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Author | Ismail Kadare |
---|---|
Original title | Qorrfermani |
Language | Albanian |
Genre | Dystopian fiction, political fiction |
Publisher | Onufri |
Publication date | 1991 |
Publication place | Albania |
Published in English | 2005 |
Pages | 90 |
ISBN | 978-1611451085 |
The Blinding Order ( Albanian: Qorrfermani, lit. 'Curse It') is a short novel written by Ismail Kadare in 1984 and published in 1991, shortly after the collapse of the hoxhaist regime in Albania. [1] Set in the 19th-century Ottoman Empire, The Blinding Order is a parable about the use of terror by authoritarian regimes, [2] and it is linked through its main subplot to the author's banned 1981 novel The Palace of Dreams. [3]
Kadare wrote The Blinding Order in the aftermath of a terror campaign in Communist Albania.[ citation needed]
The plot centres on a religious order issued by a Sultan, calling for all people with the "dubious power" [4] of the evil eye to be blinded, and the subsequent terror campaign that follows. All this is narrated in a "fable tone of one thousand and one nightmare nights" [5]
Describing the novel as "superbly plotted" and "charged with bitter black humor," Kirkus Reviews praised it as "a masterly parable worthy of comparison with José Saramago's Nobel-anointed fiction. [3] Boyd Tonkin from The Independent described it as "a chilling fable of inscrutable tyranny and collective surrender". [6] Wolfgang Schneider from Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, while reviewing Der Raub des Königlichen Schlafs – a volume of 12 stories, novellas and short novels by Kadare, published in German –singled out The Blinding Order as the best one, describing it as a "grandiose story". According to him, it gives "literary form" to the "horror of the sabotage-accusation"-which numerous people in socialist countries fell victim to. [5]
![]() | |
Author | Ismail Kadare |
---|---|
Original title | Qorrfermani |
Language | Albanian |
Genre | Dystopian fiction, political fiction |
Publisher | Onufri |
Publication date | 1991 |
Publication place | Albania |
Published in English | 2005 |
Pages | 90 |
ISBN | 978-1611451085 |
The Blinding Order ( Albanian: Qorrfermani, lit. 'Curse It') is a short novel written by Ismail Kadare in 1984 and published in 1991, shortly after the collapse of the hoxhaist regime in Albania. [1] Set in the 19th-century Ottoman Empire, The Blinding Order is a parable about the use of terror by authoritarian regimes, [2] and it is linked through its main subplot to the author's banned 1981 novel The Palace of Dreams. [3]
Kadare wrote The Blinding Order in the aftermath of a terror campaign in Communist Albania.[ citation needed]
The plot centres on a religious order issued by a Sultan, calling for all people with the "dubious power" [4] of the evil eye to be blinded, and the subsequent terror campaign that follows. All this is narrated in a "fable tone of one thousand and one nightmare nights" [5]
Describing the novel as "superbly plotted" and "charged with bitter black humor," Kirkus Reviews praised it as "a masterly parable worthy of comparison with José Saramago's Nobel-anointed fiction. [3] Boyd Tonkin from The Independent described it as "a chilling fable of inscrutable tyranny and collective surrender". [6] Wolfgang Schneider from Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, while reviewing Der Raub des Königlichen Schlafs – a volume of 12 stories, novellas and short novels by Kadare, published in German –singled out The Blinding Order as the best one, describing it as a "grandiose story". According to him, it gives "literary form" to the "horror of the sabotage-accusation"-which numerous people in socialist countries fell victim to. [5]