Islam and Postcolonial Narrative
In Islam and Postcolonial Narrative, John Erickson examines four major authors from the 'third world' - Assia Djebar, Adelkebir Khatibi, Tahar ben Jelloun and Salman Rushdie - all of whom have engaged in a critique of the relationship between Islam and the West. Erickson analyses the narrative strategies they deploy to explore the encounter between Western and Islamic values and reveals their use of the cultural resources of Islam, as well as their intertextual exchanges with other third-world writers. Erickson argues against any homogenising mode of writing labelled 'postcolonial' and any view of Islamic and Western discourses as monolithic or totalising. He reveals the way these writers valorise expansiveness, polyvalence and indeterminacy as part of an attempt to represent the views of individuals and groups that live on the cultural and political margins of society.
Reviews & endorsements
"Recommended for graduate literature programs focusing on the Middle East, romance languages, and comparative studies." Choice
"Islam and Postcolonial Narrative is a good read, intelligently written for sharp minds." Issa J. Boullata, World Literature Today
"...an original contribution to its place as a textbook wherever this literature is studied." Research in African Literatures
Product details
April 2011Adobe eBook Reader
9780511824425
0 pages
0kg
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Introduction: creating new discourses from old
- 2. Women's voices and woman's space in Assis Djebar's L'Amour, la fantasia
- 3. Tahar Ben Jelloun's Sandchild: voiceless narratives, placeless places
- 4. 'At the threshold of the untranslatable': Love in Two Languages of Abdelkebir Khatibi
- 5. The view from underneath: Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses
- Concluding: breaches and forgotten openings
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.