“Trust neither the Horse, nor Modernity”: Explicating Mahmoud Darwish’s Allusions to Babylon, Sodom and Ancient Indians in “Counterpoint: Edward Said”

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Ahmad Qabaha
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper examines the allusions to Babylon, Sodom and the Red Indians in Mahmoud Darwish’s tribute to Edward Said, which he entitled “Counterpoint.” This paper argues that these allusions add a new understanding to the significant contribution of Darwish’s poetry to postcolonial literature. It shows these allusions suggest that the postcolonial narrative is an encompassing narrative that is continuously renewed and retold by meta-narratives by authors whose peoples experienced colonialism for two reasons: first, colonialism has never ended, but it continues with new shapes; and second, allusions in postcolonial literature aim at reciprocating “postcolonial solidarity.” This paper further demonstrates that these allusions gesture toward sharing the belief that indigenous stories and struggles are more powerful and rooted when waged together against the colonialist negation of the history and culture of native people.
“不信马,也不信现代”:解读马哈茂德·达尔维什在《对位:爱德华说》中对巴比伦、所多玛和古印度人的暗示
本文考察了马哈茂德·达尔维什在《对位》中对巴比伦、所多玛和红印第安人的典故。本文认为,这些典故为达尔维什诗歌对后殖民文学的重大贡献提供了新的认识。研究表明,这些典故表明,后殖民叙事是一种包涵性的叙事,它被经历过殖民主义的作者的元叙事不断更新和重述,原因有二:第一,殖民主义从未结束,但它以新的形式继续着;其次,后殖民文学中的典故旨在相互促进“后殖民团结”。本文进一步表明,这些典故表明了一种共同的信念,即土著人的故事和斗争在共同对抗殖民主义者对土著人历史和文化的否定时更加强大和根深蒂固。
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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来源期刊
Comparative Literature East  West
Comparative Literature East West Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
20 weeks
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