Revisiting Oedipus Rex in The Red-Haired Woman

Title: The Red-Haired Woman (Kırmızı Saçh Kadın) Author: Orhan Pamuk Translated from the Turkish by Ekin Oklap Publisher: Faber & Faber, London Year published: 2017 253 pages The Red-Haired Woman is a haunting and layered novel that weaves together memory, myth, politics, and personal guilt to explore the relationship between fathers and sons, as well as the tension between tradition and modernity. Set against the backdrop of Turkey’s shifting political and cultural landscape from the 1980s to the present, the story follows Cem Çelik, a boy from Istanbul who, after his father abandons the family, takes up a summer job apprenticing with a traditional well-digger in the rural town of Öngören. As the well-digger, Master Mahmut, becomes a temporary father figure to Cem, their relationship mirrors the intimate yet fraught dynamics of paternal authority. Cem’s adolescent restlessness and curiosity grow, especially after he catches glimpses of a traveling theater troupe ...