Gender, Nation, and the Arabic Novel
Egypt, 1892-2008
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:18th Jul '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

A nuanced understanding of literary imaginings of masculinity and femininity in the Egyptian novel. Gender studies in Arabic literature have become equated with women's writing, leaving aside the possibility of a radical rethinking of the Arabic literary canon and Arab cultural history. While the 'woman question' in the Arabic novel has received considerable attention, the 'male question' has gone largely unnoticed. Now, Hoda Elsadda bucks that trend. Foregrounding voices that have been marginalised alongside canonical works, she engages with new directions in the novel tradition.
Elsadda brilliantly upends standing understandings of the Arabic novel. Nuanced and incisive, she dissects over a century of Egyptian Arabic novels, demonstrating that the liberal national elite’s gendered imaginations of the nation shaped the literary canon. She convincingly argues that national political projects must imagine themselves through cultural production and that both are systematically shot through with gendered constructions of power. -- Suad Joseph, Professor of Anthropology and Women and Gender Studies, University of California, Davis
ISBN: 9780748639267
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 592g
304 pages