'Many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh

This research began as an attempt to question to what extent a politics of solidarity and the evolution of a ‘transnational feminism’ which travels across borders can be established within Arab and Western literary novels. While this study, in spirit, takes its lead from the call for ‘feminism witho...

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Main Author: Karmi, Sali
Other Authors: Poyner, Jane
Published: University of Exeter 2008
Subjects:
800
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.547119
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5471192015-03-20T04:04:42Z'Many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-ShaykhKarmi, SaliPoyner, Jane2008This research began as an attempt to question to what extent a politics of solidarity and the evolution of a ‘transnational feminism’ which travels across borders can be established within Arab and Western literary novels. While this study, in spirit, takes its lead from the call for ‘feminism without borders’ within the writings of two contemporary women writers, the Canadian Margaret Atwood and the Lebanese Hanan Al-Shaykh, it responds to the notion of transnationalism and literary ambassadorship from the perspective of Arab-Western relations. This process raises key questions for the reading of women’s writings across sensitive cultural divides: How can the literary contributions of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh help in reshaping the form and content of a transnational and cultural interaction between the Arab World and the West? Do women writers articulate their concerns in the same manner across cultures? To what extent can literature cross borders and be fully engaged within diverse women’s concerns? And what might hinder the circulation of a transnational literary interaction? These contemporary women writers have been studied in the belief that their novels are committed to a transnational feminist agenda. Both writers place their feminist concerns within a national framework that they constantly negotiate. However, this comparison to test the value of women’s writings across borders has been challenged by a more complex study of factors that intervene along the way. The politics of reception, the processes of production, circulation, and consumption of the writers’ literary texts, the writers’ own shifting allegiances moving from nationalism to broader multicultural, cosmopolitan and transnational frameworks, are all factors to be taken into account. These factors have a direct impact on the context through which the literary texts have to be studied. Hence, this study seeks to contribute to this task by showing how these writers are engaged in the process of adjusting, reconstructing and even transcending their cultural milieus.800Comparative Women's Writings : Transnationalism and Literary AmbassadorshipUniversity of Exeterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.547119http://hdl.handle.net/10036/68634Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 800
Comparative Women's Writings : Transnationalism and Literary Ambassadorship
spellingShingle 800
Comparative Women's Writings : Transnationalism and Literary Ambassadorship
Karmi, Sali
'Many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh
description This research began as an attempt to question to what extent a politics of solidarity and the evolution of a ‘transnational feminism’ which travels across borders can be established within Arab and Western literary novels. While this study, in spirit, takes its lead from the call for ‘feminism without borders’ within the writings of two contemporary women writers, the Canadian Margaret Atwood and the Lebanese Hanan Al-Shaykh, it responds to the notion of transnationalism and literary ambassadorship from the perspective of Arab-Western relations. This process raises key questions for the reading of women’s writings across sensitive cultural divides: How can the literary contributions of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh help in reshaping the form and content of a transnational and cultural interaction between the Arab World and the West? Do women writers articulate their concerns in the same manner across cultures? To what extent can literature cross borders and be fully engaged within diverse women’s concerns? And what might hinder the circulation of a transnational literary interaction? These contemporary women writers have been studied in the belief that their novels are committed to a transnational feminist agenda. Both writers place their feminist concerns within a national framework that they constantly negotiate. However, this comparison to test the value of women’s writings across borders has been challenged by a more complex study of factors that intervene along the way. The politics of reception, the processes of production, circulation, and consumption of the writers’ literary texts, the writers’ own shifting allegiances moving from nationalism to broader multicultural, cosmopolitan and transnational frameworks, are all factors to be taken into account. These factors have a direct impact on the context through which the literary texts have to be studied. Hence, this study seeks to contribute to this task by showing how these writers are engaged in the process of adjusting, reconstructing and even transcending their cultural milieus.
author2 Poyner, Jane
author_facet Poyner, Jane
Karmi, Sali
author Karmi, Sali
author_sort Karmi, Sali
title 'Many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh
title_short 'Many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh
title_full 'Many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh
title_fullStr 'Many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh
title_full_unstemmed 'Many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of Margaret Atwood and Hanan Al-Shaykh
title_sort 'many kinds of strong voices' : transnational encounters and literary ambassadorship in the fiction of margaret atwood and hanan al-shaykh
publisher University of Exeter
publishDate 2008
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.547119
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