Desert Voices: Bedouin Women's Poetry in Saudi Arabia

Desert Voices: Bedouin Women's Poetry in Saudi Arabia

by Moneera Al-Ghadeer
Desert Voices: Bedouin Women's Poetry in Saudi Arabia

Desert Voices: Bedouin Women's Poetry in Saudi Arabia

by Moneera Al-Ghadeer

Hardcover

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Overview

The Bedouin, or "desert dwellers," have a rich cultural heritage often expressed through music and poetry. Here Moneera Al-Ghadeer provides us with the first comparative reading of women’s oral poetry from Saudi Arabia. She examines women’s lyrics of love, desire, mourning and grievance. We come to understand Bedouin mores and—most significantly—the unique description of a desert that is consistently held to be infinite, evocative, stimulating and an eternal freedom.

As the first English translation and analysis of this poetry, Desert Voices is both a gesture to preserving the oral poetic tradition of Bedouin women and a radical critique addressing the exclusion of their poetry from current academic literary studies. The book provides invaluable material for reflection in the debates around oral culture and women’s poetic composition while it translates, presents and critically examines a genre, which opens Arabic poetry and literature to contemporary theory and criticism.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781845116668
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/30/2009
Series: Library of Modern Middle East Studies , #74
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Moneera Al-Ghadeer is Assistant Professor of Arabic Language and Literature at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Table of Contents

* Reading the Nomadic Voices
• The Exclusion of Women’s Poetry
• Nomadic Voices
• Rhetoric of Love
• Melancholic Desire
• Melancholy from Europe to Arabia and Back
• Melancholic Desire
• Grief and Gender Grievance
• Malady of Grief
• She Mourns Like Desert Animals
• A Desert Lost
• Three Masquerading Tropes: The Fiction of Face and Voice
• Technology and Postcoloniality: Algeria and Arabia
• Ambivalence and the Radiophonic Voice
• Instrumental Technology: Conflict and Fantasy
• Dying to Travel in a Car
• Feminine Desire and Technology
• The translatability of the Nomadic
• Bedouin Ethos and the Untranslatable
• Translation and the Metaphor of Modernity
• Works Cited
• Index *

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