Phan Nhiên Hạo’s poems are short, sincere bursts of life which in simple language capture precise impressions of incredibly complex feelings and emotions, intimately portraying the history of a country, a man and his journey into exile. During the second Writers@Grinnell event of the spring semester on March 2, Hạo and Hai-Dang Phan, associate professor.
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The English title is
Ethos, but the words you see in the opening credits are, of course, in Turkish:
Bir Başkadır. Episode after episode, I would rack my brain for a suitable translation one that fit the idea of
ethos, but also matched the delicate world of the show. “It’s Something Else,” I ventured to my partner. Or, “There’s One More Thing.” Or, maybe, simply, “The Other,” as in, an-other-ness? Something about this eight-episode miniseries its wistful soundtrack, its themes of miscommunication, deflection, silence, and withholding encouraged me to keep generating my own language for it. I still haven’t looked up the dictionary translation for the Turkish phrase.