Known and strange things Essays

Teju Cole

Book - 2016

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

814.6/Cole
2 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 814.6/Cole Checked In
2nd Floor 814.6/Cole Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
New York : Random House 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Teju Cole (author)
Item Description
Consists of various essays on art, literature, and politics, some previously published in various journals and periodicals.
Physical Description
xvi, 393 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : color illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780812989786
  • Preface
  • Section I. Reading Things
  • Black Body
  • Natives on the Boat
  • Housing Mr. Biswas
  • Tomas Tranströmer
  • Poetry of the Disregarded
  • Always Returning
  • A Better Quality of Agony
  • Derek Walcott
  • Aciman's Alibis
  • Double Negative
  • In Place of Thought
  • A Conversation with Aleksandar Hemon
  • Section II. Seeing Things
  • Unnamed Lake
  • Wangechi Mutu
  • Age, Actually
  • An African Caesar
  • Peter Sculthorpe
  • Red Shift
  • John Berger
  • Portrait of a Lady
  • Object Lesson
  • Saul Leiter
  • A True Picture of Black Skin
  • Gueorgui Pinkhassov
  • Perfect and Unrehearsed
  • Disappearing Shanghai
  • Touching Strangers
  • Finders Keepers
  • Google's Macchia
  • The Atlas of Affect
  • Memories of Things Unseen
  • Death in the Browser Tab
  • The Unquiet Sky
  • Against Neutrality
  • Section III. Being There
  • Far Away from Here
  • Home Strange Home
  • The Reprint
  • A Reader's War
  • Madmen and Specialists
  • What It Is
  • Kofi Awoonor
  • Captivity
  • In Alabama
  • Bad Laws
  • Brazilian Earth
  • Angels in Winter
  • Shadows in São Paulo
  • Two Weeks
  • The Island
  • Reconciliation
  • Break It Down
  • The White Savior Industrial Complex
  • "Perplexed ... Perplexed"
  • A Piece of the Wall
  • Section IV. Epilogue
  • Blind Spot
  • Acknowledgments
Review by New York Times Review

TEJU COLE'S CAPTIVATING and lauded novels, "Open City" and "Every Day Is for the Thief," reflect his identity as a writer with a global perspective - born in the United States and raised in Nigeria. His international access as an author, art historian and photographer - one who also teaches and is a photography critic for The New York Times Magazine - shapes not only his obsessions but, in a chicken-and-egg sense, determines his gaze. He takes in news from African countries and American cities; but also, by necessity and interest, Asian, European and Latin American culture and history. In short, the world belongs to Cole and is thornily and gloriously allied with his curiosity and his personhood. "Known and Strange Things," his first collection of nonfiction, journeys through all the landscapes he has access to: international, personal, cultural, technological and emotional. When he feels homesick, he informs us in this book, he "visits" his parents in Nigeria through Google maps - a sweet if distant form of connection. In "The Anxiety of Influence," the renowned critic Harold Bloom argued that poets, especially those in the Western tradition since the Renaissance, necessarily negotiate the work of their predecessors as they write. "The precursors flood us," Bloom wrote, "and our imaginations can die by drowning in them, but no imaginative life is possible if such inundation is wholly evaded." Cole shares Bloom's interest in the fraught and burdened relationship writers and artists have to our ancestors, and he seeks to answer yet another question: How does the imagination cross and recross racial and filial boundaries, and what does this crossing mean? With our ever-enlarging global access to the visions and voices and influences of others, Cole attempts to untangle the knot of who or what belongs to us and to whom or what do we belong as artists, thinkers and, finally, human beings. In this light, "Black Body," the opening essay in "Known and Strange Things," engages the "question of filiation" that tormented James Baldwin in his essay "Stranger in the Village." Baldwin, reflecting on his stay in the white-peopled Swiss village of Leukerbad, was moved to write that "the most illiterate among them is related, in a way I am not, to Dante, Shakespeare, Michelangelo. ... Out of their hymns and dances come Beethoven and Bach. Go back a few centuries and they are in their full glory - but I am in Africa, watching the conquerors arrive." Cole, revisiting the terrain of Leukerbad, pairs himself with Baldwin (also echoing, in his parenthesis, the poet Elizabeth Bishop's "One Art"): "I am black like him; and I am slender; and have a gap in my front teeth and am not especially tall (no, write it: short) ... and feel myself in all places, from New York City to rural Switzerland, the custodian of a black body, and have to find the language for all of what that means to me and to the people who look at me. The ancestor had briefly taken possession of the descendant." But Cole soon distances himself from Baldwin's feeling of alienation. He states that Baldwin's "self-abnegation" prevents him from embracing Bach or Rembrandt, who Cole insists do not belong to one race. He might even care more about these artists "than some white people do," Cole writes. The first section of the collection, "Reading Things," has Cole claiming filiation with a number of authors (all male) who prove important to him. In the case of many of them, influence begets influence. Along with Baldwin comes V.S. Naipaul ("The benevolent rheumy-eyed old soul: so fond of the word 'nigger,' so aggressive in his lack of sympathy toward Africa, so brutal in his treatment of woman"); Tomas Transtromer ("It's a good thing I'm unembarrassable about influence, because I realize now how many of Transtromer's concepts I have hidden away in my own work"); W.G. Sebald ("This expert mixing of forms owed a great deal to his reading of the 17th-century melancholics Robert Burton and Thomas Browne"); Derek Walcott ("He names painters as his exemplars more often than he names poets: Pissarro, Veronese, Cézanne, Manet, Gauguin and Millet roll through the pages") ; and André Aciman ("Adman's debt to Proust is deep and freely acknowledged"). This opening section concludes with "A Conversation With Aleksandar Hemon," in which Hemon - a writer and critic and self-identified "diasporic person" - questions Cole on what Nigerian history means to him. Cole's answer catapults him into a global context: "My identity maps onto other things: being a Lagosian (Lagos is like a city-state), being a West African, being African, being a part of the Black Atlantic. I identify strongly with the historical network that connects New York, New Orleans, Rio de Janeiro and Lagos." Hemon is also interested in what happens when influences are constantly shaping and reshaping the imagination. For Cole, visual artists, especially painters, are least affected by that anxiety of influence and "know that everything is a combination of what's observed, what's imagined, what's overheard and what's been done before." He argues that to acknowledge influence is to let go of notions of "literal records of reality" and cultural or racial ownership of content. All Cole wants is to be "dragged down into a space of narrative that I haven't been in before." The stunning second section, "Seeing Things," is especially captivating and reveals Cole's voracious appetite for and love of the visual. Taken together, the essays in this section provide a comprehensive look at contemporary photography, placed within a historical framework. This approach brings forward evidence of things unseen, things, as Susan Sontag put it, "least likely to be known." The artists who have Cole's attention impose their individual and subjective sense on the material of the world, rejecting the notion, as most photographers do by nature, that it is possible to capture objective "records of reality." He is drawn toward filmmakers and the visual artists who see with this photographer's orientation. The collage work of Wangechi Mutu, described as "both easy and difficult to look at, seductive in their patterning, grotesque in their themes," relies on actual photographic images; Cole's favorite films by Michael Haneke and Krzysztof Kieslowski bring into view images of life so ordinary they could escape our attention. Cole believes that all of this work allows us to think with the eyes, and though the Australian composer Peter Sculthrope is also included here, his music becomes a passageway into the landscape and history of Australia. But it's the essays that focus explicitly on photography, especially, that demand our attention. Cole considers here the work of both well and lesser known photographers such as Seydou Keita, Malick Sidibe, J. D. 'Okhai Ojeikere, Joseph Moise Agbodjelou, Zanele Muholi, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Sergei Ilnitsky, Sam Abell, Glenna Gordan, Saul Leiter, Richard Renaldi, Thomas Demand, as well as Google-based photographic and filmic practitioners like Doug Rickard, Mishka Henner, Aaron Hobson, Michael Wolf and Dina Kelberman. These photographers, whether reframing "anthropological images of 'natives' made by Europeans in the late 19th and early 20th centuries" or applying a curatorial eye to the world around us, are democratizing the history of photography. When the occasional essay fails to hold interest it's because the connections Cole draws to some European lineage remain tenuous. This is the case, for example, with Cole's meditation on death through the woodcuts entitled "Pictures of Death," by Hans Holbein the Younger, which brings him to the killing of the African-American Walter Scott by a South Carolina police officer in 2015, which in turn makes him think about the writer Sir Walter Scott and one of his short stories, about a premeditated murder, "The Two Drovers." This associative style enables Cole to move across disciplines and through time, but in this case seems tendentious. In the third section, "Being There," photography's ability as a discipline to present a unique archive of reality comes most clearly into light. These essays track Cole's journeys around an explosive world of drones, wars and diseases, including the kidnappings of young girls in Chibok and assassinations of terror suspects by drone warfare. Cole happens to be streets away when the poet Kofi Awoonor is killed in a terrorist massacre in a Nairobi mall. He finds in Awoonor's work some echoes of T.S. Eliot, but Cole ends his essay with a line from Awoonor, himself quoting "an ancient poet from my tradition" : "I will say it before death comes. And if I don't say it, let no one say it for me. I will be the one who will say it." Even as Cole positions Awoonor relative to the European tradition, he also allows Awoonor to have the last word. One of the most resonant and powerful essays in "Being There" is "The White Savior Industrial Complex," an expansion of Cole's seven-part-Twitter-feed response to "Kony 2012," a video calling for the arrest of the Ugandan rebel leader Joseph Kony. He meditates more fully here on the interconnectivity of American political polices to their outcome. Activist philanthropy that begins in amnesia lacks, in Cole's words, "constellational thinking." He lays bear the relationship among sentimentality, ignorance, corruption, pillage and complicity within our global communities. Under Cole's watchful eye the world shrinks into a network of countries, communities and individuals influenced by, dependent on and affected by other countries, communities and individuals. This brilliant collection closes with an epilogue, "Blind Spot," in which Cole recounts the time he first had an episode of papillophlebitis, or "big blind spot syndrome." If epilogues benefit from hindsight, it's difficult not to feel the piece is intended by Cole to be read diagnostically, beyond its autobiographical content. In the essay, Cole admits to feeling shame as he worries that a waitress in a Hudson, N.Y., cafe he stumbles into might not interpret his inability to read a menu as eye trouble but assume instead that he was "illiterate." This use of the word "illiterate" is an echo of the James Baldwin quotation in the first essay in the collection, "Black Body." Suddenly the essays endeavoring to connect and build lines of influence between the canon of Western and African literature and art tremble as they stand in relation to the strange and surprising feeling of being misread. How quickly the black body can be thrown out of its cosmopolitanism and literacy, as the author's own anxieties overtake him sitting at a counter in that cafe next to "two blond women and two men, also fair haired." Cole's global perspective hits its limit here. History - literary, political, social or personal - offers us a vast archive of knowledge that both influences and challenges the definitions we construct for ourselves. On every level of engagement and critique, "Known and Strange Things" is an essential and scintillating journey. CLAUDIA RANKINE is the Iseman professor of poetry at Yale. She is the author of five collections of poetry, including, most recently, "Citizen."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [September 14, 2016]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Picture a kaleidoscope: each shining component is a small jewel for sure, but taken together, they form a stunning picture that can be viewed from myriad dazzling angles. The same can be said for the social and critical commentary by award-winning novelist Cole (Every Day Is for the Thief, 2015) in this essay collection, his first nonfiction title. The articles analyze various aspects of culture, from poetry, books (a conversation with author Aleksandar Hemon is included here), photography, and more. Cole's insights cast fresh light on even the most quotidian of objects. He shares his reasoning about why all selfies are the same; and, in a beautiful essay about artist-collectors, shows how the very ubiquitousness of pictures in today's digital, smartphone world is leading to our interpreting visual art in new ways. An American brought up in Lagos, Cole places race, especially in the context of an outsider-insider perspective, under the microscope as well. A particularly moving essay discusses the disconnect between the America of his Nigerian imagination and the one he eventually came home to. Cole's collection performs an important service by elevating public discourse in an unsettled time.--Apte, Poornima Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Three experiences structure this first nonfiction collection from novelist Cole (Every Day Is for the Thief). The first section, "Reading Things," offers appreciations of writers, among them Tomas Tranströmer, Sonali Deraniyagala, André Aciman, Ivan Vladislavic, and, especially, W.G. Sebald, whose work raises the same ethical questions Cole asks time and again. The second, "Seeing Things," explores the work of visual artists, primarily photographers, from places as different as Mali, Russia, France, and South Africa, and casts keen-eyed scrutiny upon photography itself. Cole's tripartite structure concludes with "Being There." Throughout, Cole forges unexpected connections, as in "Unnamed Lake," in which, over the course of one sleepless night, his mind wanders over different historical moments: a Nazi performance of Beethoven at the opening of the extermination camp in Belzec, Poland (1942); the death of the last Tasmanian tiger (1936); a military coup in Nigeria (1966); a ferry disaster in Bangladesh (2014); and the atomic bombing of Nagasaki (1945). Cole is a literary performance artist, his words meticulously chosen and deployed with elegance and force. To read, see, and travel with him is to be changed by the questions that challenge him. As he observes of one writer, "The pleasure of reading him resides in the pleasure of his company"; the same may well be said of Cole. Agent: Andrew Wylie, Wylie Agency. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A striking collection of essays that will leave readers wanting to reimagine our contemporary environment.In his first work of nonfiction, Cole (Every Day Is for the Thief, 2015, etc.) crafts an anthological book of reflections divided into four parts: "Reading Things," "Seeing Things," "Being Here," and "Epilogue." Without much warning, readers are immediately thrown into the current issues that punctuate the news, social media, and the literary community. Acclaimed as both photographer and art theorist, Cole uses short essays to communicate fundamental ideas about his craft: "a photograph isa little machine of ironies that contains within it a number of oppositions: light and dark, memory and forgetting, ethics and injustice, permanence and evanescence." The author discusses James Baldwin and Jacques Derrida, and he analyzes the works of various photographers and poets throughout the years. The result is a compilation of essays that call to mind what Walter Benjamin did in his Illuminations: taking cultural works and applying them critically and politically to the now. "The black body comes prejudged, and as a result it is placed in needless jeopardy," writes Cole. In fact, questions of race identity and justice are paramount for the author. "History won't let go of us," he writes. "We're pinned to it." What's clear is that Cole perseveres in breaking away from historical tropes, offering to his readers differing perspectives that emerge from wide-ranging areas of study. "What always interests meindeed obsesses meis the way we engage in history," he writes. "Except there is no we.' Americans do it differently and, often, irresponsibly and without particular interest." Moments like these will make American readers stop to think, question the population they belong to, and find ways to make it better. The hope that Cole infuses in his prose is mirrored with poetically entrancing sentences: "We are not mayflies. We have known afternoons, and we live day after day for a great many days." A bold, honest, and controversially necessary read. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Angels in Winter  Dear Beth, Our first sight of land came from Lazio's farms, a green different from American green, less neon-bright, more troubled with brown. Later, on the express train into town, the impression was strengthened by the scattering of pines, palms, and cypresses along the tracks. I became aware for the first time of how plant life is part of the story of being in a foreign place. As the eye adjusts to different buildings and different uses of technology, as the ear begins to find its way into the local dialect, the flora, too, present a challenge to the senses. Here, the biome projected a certain obstinacy: these plants had struggled against both human culture and hot weather for a long time.  It wasn't hot the day we arrived. It was cool, the fog interleaved with rain, spoiling visibility. A woman from Verona, her ticket on her lap, sat across from us. She wore a business suit and sunglasses, and had the slight impatience of early morning work--related travel. On the other side of the aisle was a middle-aged couple, the man in a blue tracksuit (which at the belly strained to contain him). Facing them, a sharply dressed young man in dark blue suit, powder--blue shirt, and skinny black tie spoke loudly into the telephone--"Pronto! Sì, sì. Sì, sì, sì! Andiamo, ciao, ciao!"--a clipped bare-bones negotiation. There was a performative busyness in his torrent of sì's; negotium, the negation of pleasure. Italy is a Third World country. It has the ostentatious contrasts as well as the brittle pride. The greenery of Fiumicino quickly gave way to abandoned buildings with rusted roofs. We rumbled by a necropolis of wrecked cars in a wide yard, beyond which were muddy roads stretching back into the country and ceasing to be roads, become just muddy fields. On the culverts and walls, as those became more numerous, graffiti artists were indefatigable, covering every available surface. The tags were beautiful: they answered to the ancient ruins. The ruins themselves were as elaborate as stretches of aqueduct, or as simple as sections of broken wall. Their size as well as their integration into the landscape was the first real sign of the ubiquity of the past in Rome. In many places this past was elaborated and curated (as I would soon discover), but in others it was entirely untouched, the material relics simply remaining there, a testament to thousands of years of decay, an echo of the wealth and greatness of the people who lived here. The suburban tenements soon appeared, festooned with washing, and increasingly small patches of open land on which flocks of tough-looking sheep grazed. By the time we arrived at Termini, the rain had begun again, this time heavily. We knew which bus we wanted, but there were no bus maps (everyone else seemed to know where to go). Finding the right embarkation point consisted of walking from one section of the parking lot to another, and we were drenched by the time we did find it. But time quickened, and we were soon inside Rome proper, in the Esquiline (one of the original seven hills), inside what felt like a gigantic Cinecittà set. I was intoxicated by the visual impression of the place: the large well-laid-out squares, the dilapidated but elegant buildings, the Vespas, the mid--century modern feel of much of the signage, the ragged edges on everything (for some reason all this made me think of Julian Schnabel). It was alluring, even in winter, perhaps especially in winter, with the colors warm and bold (orange, red, and yellow), but somewhat desaturated. As we passed through Piazza Vittorio Emanuele, I noted the gargantuan scale of the built environment, and the profusion of ornament. Both scale and ornament are related to history. "The classics" are not homogeneous. But what distinguishes Roman art from Greek art? I go with this impression: the Greeks were idealists, invested in the perfection of form, fixated on eternity. Isn't the way people die in the Iliad, sorrowfully but not without a certain dignity, part of the attraction? I thought of your love for the Greeks, Beth, which is related to this dignity. The Romans, who later adopted their forms with a startling exactness--much of what we know of Greek art is from Roman copies--were more grounded: they got more complicatedly into the preexisting questions of political advantage, obsequy, national honor, and, of course, empire. Propaganda became more vivid than ever. And so, the buildings got larger and more ornate, lurid even, ostensibly to honor the gods or the predecessor rulers (many of whom were deified), but in reality as guarantees of personal glory. The Greeks loved philosophy for its own sake, more or less, but the Romans loved it for what it could be used for, namely political power. This at least was the way I understood it--you'll forgive a traveler's generalizations. Roman propaganda, the manipulation of images for political ends, hadn't begun with Augustus, Julius Caesar's successor and the first of the emperors, but he'd certainly brought it to a keen level. He'd enlisted architects and sculptors for the project of transforming him from violent claimant to the leadership--​a position for which he was neither more nor less qualified than his main rival, Mark Antony--to Pater Patriae. The message, which got through, was that he was not merely fatherly but also avuncular. He was powerful, well loved, generous, and his leadership was inevitable. Augustus's successful marshaling of art to the shaping of his image was the template for just about every emperor who came afterward. The skill and subtlety of Roman art, from the first-century emperors to Constantine in the fourth, was for the most part dedicated to dynastic and propagandistic goals. Was there after all, I asked myself, so great a leap between imperial Rome and the buffoonery of Mussolini? The misuse of piety was no new thing. And so, on that first day, heading out in the late afternoon to the Capitoline Hill--the ancient site of an important temple to Jupiter, now a set of museums around a Michelangelo-designed piazza--I was braced for a mental separation between art and its public functions. I came up Michelangelo's broad, ramped staircase, past the monumental sculptures of Castor and Pollux, into the glistening egg-shaped piazza. The rain had ceased. Not many people were around. I had my arsenal of doubts at the ready. But I want to set parentheses around this essay, Beth. It's no good pretending that, in going to Rome in 2009, one has gone to some exotic corner of the earth. Rome was as central a center of the world as there has been in this world. And now that there are many centers, it remains one of the important ones. So, I want to acknowledge not only that millions of other visitors do what I just did--visit Rome as tourists or pilgrims--but that this has been going on for a great long while. Those visitors have included many of the world's best writers, and, in addition, many of the world's great writers have been themselves Romans. I am unlikely to write anything new or penetrating about Rome. In writing about Rome, I am writing about art and history and politics, and how those things relate particularly to me, a solitary observer with a necessarily narrow, a necessarily shallow, view of the place. Rome is simply the pretext, and the font of specifics, for the discontinuous thoughts of a first-time traveler. And while I'm at it, I also want to question the very possibility of writing anything about a people, in this particular case Romans. Is it possible, I wonder, to write a sentence that begins "Romans are . . . ," and have such a sentence be interesting and truthful at the same time? We are properly skeptical of gen-eralizations, after a lifetime of "blacks are . . . ," "women are . . . ," "Indians are . . . ," "Pakistanis are . . ." But an important part of the Roman enterprise, historically speaking, was the effort to characterize Rome and what it meant to be a Roman. This went beyond local pride, and also beyond imperial ambition. It was a certain relationship to fellow citizens and to the state, a relationship aided by war and by oratory. Principles were important, they were fought over if necessary, and any and all hypocrisies had to be practiced under the aegis of the principles. The motto SPQR (Senatus Populusque Romanus: a reminder that a given enterprise or monument was there at the pleasure of the senate and people of Rome) simply manifested the principles at stake. Rome followed the example of Athens in this (think of Pericles's funeral oration, which had more sly jingoism than an American campaign speech) and would herself later serve as exemplum for the American experiment. Before American exceptionalism, there was Roman exceptionalism, to a much more severe degree. Our Capitol is named for the Capitoline Hill. Close parentheses. Thus primed with my skepticism, a skepticism compounded with an anticolonial instinct, I entered the museums on the Capitoline Hill. Well: so much for preparation. I was floored. My theories simply had no chance against what I experienced--the finest collection of classical statuary I had ever seen. The strength of the collection was not limited to the famous pieces--the Capitoline Venus, the Dying Gaul, the Colossus of Constantine --wonderful though they were. There were countless other sculptures, including several, such as a standing Hermes, that would have been the proud centerpieces of lesser collections. The patron of boundaries wore his winged hat and winged sandals, held a caduceus in his hand--what a wonder to meet Hermes where Hermes meant so much. But what struck me most was the rooms full of marble portrait busts. Ancient Roman marble portraiture rose to a very high degree of competence. It was an art that had been less thoroughly pursued by the Greeks, invested as they were in ideal forms. The fascination of Roman portraiture for me was twofold. First, I was struck by how subject to fashions it was, how, within the space of thirty or forty years, there were perceptible shifts in the sculptural style. The pendulum swung between "veristic" and "idealizing" techniques. A female portrait from the second century c.e., for instance, is rather easy to identify: the sculptors depicted the corkscrew hairstyle of the time in careful detail, and made extensive use of the drill (to poke holes in the marble, and give the hair an illusion of depth). Drills were used, too, in portraits of men during this period: after Hadrian's decision to wear one, beards were all the rage, and they were sculpted in marble with drills. By the time of Marcus Aurelius and his son Commodus (both bearded), portraiture had reached new levels of psychological acuity. To the realistic depiction of age and wrinkles, which was itself a conscious throwback to the portraiture of the Roman republic, there were now added indications of the subjects' frame of mind: melancholy, levity, exhaustion, fleeting states set in stone. Among the many representations of the gods and emperors and senators were busts of ordinary citizens. What these portraits showed was that ordinary Romans participated intimately in this image economy. I was right to have been aware of the propagandistic aspect of image making, but not to the extent of forgetting how widespread and common images themselves were, and how generally sophisticated the ability to read them. One estimate puts the number of sculptures in Rome in the second century at 2 million. History tends to favor rulers and warriors, but the history that peered at me from the white marble faces on the Capitoline was closer to ground level: bakers, soldiers, courtesans, writers. It was a history of involvement and implication in the Roman project. Whatever Rome was, or whatever it had been, it was so out of the enthusiasm of the people of Rome for Roman modes of being. The sculptures were one part of that. They were a way of expressing a desire to be honored and to be remembered. That the results were so visually arresting was no coincidence. The visual propaganda of the emperors would not have been so forceful had the populace not been already attuned to imagery. So, "Romans are . . ." what? Romans are people who are part of Rome, and would rather be part of Rome. To be Roman was to participate in Rome. That was my inkling on the first day. But, of course, that inkling was not to last the week without revision. "We are working hard. In fact we're just hustling. It's not easy at all," Moses said. He'd made little room for small talk or pleasantries. A certain bitterness was evident in his voice. Moses was a friend of Paula's, and she'd introduced him to me because he was a Nigerian, an Ibo. Before he came to the house, she'd told me that he was a building contractor. "He is in partnership with an Italian. You know why? If you have an employee, there are rules, you must pay a certain amount, of taxes, of benefits, a certain minimum salary. But if you are 'partners,' then there is no responsibility. And so this man cheats him by making him a partner; Italians cheat foreign employees this way. They painted this house, but I don't know who pocketed the money." Moses's sober mien and sharp comments confirmed this picture. "Our problem is that when we go home, when we are there for a few days, we spend one thousand euros. And everyone thinks that life must be luxurious for us overseas. They think we live in palaces here. It is not so, but they don't know that. They get on the next flight and come. They meet a bad situation in Rome." I asked him about the Nigerian community in Rome. "There are many of us," he said, "not as many as Turin---you know, that's where our women are, mostly, doing, you know---but our people are always how they are. You know our people. No Nigerian helps you unless you help them first, unless you pay them money. Nothing is free. There is no help. I've been in this country now nine years, and everything is still a struggle. Especially for those of us who don't have much education." Moses spoke fluent Italian, and he wore a well-cut brown suit, a blush-colored tie, oxblood brogues. His mustache was meticulously trimmed to a slightly comical half-inch-thick strip on either side of his philtrum. There was no particular warmth in his interaction with me, confessional though it was. His presentation was smart, his manner courtly, a contractor dressed like a dandy; but the tone was all exhaustion. A miserable cry of exhaustion. "Our women" to describe the Nigerian prostitutes in Turin was, I thought, part of his resigned attitude. No activist he, just a brother trying to survive. Paula was Italian, and separated from her husband. She ran the bed-and-breakfast with the help of a business partner. The husband, Carlo, helped when she needed it. We'd met him on the first day--an evasive, thin-faced man--and hadn't seen him since. Their split was recent. Paula herself was warm, an "accidental Italian" as she saw it, much more interested in Latin America, in salsa and tango, and in learning English. One evening, at the kitchen table of her beautiful home, she said, "Have you read Saviano? Everyone here read this book. It's so sad, no? I feel such deep shame for my country." Roberto Saviano's exposé of the mafia, Gomorrah, had been a bestseller, and had been recently made into a film. But a number of threats on his life meant that he was now under round--the--clock police protection. It was a big story. For anyone who knew the ruthlessness and reach of the Naples organization known as the Camorra, the threats were credible, and chilling. Their tentacles reached into high levels of law enforcement and government. "I don't care about Berlusconi. Everyone hates him," Paula said, "but I care about the future of Italy. It means nothing to me, for myself, but I think always of my daughter. She is growing up here, she will maybe make her life here. We have a justice system so slow that it is like having no justice system. Mafia bosses are released on technicalities, but petty criminals get stiff sentences. Can you believe, in Naples, when the police comes to arrest a killer, the women get in the street and make a big scene, shouting, crying? The Camorra is like a cult; it controls them totally. I have such shame for this country. And our politicians, of course, they can do nothing. Berlusconi, he is the worst, just the worst. You say his name and people spit." Perry Anderson, in a recent essay in the London Review of Books, wrote about the "invertebrate left" in Italy. From the engaged and partially successful interventions of Antonio Gramsci and Rodolfo Morandi there had now emerged . . . ​nothing. Italian politics was a mass of confusions, and within this confusion, rightist parties clung on to power. Paula said, "We are excited for America. We love Obama. But we don't believe we can change things here. It's not possible, so we don't try. It's a great shame for us, though people don't talk much about it." Later, on television I watch Berlusconi speak rapidly and smugly, his hands gesturing at speed. The impunity that he and the Camorristi share is met with shrugs. He's made of money; he can outbid anyone. Father Rafael said, "Italians are too interested in enjoying life to do anything about politics. Wine, fashion, that's what they care about. So people like Berlusconi face no opposition." Father Rafael was a Jesuit I had met through another priest in New York last summer. He now lived in Rome. He was easygoing, in his mid-forties, not at all ascetic. We'd first met over drinks and football matches. I was drawn to him then for his matter-of-fact style. "Most priests dislike this pope," he'd said to me, "he's old, his ideas are old. The sooner he dies off, the better. This is something we priests talk about openly. We loved John Paul, because he did a lot to move the church forward in the right ways. Now Benedict, among his other mistakes, has given a free pass to those who want to drop the vernacular and return to a Latin mass. What's the point?" Like many priests of his generation, he's not from Europe or America, not white. He's from Angola, though for many years he worked in Burundi, and considers it his home now. We met in a trattoria not far from the Colosseum. I ordered the pizza with prosciutto and fungi; he ordered the same, but without the ham; it was Lent. "You won't have too much problem with racism here," he said, "especially if you speak the language. Italians love that, when someone from outside masters their language." He was doing advanced studies in biblical scholarship at the Society of Jesus. Italian, being only a half step away from Portuguese, had been easy for him to learn. "And you have to remember, there are racists everywhere." But, I wanted to know, wasn't the situation of the Roma, the gypsies, especially bad? "That's true," he said, "people here have little patience with them. There is a belief that they are generally criminals and, well, they are. They raise their children up to be thieves." I had raised an eyebrow, so he softened his stance. "Out of every two crimes reported in the newspaper, one is committed by Roma. Is that the reality? Who knows? But that is what is reported. So, Romans don't view them as human beings, really. There is a big effort in the comune to push them out once and for all. There have been rapes and murders recently that they are blamed for. And that is why you haven't seen many of them: they're afraid! I think there's a real possibility of Roma men being lynched in this city now. The feeling about them is that hostile." On the metro lines, there was a small set of videos that recycled endlessly on TV screens. One, a jaunty little cartoon, warned you against pickpockets. Another was a television blooper reel, most memorably featuring a fat man in a hurdle race who stumbled at every hurdle but kept going. And then there was the slickly produced spot that implored those who had been victims of racism to call the number provided. The "anti--razzismo" push was a serious public project. But privately? In many restaurants and museums, I was stared at, aggressively and repeatedly. In public interactions, I was treated either to the famous Mediterranean warmth (usually by the young) or to an almost shocking disdain. I had at least four incidents of speaking to people (in my few phrases of Italian) and being met with resolute silence, some transactions taking place entirely in that silence. There were in any case many people of color in the city: Africans, Bangladeshis, Latin Americans. Around them was the inescapable air of being on the margins--the clergy seemed to be visitors, and the workers (newsagents, street florists, sellers of knockoff luxury goods) appeared to have scarcely more secure a hold. They were here only because Romans, for now, tolerated their presence. The comune was Roman, nativist. Not black, not brown, not Albanian, and definitely not Roma. After Berlusconi's frothing performance, the RAI picture cut to a newscast. The newscaster was a middle-aged African man, much darker than I am, distinguished-looking, graying at the temples. He delivered the day's headlines in rapid Italian, and in the cloying, ingratiating style common to newscasters everywhere. I used to hate angels. But even to put it that way gives them too much credence. It would be more accurate to say I don't believe in angels but I dislike the idea of angels, finding them silly, seeing none of the beauty, grace, or comfort that people seem to project on them. When I was more active in church life, I found angels actively embarrassing, as though comic book or fantasy novel characters had somehow lodged themselves into the center of the world's most serious narrative. Fairy tales should have no role in theology. No feature of angels annoyed me more than their wings: impractical, unlikely, entirely incredible from a biological point of view. I always reasoned that for a man to fly with wings on his back, he would need back muscles as enormous as a bison's. Angels, in most depictions through the ages, looked like men with white toy wings tacked on. They were an infantile fantasy, made to bear a spiritual burden that they were, to my eyes at least, remarkably ill suited for. Angels were just about as relevant to my life as the preprocessed sentiment of Hallmark cards or Top 40 love songs: in other words, irrelevant. Toward the end of my week in Rome, standing in the long gallery of the Museo Pio--Clementino in the Vatican, I saw another fine statue of Hermes. Nearby were two herms. I did not look at the herms for long, but--as is fitting to their function--they flashed through me memorably. You know I have been thinking about porous boundaries, shadow regions, ambiguities, and, lately, about the idea of embodied intermediaries. This is why I have become more interested in how these intermediaries have been narrated: Hermes, Mercury, Esu, and, in the case of the Christian religions, angels. But no, to say "interested" is insufficient. Better to call it "invested"--an investment in what, it now occurs to me, I might call a parenthetical mode of life. I visited Rome in the waning of winter. The senses implicated me. The senses were key: in addition to the classical statuary, my most intense artistic experiences of Rome were the troubled architect Borromini and the troubled painter Caravaggio. Both freed my senses, caught my heart off guard, blew it open. Borromini's buildings--the small church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane in particular--seemed to be taking wing right before one's eyes. Caravaggio's paintings, meanwhile, were full of musicians, peasants, saints, and angels. His St. John the Baptist (at the Borghese Gallery), the young prophet with an inscrutable expression on his face, his body nestled next to a wild ram's, was a sensuous catalogue of subtle conflicts, as smoky and disturbing as anything by Leonardo da Vinci. People, too, stood in as angels. Paula, the owner of the bed-and-breakfast, who declared that she did not believe in doing anything if she could not do it with amore, was one such. Another was Annie, a new friend, whose wisdom and intelligence steeped me in worlds entirely mine and entirely unknown to me. In stories of her friends and acquaintances, I caught glimpses of creativity and flexibility (hers, as well as theirs). Through her, I understood De Sica better, and Rossellini, and Visconti. I especially enjoyed her story about driving Fellini around--of his insatiable curiosity about everything around him. And through her, I met Judit, a Hungarian photographer, who, in the long low Roman light of a Sunday evening, showed me a quarter century of her work, pictures taken in Budapest and Rome. Our photographs--I shot a great deal in my brief time in the city--had uncanny areas of resonance. We were drawn to the same moments: reflections, ruins, motion, wings. I wondered if perhaps immigrants and visitors had certain insights into the heart of a place, insights denied the natives. My life and Judit's had been so different, she growing up in Communist Hungary, wrestling over a lifetime of creativity with the legacy of great Hungarian photographers--Kertész, Munkácsi, Capa, Brassaï--then moving to Italy, and raising a son in what still felt, to her, like a foreign country. I was grateful for the connection, of which Annie had been the intermediary. And for the connection with Annie, too, which had been brokered by her sister, Natalie. These avatars of Hermes who guided me from where I had been to where I was to be. And you also, Beth, through whom these words and images now enter the world in a new way. At the Spanish Steps, where, even in winter, tourists swarm, there were lithe African men doing a brisk trade in Prada and Gucci bags. The men were young, personable as was required for sales, but at other moments full of melancholy. The bags were arranged on white cloths, not at all far from the luxury shops that sold the same goods for ten or twenty times more. It was late afternoon. Beautiful yellow light enfolded the city, and, from the top of the steps, the dome of St. Peter's was visible, as was the Janiculum Hill, on the other side of the Tiber. In that light, the city had an eternal aspect, an illumination seemed to come from the earth and glow up into the sky, not the other way around. Did I sense in myself, just then, a shift? A participation, however momentary, in what Rome was? There was a sudden commotion: with a great whoosh the African brothers raced up the steps, their white cloths now caught at the corners and converted into bulging sacks on their backs. One after the other, then in pairs, they fled upward, fleet of foot, past where I stood. Tourists shrank out of their way. I spun around and pressed the shutter. Far below, cars carrying carabinieri, the military police, arrived, but by then (all this was the action of less than half a minute) the brothers had gone. Later, I looked at the image on my camera: the last of the angels vanishing up the long flight of steps, a hurry through which known and strange things pass, their white wings flashing in the setting sun. Excerpted from Known and Strange Things: Essays by Teju Cole All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.