Home
Arabic Literature: Postmodern Perspectives
Barnes and Noble
Arabic Literature: Postmodern Perspectives
Current price: $28.95
Barnes and Noble
Arabic Literature: Postmodern Perspectives
Current price: $28.95
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
"The coverage of the region is admirable in terms of both geographical spread and literary genre. . . . This collection of articles, carefully grouped around specific themes and the authors who invoke them, is an important contribution to the study of modern Arabic literature."Professor Roger Allen
Arabic Literature: Postmodern Perspectives
introduces the work of twenty-nine pivotal authors from the Arab world writing in Arabic, English, French, and Hebrew. Organized around the central themes of memory, place, and gender, each of which is discussed in an introductory essay, the volume provides a critical framework for Arab writing, locating it alongside contemporary world literature.
The contributors maintain that Arabic literature reflects the Western postmodern condition without denying its own traditions. As such,
Arabic Literature
paves the way for an important cultural dialogue between East and West.
Authors covered include Adonis, Rabih Alameddine, Hoda Barakat, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Mahmoud Darwish, Assia Djebar, and Elias Khoury.
Angelika Neuwirth
is chair of Arabic studies at the Free University of Berlin.
Andreas Pflitsch
is a research fellow at the Center for Literary and Cultural Studies in Berlin and teaches Arabic studies at the University of Bamberg and the Free University of Berlin.
Barbara Winckler
is a research fellow at the Center for Literary and Cultural Studies in Berlin and teaches modern Arabic literature at the Free University of Berlin.
Arabic Literature: Postmodern Perspectives
introduces the work of twenty-nine pivotal authors from the Arab world writing in Arabic, English, French, and Hebrew. Organized around the central themes of memory, place, and gender, each of which is discussed in an introductory essay, the volume provides a critical framework for Arab writing, locating it alongside contemporary world literature.
The contributors maintain that Arabic literature reflects the Western postmodern condition without denying its own traditions. As such,
Arabic Literature
paves the way for an important cultural dialogue between East and West.
Authors covered include Adonis, Rabih Alameddine, Hoda Barakat, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Mahmoud Darwish, Assia Djebar, and Elias Khoury.
Angelika Neuwirth
is chair of Arabic studies at the Free University of Berlin.
Andreas Pflitsch
is a research fellow at the Center for Literary and Cultural Studies in Berlin and teaches Arabic studies at the University of Bamberg and the Free University of Berlin.
Barbara Winckler
is a research fellow at the Center for Literary and Cultural Studies in Berlin and teaches modern Arabic literature at the Free University of Berlin.