The City & the City

by

China Miéville

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Besź refers both to people and things from Besźel and to the language spoken there. Note that this is different from Ul Qoma, where the adjective to describe things belonging to the city is Ul Qoman, but the language is named Illitan.

Besź Quotes in The City & the City

The The City & the City quotes below are all either spoken by Besź or refer to Besź. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
).
Chapter 2 Quotes

A common form of establishment, for much of Besźel’s history, had been the DoplirCaffé: one Muslim and one Jewish coffeehouse, rented side by side, each with its own counter and kitchen, halal and kosher, sharing a single name, sign, and sprawl of tables, the dividing wall removed. Mixed groups would come, greet the two proprietors, sit together, separating on communitarian lines only long enough to order their permitted food from the relevant side, or ostentatiously from either and both in the case of freethinkers. Whether the DoplirCaffé was one establishment or two depended on who was asking: to a property tax collector, it was always one.

Related Characters: Inspector Tyador Borlú (speaker)
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Anyway whether in its original or later written form, Illitan bears no resemblance to Besź. Nor does it sound similar. But these distinctions are not as deep as they appear. Despite careful cultural differentiation, in the shape of their grammars and the relations of their phonemes (if not the base sounds themselves), the languages are closely related—they share a common ancestor, after all. It feels almost seditious to say so. Still.

Related Characters: Inspector Tyador Borlú (speaker)
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

A Besź dweller cannot walk a few paces next door into an alter house without breach.

But pass through Copula Hall and she or he might leave Besźel, and at the end of the hall come back to exactly (corporeally) where they had just been, but in another country, a tourist, a marvelling visitor, to a street that shared the latitude-longitude of their own address, a street they had never visited before, whose architecture they had always unseen, to the Ul Qoman house sitting next to and a whole city away from their own building, unvisible there now they had come through, all the way across the Breach, back home.

Related Characters: Inspector Tyador Borlú (speaker)
Related Symbols: Breach, Copula Hall
Page Number: 70
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

Okay I need to be a little bit careful here, Inspector, because honestly I never really, not really, thought he did believe it—I always thought it was kind of a game—but the book said he believed it […] A secret colony. A city between the cities, its inhabitants living in plain sight […] Unseen, like Ul Qomans to the Besź and vice versa. Walking the streets unseen but overlooking the two. Beyond the Breach. And doing what, who knows? Secret agendas. They’re still debating that, I don’t doubt, on the conspiracy theory websites.

Related Characters: Professor Isabelle Nancy (speaker), Inspector Tyador Borlú, Mahalia Geary (a.k.a. Fulana/Marya/Byela Mar) , Dr. David Bowden
Related Symbols: Breach, Between the City and the City
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:
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The City & the City PDF

Besź Term Timeline in The City & the City

The timeline below shows where the term Besź appears in The City & the City. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 2
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Seeing vs. Unseeing Theme Icon
Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...busy nor totally deserted. Although they are in an unmarked car rather than a “bruise” (Besź police car), Corwi still wears her uniform because she doesn’t want any potential sources to... (full context)
Chapter 4
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Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...from a man speaking in a foreign accent. The line is bad, and the man’s Besź is good but strangely old-fashioned. When Borlú asks why the man isn’t calling the information... (full context)
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...is making is not illegal, and switches to Illitan. However, the man switches back to Besź, grumbling that “it’s the same damn-faced language anyway.” Borlú is desperately trying to think of... (full context)
Chapter 5
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Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
To those who don’t know much about them, Illitan and Besź seem very different; they sound different, and where Besź is written in a Cyrillic-like script,... (full context)
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Seeing vs. Unseeing Theme Icon
Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
BudapestStrász is crosshatched. The Besź side has grown desolate in recent years thanks to the death of the river industry,... (full context)
Chapter 6
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Seeing vs. Unseeing Theme Icon
Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
...to the 42 members of the Oversight Committee sitting around the table. There are 21 Besź politicans there; the rest are from Ul Qoma. The committee meets in one of the... (full context)
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Seeing vs. Unseeing Theme Icon
Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...time Borlú saw Breach, he was 14 and witnessed a traffic accident that involved both Besź and Ul Qoman cars on a crosshatched street. Just as he glanced at the accident,... (full context)
Chapter 7
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Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...Gearys leave, Borlú and Corwi discuss two particularly nasty nationalist groups: Qoma First, and their Besź equivalent, the True Citizens. Borlú comments that Mr. Geary’s assertion that Mahalia angered the nationalists... (full context)
Chapter 12
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
...is subject to extra scrutiny. Speaking to the border control officer, he explains that his Besź driver will remain in Copula Hall, and he points out the Ul Qoman police who... (full context)
Chapter 13
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Seeing vs. Unseeing Theme Icon
Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...walks through the busy nighttime streets, most Ul Qoman passersby double-take, assuming he is in Besźel from the way he looks before realizing he is walking in Ul Qoma. He hears... (full context)
Chapter 17
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Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...to speculate that the package may have been from an Ul Qoman nationalist based in Besźel, who sent it from a Besź address in an attempt to obscure its actual origin.... (full context)
Chapter 21
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
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...in case Bowden shows up. At 7pm, Corwi announces she has everything ready on the Besź side. (full context)
Chapter 23
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
...the people identify themselves only as “Breach.” One of the men speaks to Borlú in Besź with an undetectable, “flat” accent. He says that Borlú committed an extreme, violent breach, killing... (full context)
Chapter 24
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Seeing vs. Unseeing Theme Icon
Crime vs. Punishment Theme Icon
Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...its avatars, he realizes that he doesn’t know whether he is in Ul Qoma or Besźel. The previous night, he spent hours watching interrogation tapes, footage of Corwi, his lovers, and... (full context)
Borders and Doubles Theme Icon
Seeing vs. Unseeing Theme Icon
Urban Life and Alienation Theme Icon
...Ashil, and says he will address Borlú as Tye. Both these names could be either Besź or Ul Qoman, with no strong ties to one or the other. As they walk,... (full context)
Chapter 26
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...the severity of this reaction, but Ashil then explains that the bus crash was intentional, Besź and Ul Qoman unifications planned it together. This is the unificationist “insurrection,” a dramatic attempt... (full context)
Chapter 27
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...fires started. Borlú spots a unificationist gang spray painting the words “TOGETHER! UNITY!” in both Besź and Illitan. Very quickly, the group is swarmed by Breach avatars moving so quickly they... (full context)
Paranoia, Conspiracy, and Illicit Knowledge Theme Icon
...and Borlú announces that they’re too late. However, they go into the building anyway. A Besź security guard tries to stop them from entering, but Ashil tells him to back down,... (full context)
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...think they’ll shoot. He announces that he is not there representing Breach, but rather the Besźel policzai, and reminds Buric that he has broken Besź law. He adds that he doesn’t... (full context)