordarsi che L'Aja si trova sul mare del Nord, per tanti è una città che sembra affacciarsi verso l'interno, dando le spalle alla distesa d'acqua.
[L'imputato] Era un ex capo milizia ancora giovane, con un abito costoso, stravaccato su una sedia ergonomica tra i vari giudici e avvocati. Era sotto processo per crimini orrendi, eppure in aula aveva sempre l'aria imbronciata e forse un poi annoiata. Certo, gli imputati sono speso ben vestiti e seduti su sedie da ufficio; la differenza sta nel fatto che alla Corte gli imputati non erano semplici criminali abbigliati per l'occasione, ma uomini che avevano a lungo indossato il mantello dell'autorità trasmesso da un completo o da un'uniforme, uomini abituati al potere che ne derivava.
[...] Gli imputati, quindi, arrivavano, all'Aja circondati da una certa aura, avevamo sentito un gran parlare di questi uomini (perché erano quasi sempre uomini), avevamo visto fotografie e video, e quando finalmente si presentavano alla Corte erano le star dello spettacolo, non c'era altro modo di dirlo, la situazione era un palcoscenico per loro carisma.
Tutti hanno diritto a una giusta rappresentanza legale, anche chi ha commesso crimini indicibili, oltre ogni immaginazione, crimini che a sentire descrivere ti verrebbe voglia di tapparti le orecchie e correre via. L'avvocato difensore non può cedere a una simile vigliaccheria, deve non solo ascoltare, ma studiare con attenzione la storia di quei crimini, viverne e respirarne l'atmosfera. Quello che il resto di noi non è in grado di sopportare è proprio ciò in cui l'avvocato difensore deve immergersi.
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Fiction. Literature. HTML:A NEW YORK TIMES TOP 10 BOOK OF 2021
LONGLISTED FOR THE 2021 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD IN FICTION
ONE OF BARACK OBAMA??S FAVORITE 2021 READS
AN INSTANT NATIONAL BESTSELLER

A BEST BOOK OF 2021 FROM Washington Post, Vogue, Time, Oprah Daily, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Atlantic, Kirkus and Entertainment Weekly
??Intimacies is a haunting, precise, and morally astute novel that reads like a psychological thriller?. Katie Kitamura is a wonder.? ??Dana Spiotta, author of Wayward and Eat the Document
??One of the best novels I??ve read in 2021.? ?? Dwight Garner, The New York Times
A novel from the author of A Separation, an electrifying story about a woman caught between many truths.

An interpreter has come to The Hague to escape New York and work at the International Court. A woman of many languages and identities, she is looking for a place to finally call home.
 
She's drawn into simmering personal dramas: her lover, Adriaan, is separated from his wife but still entangled in his marriage. Her friend Jana witnesses a seemingly random act of violence, a crime the interpreter becomes increasingly obsessed with as she befriends the victim's sister. And she's pulled into an explosive political controversy when she??s asked to interpret for a former president accused of war crimes.
 
A woman of quiet passion, she confronts power, love, and violence, both in her personal intimacies and in her work at the Court. She is soon pushed to the precipice, where betrayal and heartbreak threaten to overwhelm her, forcing her to decide

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