• Home
  • Advanced Search
  • Directory of Libraries
  • About lib.ir
  • Contact Us
  • History

عنوان
Intimate others: Representations of the Arabs in the Palestinian imaginary

پدید آورنده
Ahmad Diab

موضوع
Middle Eastern literature; Film studies; Arabs; Poetry; Arabic language; Cultural identity; Silence; Novels; Negotiation; Politics; Eye movements; Occupations; Fiction; Historical text analysis; Middle Eastern studies; Prose; Attitudes; Otherness,Language, literature and linguistics;Social sciences;Communication and the arts;Arabic fiction;Culture and representation;Exile in literature;Film studies;Middle eastern cinema;Palestinian literature

رده

کتابخانه
Center and Library of Islamic Studies in European Languages

محل استقرار
استان: Qom ـ شهر: Qom

Center and Library of Islamic Studies in European Languages

تماس با کتابخانه : 32910706-025

NATIONAL BIBLIOGRAPHY NUMBER

Number
TL48660

LANGUAGE OF THE ITEM

.Language of Text, Soundtrack etc
انگلیسی

TITLE AND STATEMENT OF RESPONSIBILITY

Title Proper
Intimate others: Representations of the Arabs in the Palestinian imaginary
General Material Designation
[Thesis]
First Statement of Responsibility
Ahmad Diab
Subsequent Statement of Responsibility
Shohat, Ella; Antoon, Sinan

.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC

Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
New York University
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2016

PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION

Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
290

GENERAL NOTES

Text of Note
Committee members: Khoury, Elias; Rius-Pinies, Monica; Tawil-Souri, Helga

NOTES PERTAINING TO PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.

Text of Note
Place of publication: United States, Ann Arbor; ISBN=978-1-339-52091-9

DISSERTATION (THESIS) NOTE

Dissertation or thesis details and type of degree
Ph.D.
Discipline of degree
Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies
Body granting the degree
New York University
Text preceding or following the note
2016

SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT

Text of Note
This dissertation traces the shifts in the representations of the Arabs in Palestinian literary and visual culture since the beginning of the twentieth century until the present moment. Focusing on select texts from different genres and periods, this study argues that the psychological and political effects of living against the threat of erasure contribute to a discourse of heterogeneous visions for identity and alterity that congeal around the relationship with the Arabs. This study demonstrates that Palestinian writers and artists, both before and after al-Nakba (the Cataclysm) of 1948, responded to the exigencies of their political conditions by negotiating a multiplicity of attitudes towards the Arabs in works that represented non-Palestinian Arabs as at once intimate and other. In the pre-Nakba poetry of 'Ibrāhīm Tūqān (1905-1941), 'Abd al-Rahīm Mahmūd (1913-1948) and Wadī' al-Bustānī (1886-1954), premonitions of an approaching disaster prefigure the depictions of the Arabs as a reluctant savior. The immediate post-Nakba silence was both traumatic and generative for the perception of self and other in Palestinian prose fiction. Close readings of Ghassān Kanafānī's (1936-1972) Rijāl fi al-Shams [Men in the Sun], and Jabra 'Ibrāhīm Jabrā's (1919-1994) Al-Safīna [The Ship], show how these works contribute to a largely introverted Palestinian gaze whereby Arab spaces and figures emerge as primarily exilic. For post-Nakba poetry, I trace the genealogy of the Arabs in the works of the Palestinian poet Mahmūd Darwīsh (1941-2008). The study investigates the role of allegorical poetry in national self-fashioning and the ways that informs the attitudes and depictions of the Arabs. The dissertation also focuses on the works of the filmmaker Elia Suleiman (b.1960), and the political cartoonists Nājī al-'Alī (1938-1987) and Hānī 'Abbās (b. 1977) in its review of visual representations of non-Palestinian Arabs. In Suleiman's The Time That Remains, the contrapuntal relationship between the rich Arabic music in the soundtrack and the multi-layered visual treatment of the Arab underscores conflicting attitudes that negotiate the (im)possibility of a dismissal of Arabs in Palestinian narratives. The works of Al-'Ali and 'Abbās, following their displacement from Beirut and Damascus respectively, gesture towards an opening for a more expansive Palestinian gaze. They contribute to a novel portrayal of the common Arab man and woman (both Palestinian and non-Palestinian) united in their struggle against the Israeli occupation and authoritarian Arab regimes. Ultimately, the Nakba-induced self-involvement of the Palestinian literary and artistic gaze afforded sparse yet dynamic portrayals of the Arabs that are contingent upon the current historical circumstance of the writers and artists studied and the positions from which their works were produced.

TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT

Middle Eastern literature; Film studies; Arabs; Poetry; Arabic language; Cultural identity; Silence; Novels; Negotiation; Politics; Eye movements; Occupations; Fiction; Historical text analysis; Middle Eastern studies; Prose; Attitudes; Otherness

UNCONTROLLED SUBJECT TERMS

Subject Term
Language, literature and linguistics;Social sciences;Communication and the arts;Arabic fiction;Culture and representation;Exile in literature;Film studies;Middle eastern cinema;Palestinian literature

PERSONAL NAME - PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY

Schum, Timothy

PERSONAL NAME - SECONDARY RESPONSIBILITY

Shohat, Ella; Antoon, Sinan

CORPORATE BODY NAME - SECONDARY RESPONSIBILITY

Subdivision
Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies
New York University

LOCATION AND CALL NUMBER

Call Number
1769837756; 10025615

ELECTRONIC LOCATION AND ACCESS

Electronic name
 مطالعه متن کتاب 

p

[Thesis]
276903

a
Y

Proposal/Bug Report

Warning! Enter The Information Carefully
Send Cancel
This website is managed by Dar Al-Hadith Scientific-Cultural Institute and Computer Research Center of Islamic Sciences (also known as Noor)
Libraries are responsible for the validity of information, and the spiritual rights of information are reserved for them
Best Searcher - The 5th Digital Media Festival