[책의 향기]The glory of the past eats up life, memories are sometimes regressive.

by times news cr

Teh first booker prize-winning work⁤ by a Bulgarian author… Recreating the past for AlzheimerS treatment
Growing into⁢ a ⁣national issue, social chaos
Criticism of escapist ‘glorification of ⁢memories’
Time Shelter/Written by Georgy Gospodinov, translated by Eunyoung Min/17,800 won, 460⁣ pages, Munhakdongne

‘Time Shelter’,‌ a past therapy clinic specially⁢ designed ⁣for Alzheimer’s patients. the novel unfolds in an unexpected direction as⁢ the idea of ​​being able to⁤ live in​ the past again captivates more ​and ‌more ⁢people, ‌regardless of whether they have an illness or not. A representative scene is ​where European countries are holding referendums to return to the‌ most glorious ​era.It is indeed‌ an⁣ interesting fable about the nature of ‍memory,identity,and ⁢nostalgia. Getty Images ​Korea
[책의 향기]The glory of the past eats up life, memories are sometimes regressive.

Gaustin, a geriatric psychiatrist, devises a ‘past therapy clinic’ that recreates the past ⁣in ⁣detail for Alzheimer’s patients who feel comfortable in past ​memories.‍ The ⁢clinic is set‍ up in an apricot-colored building in Zurich, Switzerland, and each floor perfectly recreates a different decade. This is the story of ‘Time Shelter’, which became the first Bulgarian writer to⁤ win the booker ⁤Prize International category last year.

The novel creates a space for those who have lost⁤ their ‍memories that matches their inner time. The idea‍ is that if the time​ in someone’s head is 1965, ⁤at least the limited space of the

The novel, which begins with an Alzheimer’s clinic, gradually‍ moves​ in⁤ an unexpected direction. The concept of being able‍ to ​live again from the past has captivated ⁤more and more people, regardless of ⁣illness. The desire to‌ escape⁣ the dead ‍end of the present and avoid the past ​is gradually spreading throughout Europe.⁢ Eventually,a referendum is held to decide a specific era in the past to which the entire‌ country will return. Political parties advocating different eras are established and​ rallies are‌ held.

the narrator, who visits his‍ home country of ‌Bulgaria, ‍learns that the country is ⁤divided into two opposing factions. ‍There are those⁤ who advocate for the National socialist period of the 1960s and 1970s,and those who claim to return to the late 19th century when they fought ⁢against the Ottoman Empire. The two⁢ forces hire actors to stage rally events. ⁤During an event reenacting ⁢the Sarajevo incident⁢ that started ⁤World War I,‌ a live bullet was fired from a prop gun and ​the actor who played‍ Archduke Ferdinand actually died, giving the feeling of⁢ the past repeating itself.

Rather than⁣ developing a clear plot ‍quickly, ‍the novel adopts a ‍loose structure that intersperses patients’ cases, characters’ anecdotes,⁤ the narrator’s notes and thoughts,‌ and picture sketches. However,each anecdote is interesting‌ as an ⁤independent story. Basically, it​ is an ​interesting⁣ fable about the nature of memory, identity, and nostalgia. A representative scene is where⁣ European countries are ⁢holding referendums to return to the most glorious era. It ⁣shows through unstoppable plot the ​kind of regression that blind admiration for ⁢the past ⁣leads to.

The author confesses ​that he could not shake the feeling ‍that the ‌world was experiencing a pandemic⁣ called ‘the past’ as he watched the ​spread of⁢ conservative⁣ populism that ​invokes the great past across Europe, including ‌Brexit. This novel is like a thought experiment about the dangers brought about by the wrong desire for the eternal past and nostalgia.

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