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Lebanese Women's Fiction

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dc.contributor.author Aghacy, Samira
dc.date.accessioned 2015-12-10T09:21:14Z
dc.date.available 2015-12-10T09:21:14Z
dc.date.copyright 2001
dc.date.issued 2015-12-10
dc.identifier.issn 0020-7438 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10725/2801
dc.description.abstract This study undertakes an examination of Lebanese women's fiction over the past forty years or so. For many women, the urban environment is an escape from the restrictive traditional community that is closely aligned with a rural mentality. Many of these writers tend to see the city in stark contrast to the country, which, in their eyes represents restraining cultural values. If in some cases the city and the country are represented as real, tangible places, the majority of women tend to view them as “states of mind and feeling”1 or as representations. Some female writers see the city and the village in ontological opposition between repression and freedom, backwardness and progress, and past and present—or, as Raymond Williams refers to it, “of consciousness with ignorance; of vitality with routine; of the present and actual with the past or the lost.”2 Nevertheless, it is clear that in many cases the city incorporates and embraces both the traditional and modern patterns, because “an old order, a ‘traditional' society, keeps appearing, reappearing, at bewilderingly various dates.”3 Far from viewing themselves as alienated and degraded beings in the corrupt and hellish city4 or the modern wasteland, women see the nurturing city as a symbol of well-being, independence, and freedom from shackles. Indeed, they become so immersed in city life that, for some of them, there is “little reality in any other mode of life.”5 The city gives them the opportunity to escape the narrow confines of home, family, and stifling traditions that have relegated them to a corner and associated them with a nostalgic past. Accordingly, for many of them, the city has become, as Williams puts it, “the physical embodiment of a decisive modern consciousness,”6 a place consistently in flux and motion7 where women attempt to keep the ever-haunting past at bay and reveal a thrust for change and for experience and knowledge that they try to replenish in the city. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.title Lebanese Women's Fiction en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.description.version Published en_US
dc.title.subtitle Urban Identity and the Tyranny of the Past en_US
dc.author.school SAS en_US
dc.author.idnumber 198629510 en_US
dc.author.woa N/A en_US
dc.author.department English en_US
dc.description.embargo N/A en_US
dc.relation.journal International Journal of Middle East Studies en_US
dc.journal.volume 33 en_US
dc.journal.issue 4 en_US
dc.article.pages 503-523 en_US
dc.identifier.doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0020743801004020 en_US
dc.identifier.ctation Aghacy, S. (2001). Lebanese women's fiction: Urban identity and the tyranny of the past. International Journal of Middle East Studies, 33(04), 503-523. en_US
dc.author.email saghacy@lau.edu.lb
dc.identifier.url http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=105185&fileId=S0020743801004020


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