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impossible within, the impossible constitutes our very being. Lacan elaborates the central place<br />

the Thing as “the intimate exteriority or ‘extimacy’”:<br />

of<br />

The reason is that das Ding is at the center only in the sense that it is excluded. [In]<br />

reality das Ding has to be posited as exterior, as the prehistoric Other that is impossible to<br />

forget […] something strange to me, although it is at the heart of me, something that on<br />

the level of the unconscious only a representation can represent. 3<br />

The function of the real is found at the heart of the symbolic order, precisely because it is excluded<br />

from that very order, as a non‐symbolizable traumatic element. Lacan writes, “[T]he real is just as<br />

much inside as outside, and the unconscious is not a purely interior psychic system but an<br />

intersubjective structure (‘the unconscious is outside’).” 4 As the extimacy is the traumatic,<br />

antagonistic kernel of otherness at the very heart of the subject, the real is situated inside as much as<br />

it is outside.<br />

Karamustafa’s work, “Memory of a Square (perceived from an interior),” reveals how this<br />

traumatic otherness, such externality is located in what is internal. One cannot engage in what is<br />

happening in the interiors without referring to the exteriors, to the traumatic events happening in<br />

the square. The other way around is equally plausible: in order to make a commentary about the<br />

events happening outside, one should contemplate on movement, behavior and mood of the<br />

residents in interiors. Because of this continual awareness of the second screen on the part of the<br />

spectators, throughout their engagement with this work, the spectators find themselves<br />

simultaneously both inside the imaginary, domestic interiors and outside of that world which is<br />

coded as exteriority, as reality.<br />

Karamustafa’s work achieves such ambivalence for the spectators, the effect of being<br />

simultaneously inside and outside of one screen. This feeling of ambivalence, instilled upon the<br />

spectators, could be best described as a topology marked foremost by spatial uncertainty, the nondifferentiation<br />

between inside and outside. The questions regarding spatial ambiguity are thrust<br />

upon the spectators, causing a subtle, but strong effect that both facilitates and prevents the<br />

viewers’ collaboration in producing the signification of the work.<br />

The coexistence of the two narratives creates an ambivalent, unstable effect for the spectators: as<br />

they concentrate on one screen and being pulled into the fiction of the residents’ lives, while at the<br />

same time, the other screen becomes a centrifugal force, taking the viewers away from that<br />

imaginary world and its confined space. The spectators, on the one hand, engages with this effect,<br />

therefore, emerges when the rigidity of the boundaries separating inside/outside, intimate/foreign,<br />

and external/internal are rendered unstable.<br />

However, this is not only a spatial ambiguity but also a temporal one. In order to better<br />

understand this narration‐wise strategy, we need to utilize a different temporal topology that<br />

traverses the fundamental assumptions of Euclidean time and space. This new topology can be<br />

demonstrated through the figure of the Moebius strip. 5 As Dylan Evans explains:<br />

The figure illustrates the way that psychoanalysis problematizes various binary<br />

oppositions, such as inside/outside, before/after, signifier/signified, truth/appearance.<br />

While the two terms in such oppositions are often presented as radically distinct, [i]n<br />

terms of the topology of the moebius strip […] the opposed terms are thus seen as to be<br />

not discrete but continuous with one each other. 6<br />

The structure of the Moebius strip, therefore, invites us to conceptualize the binary pairs not as<br />

strictly disparate but as merging/blending into one another. On a Moebius strip, Slavoj Žižek writes,<br />

“if we progress far enough on one surface, […] we find ourselves on its reverse side.” 7

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