Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel after 2003: Literature and the Recovery of National Identity
Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel is about the use of literature and the novel to express the new content of an Iraqi national identity constructed after the American invasion of 2003. Instead of the homogenizing national identity in Iraqi literature created before 2003, postoccupation literature presents Iraqi society as a kaleidoscope of multiple religious identities converging in an accommodating Iraqi national identity. The author argues that this could not have happened without the upheaval of 2003 and its consequent results: democracy and political restructuring that incorporated Shia for the first time into the ruling political coalition in recognition of their numerical majority. Literature was consequential to processing the complicated subject of Shia-Sunni relations and the sectarian identity of each and, even more, in the wake of the geopolitical events of 2003, literature was instrument in bringing representation of the Kurds, the small minorities, and even the last Jews of Iraq to the fore. As such, literature demonstrated its revolutionary power and formed the basis for a “New Iraq.”

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Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel after 2003: Literature and the Recovery of National Identity
Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel is about the use of literature and the novel to express the new content of an Iraqi national identity constructed after the American invasion of 2003. Instead of the homogenizing national identity in Iraqi literature created before 2003, postoccupation literature presents Iraqi society as a kaleidoscope of multiple religious identities converging in an accommodating Iraqi national identity. The author argues that this could not have happened without the upheaval of 2003 and its consequent results: democracy and political restructuring that incorporated Shia for the first time into the ruling political coalition in recognition of their numerical majority. Literature was consequential to processing the complicated subject of Shia-Sunni relations and the sectarian identity of each and, even more, in the wake of the geopolitical events of 2003, literature was instrument in bringing representation of the Kurds, the small minorities, and even the last Jews of Iraq to the fore. As such, literature demonstrated its revolutionary power and formed the basis for a “New Iraq.”

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Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel after 2003: Literature and the Recovery of National Identity

Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel after 2003: Literature and the Recovery of National Identity

by Ronen Zeidel
Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel after 2003: Literature and the Recovery of National Identity

Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel after 2003: Literature and the Recovery of National Identity

by Ronen Zeidel

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Overview

Pluralism in the Iraqi Novel is about the use of literature and the novel to express the new content of an Iraqi national identity constructed after the American invasion of 2003. Instead of the homogenizing national identity in Iraqi literature created before 2003, postoccupation literature presents Iraqi society as a kaleidoscope of multiple religious identities converging in an accommodating Iraqi national identity. The author argues that this could not have happened without the upheaval of 2003 and its consequent results: democracy and political restructuring that incorporated Shia for the first time into the ruling political coalition in recognition of their numerical majority. Literature was consequential to processing the complicated subject of Shia-Sunni relations and the sectarian identity of each and, even more, in the wake of the geopolitical events of 2003, literature was instrument in bringing representation of the Kurds, the small minorities, and even the last Jews of Iraq to the fore. As such, literature demonstrated its revolutionary power and formed the basis for a “New Iraq.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498594639
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 01/13/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 222
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Ronen Zeidel is research fellow in the Moshe Dayan Center in Tel Aviv University and deputy director of the Center for Iraq Studies in the University of Haifa.

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction

Chapter 1: The Shīʿa in Iraqi Novels

Chapter 2: Sunnis and Novels in Iraq

Chapter 3: The Iraqi Novel and the Kurds

Chapter 4: The Iraqi Novel and the Christians of Iraq

Chapter 5: Gypsies in the Iraqi Novel: Between Marginality, Folklore and Romanticism

Chapter 6: On the Last Jews of Iraq and Iraqi National Identity: A Look at Two Recent Iraqi Novels

Conclusion: From Self Identity to Pluralism

Index

Bibliography

About the Author
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