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Chapter 28 - Realism and Arabic Novel

from Part IV - Locations of Realism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2025

Paul Stasi
Affiliation:
University of Albany
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Summary

This chapter traces an aesthetic shift in realism in Arabic literature through a materialist framework that engages two core concepts: historical context (including social and political changes) and literary form. It explores how the relationship between poetics and politics shapes the transformation of realism in the Arabic novel during very significant moments in Arab history, including the political radicalism of the 1950s, the military defeats in the 1967 war, and the Arab Spring in 2011, showing how realism still responds powerfully to the historical change that the region has been undergoing since 2011. It explores how the realist mode aesthetically captures the stateless Bidun residents of Kuwait in Nasir Al-zafiri’s Al-Sahd (Scorched Heat, 2014) to offer a counter-narrative. Furthermore, it examines the realist representation of state violence, structural marginalization, and the alienation of the constantly changing city of Amman in Jalal Barjas’s Dafatir Alwarraq (The Bookseller’s Notebooks, 2020), emphasizing the contemporary persistence and deepening of realism in Arabic literature.

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Chapter
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Realism and the Novel
A Global History
, pp. 400 - 414
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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