Sufism in the Contemporary Arabic Novel

Author:   Ziad Elmarsafy
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9780748695850


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   31 August 2014
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Sufism in the Contemporary Arabic Novel


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Overview

Sufi characters saints, dervishes, wanderers occur regularly in modern Arabic literature. A select group of novelists to interrogate Sufism as a system of thought and language. In the work of writers like Naguib Mahfouz, Gamal Al-Ghitany, Taher Ouettar, Ibrahim Al-Koni, Mahmud Al-Mas'adi and Tayeb Salih we see a strong intertextual relationship with the Sufi masters of the past, including Al-Hallaj, Ibn Arabi, Al-Niffari and Al-Suhrawardi. This relationship becomes a means of interrogating the limits of the creative self, individuality, rationality and the manifold possibilities offered by literature, seeking in a dialogue with the mystical heritage a way of preserving a self under siege from the overwhelming forces of oppression and reaction that have characterised the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ziad Elmarsafy
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9780748695850


ISBN 10:   0748695850
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   31 August 2014
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations; Acknowledgements; Introduction: Ouverture; Chapter One: Naguib Mahfouz: (En)chanting Justice; Chapter Two: Tayeb Salih: The Returns of the Saint; Chapter Three: Al-Mas'adi: Witnessing Immortality; Chapter Four: The Survival of Gamal Al-Ghitany; Chapter Five: Ibrahim Al-Koni: Writing and Sacrifice; Chapter Six: Tahar Ouettar: The Saint and the Nightmare of History; Epilogue: Bahaa Taher, Solidarity and Idealism; Bibliography.

Reviews

"Elmarsafy brings together an illustrative spectrum of seminal Arab authors, and ably illuminates the persistence of Sufi idioms and voices in contemporary literary texts. He argues convincingly that these appropriations are intricately linked not only to questions of besieged national identities and ideological bankruptcy, but perhaps more pressingly to aspects of the journey of the self, the limits of the language and form of the novel, and ultimately, the very habitability of the world of the writer.--Samia Mehrez, Professor of Arabic Literature, American University in Cairo Elmarsafy is to be commended on the ambitious project to encompass a large geographic expanse, and his selections are meant to be illustrative rather than encyclopedic. The work is meticulously detailed.-- ""Celene Ayat Lizzio, Journal of Postcolonial Writing"" I genuinely enjoyed reading Elmarsafy's well researched analysis and presentation of contemporary Arab novelists...I am sure that his book will be a solid companion for all who want to develop their thinking and knowledge of Sufism and Arabic literature.'--G�ran Larsson, University of Gothenburg ""Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations"" I genuinely enjoyed reading Elmarsafy's well-researched analysis and presentation of contemporary Arab novelists...his book will be a solid companion for all who want to develop their thinking and knowledge of Sufism and Arabic literature.-- ""G�ran Larsson, Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations"" Readers interested in how a particular work fits into the broader arabophone literary scene will appreciate Elmarsafy's thorough indexing, while those familiar with Arabic will also appreciate lengthy quotations from the original works in over 60 pages of endnotes. The volume has a helpful bibliography including plentiful French-language scholarship on Arabic literature, fiction, and literary theory more generally. Elmarsafy is to be commended on the ambitious project to encompass a large geographic expanse, and his selections are meant to be illustrative rather than encyclopedic. The work is meticulously detailed; hence, a reader new to the field would necessarily read this work alongside a more introductory survey of trends in modern Arabic fiction.--Celene Ayat Lizzio, Brandeis University ""Journal of Postcolonial Writing"""


Readers interested in how a particular work fits into the broader arabophone literary scene will appreciate Elmarsafy's thorough indexing, while those familiar with Arabic will also appreciate lengthy quotations from the original works in over 60 pages of endnotes. The volume has a helpful bibliography including plentiful French-language scholarship on Arabic literature, fiction, and literary theory more generally. Elmarsafy is to be commended on the ambitious project to encompass a large geographic expanse, and his selections are meant to be illustrative rather than encyclopedic. The work is meticulously detailed; hence, a reader new to the field would necessarily read this work alongside a more introductory survey of trends in modern Arabic fiction. --Celene Ayat Lizzio, Brandeis University Journal of Postcolonial Writing


"Readers interested in how a particular work fits into the broader arabophone literary scene will appreciate Elmarsafy's thorough indexing, while those familiar with Arabic will also appreciate lengthy quotations from the original works in over 60 pages of endnotes. The volume has a helpful bibliography including plentiful French-language scholarship on Arabic literature, fiction, and literary theory more generally. Elmarsafy is to be commended on the ambitious project to encompass a large geographic expanse, and his selections are meant to be illustrative rather than encyclopedic. The work is meticulously detailed; hence, a reader new to the field would necessarily read this work alongside a more introductory survey of trends in modern Arabic fiction. --Celene Ayat Lizzio, Brandeis University ""Journal of Postcolonial Writing"""


Author Information

Ziad Elmarsafy is Reader in the Department of English and Related Literature, University of York. He is author of The Enlightenment Qur'an: The Politics of Translation and the Construction of Islam (Oneworld Publications, 2009).

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