Conflicting Narratives: War, Trauma and Memory in Iraqi Culture

Amirbahador Moosavi
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In the latter half of the twentieth century some of the Arab world's most important poets emerged from the country; names like Badr Shakir al-Sayyab, Nazik al-Mala'ika, and 'Abd al-Wahhab al-Bayati- among many others-need no introduction for anyone with the slightest familiarity with modern Arabic poetry. Their stories are well known, and their contribution to the shape of modern Arabic literature is undeniable. Yet far less has been written, particularly in English, about the writers and cultural figures from the final quarter of the last century until the present day. What happened to Iraqi cultural production during the terrifying years of Ba'thist rule, under the sanctions of the 1990s, or following the 2003 US invasion and occupation? What has been the role of the Iraqi intellectual since then, and how has Iraqi culture responded to the memories and traumas of recent, violent pasts? Moreover, who, for that matter, can speak in the name of Iraq at a time when the country is more fragmented than ever before and an increasing number of writers live abroad?In response to these questions, in December 2008 a conference entitled \"Cultural Voices of a Fragmented Nation: War, Trauma and Remembrance in Contemporary Iraq\" took place at the Phillips-Universitat in Marburg, Germany. Much of Conflicting Narratives: War, Trauma, and Memory in Iraqi Culture grew from this conference. The edited volume consists of four sections: \"Cultural and Political Narratives\"; \"Poetics of Trauma\"; \"The Dialectics of Home and Exile\"; and \"Shahadat: Essays on the Poetic Semantics of the 'Iraqi Place.'\" The final section contains five additional essays translated from the 2009 collection of articles edited by Basran novelist and short story writer Lu'ay Hamza 'Abbas entitled al-Makan al-'Iraqi: Jadal al-Kitaba wa-lTajriba (The Iraqi place: Debating writing and experience). While the goals of the book are ambitious, it does an admirable job of introducing readers to contemporary debates about Iraqi literary production.The book's essays reflect important recent trends in scholarship on Iraqi culture, originating in scholarly works written primarily in Arabic by Iraqi intellectuals who critically treat Iraqi cultural production, especially literature, inside and outside the country from approximately 1979 until the present day. The most notable of these studies are Salam 'Abbud's Thaqafat al-'Unf fi al-'Iraq (The culture of violence in Iraq) and 'Abbas Khidr's alKhakiyya: Min Awraq al-Jarima al-Thaqafiyya fial-'Iraq (Khaki: Documents of cultural crime in Iraq), both published in Cologne by al-Jamal in 2002 and 2005, respectively, and both of which are cited frequently throughout the book. They are scathing critiques of cultural production under the Iraqi Ba'th Party, and if at points they seem overly caustic in their criticism (an arguably justifiable excess, given the level of fear that existed during Ba'thist rule), they are nevertheless essential reading for anyone interested in contemporary Iraqi literature and cultural history. At the same time, much of the literary scholarship in Conflicting Narratives reflects more recent Englishlanguage studies of Iraqi fiction and poetry written by a younger generation of writers including Muhsin al-Ramli, Hassan Blasim, Sinan Antoon, and Inaam Kachachi. Much of this material deals with the consequences of the US-led invasion and subsequent wars and unrest since 2003.The first section of Conflicting Narratives, entitled \"Cultural and Political Narratives,\" consists of three articles individually written by cultural critic Fatima Mohsen, literary scholar Leslie Tramontini, and historian Hala Fattah. …","PeriodicalId":184252,"journal":{"name":"Arab Studies Journal","volume":"39 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Arab Studies Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.29091/9783752000993","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 5

Abstract

CONFLICTING NARRATIVES: WAR, TRAUMA, AND MEMORY IN IRAQI CULTURE edited by Stephan Milich, Friederike Pannewick, and Leslie Tramontini Wiesbaden: Reichert Verlag, 2012 (x v iii + 268 pages) $99.00 (clot h)Looking at Iraq from our current vantage point it is easy to forget the rich cultural history contained within the borders of a country that has been plagued by warfare for over thirty years, with each catastrophic event seemingly overshadowing the previous one. Iraq has had no shortage of writers and intellectuals. In the latter half of the twentieth century some of the Arab world's most important poets emerged from the country; names like Badr Shakir al-Sayyab, Nazik al-Mala'ika, and 'Abd al-Wahhab al-Bayati- among many others-need no introduction for anyone with the slightest familiarity with modern Arabic poetry. Their stories are well known, and their contribution to the shape of modern Arabic literature is undeniable. Yet far less has been written, particularly in English, about the writers and cultural figures from the final quarter of the last century until the present day. What happened to Iraqi cultural production during the terrifying years of Ba'thist rule, under the sanctions of the 1990s, or following the 2003 US invasion and occupation? What has been the role of the Iraqi intellectual since then, and how has Iraqi culture responded to the memories and traumas of recent, violent pasts? Moreover, who, for that matter, can speak in the name of Iraq at a time when the country is more fragmented than ever before and an increasing number of writers live abroad?In response to these questions, in December 2008 a conference entitled "Cultural Voices of a Fragmented Nation: War, Trauma and Remembrance in Contemporary Iraq" took place at the Phillips-Universitat in Marburg, Germany. Much of Conflicting Narratives: War, Trauma, and Memory in Iraqi Culture grew from this conference. The edited volume consists of four sections: "Cultural and Political Narratives"; "Poetics of Trauma"; "The Dialectics of Home and Exile"; and "Shahadat: Essays on the Poetic Semantics of the 'Iraqi Place.'" The final section contains five additional essays translated from the 2009 collection of articles edited by Basran novelist and short story writer Lu'ay Hamza 'Abbas entitled al-Makan al-'Iraqi: Jadal al-Kitaba wa-lTajriba (The Iraqi place: Debating writing and experience). While the goals of the book are ambitious, it does an admirable job of introducing readers to contemporary debates about Iraqi literary production.The book's essays reflect important recent trends in scholarship on Iraqi culture, originating in scholarly works written primarily in Arabic by Iraqi intellectuals who critically treat Iraqi cultural production, especially literature, inside and outside the country from approximately 1979 until the present day. The most notable of these studies are Salam 'Abbud's Thaqafat al-'Unf fi al-'Iraq (The culture of violence in Iraq) and 'Abbas Khidr's alKhakiyya: Min Awraq al-Jarima al-Thaqafiyya fial-'Iraq (Khaki: Documents of cultural crime in Iraq), both published in Cologne by al-Jamal in 2002 and 2005, respectively, and both of which are cited frequently throughout the book. They are scathing critiques of cultural production under the Iraqi Ba'th Party, and if at points they seem overly caustic in their criticism (an arguably justifiable excess, given the level of fear that existed during Ba'thist rule), they are nevertheless essential reading for anyone interested in contemporary Iraqi literature and cultural history. At the same time, much of the literary scholarship in Conflicting Narratives reflects more recent Englishlanguage studies of Iraqi fiction and poetry written by a younger generation of writers including Muhsin al-Ramli, Hassan Blasim, Sinan Antoon, and Inaam Kachachi. Much of this material deals with the consequences of the US-led invasion and subsequent wars and unrest since 2003.The first section of Conflicting Narratives, entitled "Cultural and Political Narratives," consists of three articles individually written by cultural critic Fatima Mohsen, literary scholar Leslie Tramontini, and historian Hala Fattah. …
冲突的叙述:伊拉克文化中的战争、创伤和记忆
Stephan Milich, Friederike Pannewick和Leslie Tramontini Wiesbaden编辑的伊拉克文化中的战争,创伤和记忆:Reichert Verlag, 2012 (x v iii + 268页)$99.00 (clot h)从我们当前的有利位置来看伊拉克,很容易忘记包含在一个国家边界内的丰富的文化历史,这个国家已经被战争困扰了30多年,每一个灾难性事件似乎都掩盖了前一个。伊拉克并不缺少作家和知识分子。在20世纪后半叶,阿拉伯世界一些最重要的诗人从这个国家涌现出来;像Badr Shakir al-Sayyab, Nazik al-Mala'ika和Abd al-Wahhab al-Bayati这样的名字,对于任何对现代阿拉伯诗歌稍有了解的人来说都不需要介绍。他们的故事众所周知,他们对现代阿拉伯文学的贡献是不可否认的。然而,关于从上世纪最后25年至今的作家和文化人物的著作,尤其是英文著作,却少得多。在复兴党统治的恐怖年代,在20世纪90年代的制裁下,或者在2003年美国入侵和占领之后,伊拉克的文化生产发生了什么变化?从那时起,伊拉克知识分子扮演了什么角色?伊拉克文化如何回应最近暴力过去的记忆和创伤?此外,在这个国家比以往任何时候都更加分裂,越来越多的作家生活在国外的时候,谁能以伊拉克的名义说话?为了回答这些问题,2008年12月在德国马尔堡的菲利普斯大学举行了一场题为“支离破碎的国家的文化之声:当代伊拉克的战争、创伤和记忆”的会议。《冲突的叙述:伊拉克文化中的战争、创伤和记忆》一书就是从这次会议中产生的。编辑后的卷由四个部分组成:“文化和政治叙事”;《创伤诗学》;《家与流亡的辩证法》;《沙哈达特:“伊拉克地”的诗歌语义学论文集》。最后一部分收录了另外五篇文章,这些文章摘自巴斯兰小说家和短篇小说作家鲁阿伊·哈姆扎·阿巴斯2009年编辑的文集《伊拉克的地方:辩论写作和经验》。虽然这本书的目标雄心勃勃,但它在向读者介绍有关伊拉克文学创作的当代辩论方面做了令人钦佩的工作。这本书的文章反映了伊拉克文化学术研究的重要最新趋势,这些趋势主要是由伊拉克知识分子用阿拉伯语撰写的学术著作,这些知识分子从大约1979年至今,在国内外批判地对待伊拉克的文化生产,特别是文学。这些研究中最值得注意的是萨拉姆·阿布巴德的《伊拉克的暴力文化》和阿巴斯·希德尔的《伊拉克的文化犯罪》,这两本书分别于2002年和2005年在科隆由al- jamal出版,并在全书中被频繁引用。他们对伊拉克复兴党统治下的文化生产进行了严厉的批评,如果他们的批评在某些方面显得过于尖刻(考虑到复兴党统治期间存在的恐惧程度,可以说是合理的过度),他们仍然是任何对当代伊拉克文学和文化史感兴趣的人的必读读物。与此同时,《冲突叙事》中的许多文学研究反映了最近对年轻一代作家(包括穆赫辛·拉姆利、哈桑·布拉西姆、希南·安东和伊纳姆·卡查奇)所写的伊拉克小说和诗歌的英语研究。这些材料大多涉及美国领导的入侵以及2003年以来的战争和动乱的后果。《冲突叙事》的第一部分题为“文化与政治叙事”,由文化评论家法蒂玛·莫森、文学学者莱斯利·特拉蒙蒂尼和历史学家哈拉·法塔赫分别撰写的三篇文章组成。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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