An Oriental Version of Otherness: English-Speaking Writers of the Arab Diaspora

Our purpose has been to draw on the representation of otherness by selected writers of the Arab American diaspora, with a stress on two representative authors of this community: Gibran Khalil Gibran and Edward Said. Viewed from a postcolonial perspective, most of the writers considered for our a...

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Main Authors: Anwer Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir, Sahar Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Editura Universităţii Aurel Vlaicu Arad 2020-07-01
Series:Journal of Humanistic and Social Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jhss.ro/downloads/21/articles/2%20Anwer%20Sabbar%20Zamil%20Al-Yasir.pdf
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spelling doaj-37a5e53156cb4e0bac008f2b1aad493c2021-04-02T12:14:40ZdeuEditura Universităţii Aurel Vlaicu AradJournal of Humanistic and Social Studies2067-65572247-23712020-07-01XI1(21)2340An Oriental Version of Otherness: English-Speaking Writers of the Arab DiasporaAnwer Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir0Sahar Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir1 “Alexandru Piru” Doctoral School, University of CraiovaYeni Yüzyıl University, Istanbul, TurkeyOur purpose has been to draw on the representation of otherness by selected writers of the Arab American diaspora, with a stress on two representative authors of this community: Gibran Khalil Gibran and Edward Said. Viewed from a postcolonial perspective, most of the writers considered for our analysis have written as a response to the artificial East/West dichotomy, almost defying their assumed hyphenated identity. If the African slave Omar Ibn Said first wrote in Arabic, Edward Said preferred to write his books in English, Gibran Khalil Gibran wrote both in English and Arabic, while the Egyptian writer Ahdaf Soueif – educated in England and Egypt, writes in English and Arabic. In the cultural and geographical space of the United States, the Arab American immigrant experience mirrors that of other ethnic groups, and it is demonstrated in their literatures. http://www.jhss.ro/downloads/21/articles/2%20Anwer%20Sabbar%20Zamil%20Al-Yasir.pdfarab americanedward saidexilekhalil gibranorientalismothernesspostcolonialsplit identity
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language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anwer Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir
Sahar Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir
spellingShingle Anwer Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir
Sahar Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir
An Oriental Version of Otherness: English-Speaking Writers of the Arab Diaspora
Journal of Humanistic and Social Studies
arab american
edward said
exile
khalil gibran
orientalism
otherness
postcolonial
split identity
author_facet Anwer Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir
Sahar Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir
author_sort Anwer Sabbar Zamil Al-Yasir
title An Oriental Version of Otherness: English-Speaking Writers of the Arab Diaspora
title_short An Oriental Version of Otherness: English-Speaking Writers of the Arab Diaspora
title_full An Oriental Version of Otherness: English-Speaking Writers of the Arab Diaspora
title_fullStr An Oriental Version of Otherness: English-Speaking Writers of the Arab Diaspora
title_full_unstemmed An Oriental Version of Otherness: English-Speaking Writers of the Arab Diaspora
title_sort oriental version of otherness: english-speaking writers of the arab diaspora
publisher Editura Universităţii Aurel Vlaicu Arad
series Journal of Humanistic and Social Studies
issn 2067-6557
2247-2371
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Our purpose has been to draw on the representation of otherness by selected writers of the Arab American diaspora, with a stress on two representative authors of this community: Gibran Khalil Gibran and Edward Said. Viewed from a postcolonial perspective, most of the writers considered for our analysis have written as a response to the artificial East/West dichotomy, almost defying their assumed hyphenated identity. If the African slave Omar Ibn Said first wrote in Arabic, Edward Said preferred to write his books in English, Gibran Khalil Gibran wrote both in English and Arabic, while the Egyptian writer Ahdaf Soueif – educated in England and Egypt, writes in English and Arabic. In the cultural and geographical space of the United States, the Arab American immigrant experience mirrors that of other ethnic groups, and it is demonstrated in their literatures.
topic arab american
edward said
exile
khalil gibran
orientalism
otherness
postcolonial
split identity
url http://www.jhss.ro/downloads/21/articles/2%20Anwer%20Sabbar%20Zamil%20Al-Yasir.pdf
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