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Alexander Christie-Miller
ALEXANDER CHRISTIE-MILLER  is a writer and journalist based in Istanbul. His writing about Turkish politics and culture has been published in Newsweek, the Times, the Atlantic, and other publications. He is a regular contributor to The White Review.


Articles Available Online


Ada Kaleh

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Issue No. 17

Alexander Christie-Miller

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Issue No. 17

When King Carol II of Romania set foot on the tiny Danubian island of Ada Kaleh on 4 May 1931, it was said among...

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October 2015

War is Easy, Peace is Hard

Alexander Christie-Miller

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October 2015

At around midday on 19 July, Koray Türkay boarded a bus in Istanbul and set off for the Syrian...

How might the novelist, working with a form traditionally obsessed with humans, represent the nonhuman? Or, perhaps a better question: how might a fiction writer animate the two — figure and ground — to express and confront our present ecological crisis? Is it sustainable to work, as we do, in an intensely virtual and phenomenally heated time? The Disaster Tourist by Yun Ko-eun, translated from Korean by Lizzie Buehler, offers one possible, tantalisingly zany answer to the future of work and fiction (storytelling) in our age of mass extinction For Yona Ko, the office-worker protagonist, ‘Disaster lay dormant in every corner, like depression’ This South Korean dark comedy underlines the absurdity of our complicity and collective contribution to the present crisis    Reading the first chapter, I couldn’t help but imagine it narrated like a cheesy film trailer from the 90s, a male voiceover on top of shots of office cubicles Yona Ko is a top programming coordinator at Jungle, a Seoul-based tourism company that specialises in holidays to disaster sites Jungle offers 152 travel packages, including trips to sites of nuclear meltdowns, floods, earthquakes, volcanos, desertification, hurricanes, war, tsunamis, and much more ‘As a child she hadn’t imagined doing work like this, but she was skilled at quantifying the unquantifiable,’ the narrator notes, drily When a tsunami strikes Jinhae, a coastal city, during cherry blossom season, Yona takes the train down to survey the site, distributes donations and condolences, and plans an itinerary that combines volunteering with viewing the aftermath of the tsunami Rumours of an enormous trash island formed from wreckage and ‘destined to swirl about the sea for decades’ float onto the TV, but quickly vanish Back at the office, Yona waits by the copy machine, feeling so catatonically bored that she starts to browse websites that estimate the user’s date of death After ten years at the company, her conscience is more of a whisper than a shout: a customer calls to cancel a trip because his child is in hospital, and she explains for the thousandth

Contributor

August 2014

Alexander Christie-Miller

Contributor

August 2014

ALEXANDER CHRISTIE-MILLER  is a writer and journalist based in Istanbul. His writing about Turkish politics and culture has been...

Forgotten Sea

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Issue No. 11

Alexander Christie-Miller

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Issue No. 11

I. As I stood on the flanks of the Kaçkar Mountains where they slope into the Black Sea near the town of Arhavi, the...
Occupy Gezi: From the Fringes to the Centre, and Back Again

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July 2013

Alexander Christie-Miller

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July 2013

Taksim Square appears at first a wide, featureless and unlovely place. It is a ganglion of roads and bus routes, a destination and a...

READ NEXT

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July 2014

The Fast, the Furious and the Power of Frivolity

Orlando Whitfield

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July 2014

The six chapters that comprise the Fast & Furious franchise thus far (a seventh is due for release in...

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Issue No. 2

Three Poets and the World

Caleb Klaces

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Issue No. 2

In 1925, aged 20, the Hungarian poet Attila József was expelled from the University of Szeged for a radical...

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September 2011

Sleepwalking through the Mekong

Michael Earl Craig

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September 2011

I have my hands out in front of me. I’m lightly patting down everything I come across. I somehow...

 

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