The Poetics of the City in Aka Morchiladze's "Madatov Trilogy"

The Poetics of the City in Aka Morchiladze's "Madatov Trilogy"

Authors

  • Mariam Korinteli Shota Rustaveli State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52340/lac.2025.34.08

Keywords:

აკა მორჩილაძე, „მადათოვის ტრილოგია“, პოეტიკა, ქალაქური ამბები

Abstract

In 21st-century Georgian prose, the city appears in two forms: 19th-century Tbilisi and post-Soviet Tbilisi.  Aka Morchiladze was one of the first authors to compose modern Georgian prose in full accordance with the traditions of a true urban novel, the genre. Then, in the first volume of the Madatov trilogy, "Flight to Madatov and Back," he traveled to the nineteenth century and developed a unique novel full of literary allusions, intertexts, allegories, mystifications, and myths of 19th-century Tbilisi, offering the most vivid portrayal of the city in that era.

The work aims to examine the city as an artistic space and unravel its mythic fabric within the Madatov Trilogy. Aka Morchiladze’s portrayal of the city is shaped by a unique myth he created, inspired by 19th-century Tbilisi and its urban archetypes.

Cities, particulalry those with a rich history, have their own myths. Tbilisi is no exception; Tbilisi's mythology is constantly evolving as some myths fade away, while the city's rhythm creates new ones in their place. Myths can be used to discuss the values ​​that unite the majority of Tbilisi residents.

At the heart of the book’s story is Madatov Island, one of the main sources of 19th-century Tbilisi’s mythology. The first volume of the story is about a murder: the body of a Tbilisi resident, Khapo the artist, is discovered on Madatov Island, and the inquiry uncovers a variety of urban secrets. The second novel, "Disappear on Madatov," is set ten years after the events of "Flight" and recaptures the pre-revolutionary excitement of twentieth-century Georgia.

The Whale on Madatov takes us back to early twentieth-century Georgia and tells the story of Madatov Island's disappearance. The book's ending takes an unexpected turn. Instead of using an existing urban myth, the author creates a whole new myth for Tbilisi, even shaping the city itself in the process. Throughout the trilogy, it seems that Aka Morchiladze views the city as a living organism, constantly shifting its form in response to the social, political, and cultural changes of the country.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

ავალიანი ლ., - ჭაბუა ამირეჯიბიდან აკა მორჩილაძემდე. თბილისი: გამომცემლობა „თეთრი გიორგი“. 2005

მორჩილაძე ა., - მადათოვი. თბილისი: ბაკურ სულაკაურის გამომცემლობა. 2018

ქარუმიძე ზ., - პოსტსაბჭოთა საქართველო და პოსტმოდრნიზმი, „არილი“, ივნისი. 2010

ხარბედია მ., - კუნძულების გოთიკა. თბილისი: არილი, 2008

Downloads

Published

2025-11-17

How to Cite

Korinteli, M. (2025). The Poetics of the City in Aka Morchiladze’s "Madatov Trilogy". Language and Culture, (34), 59–66. https://doi.org/10.52340/lac.2025.34.08

Issue

Section

LITERATURE AND LITERARY THEORY
Loading...