ABSTRACT

This monograph explores and investigates narratives of physical, psychological, and emotional dislocation that take place within the Arab world, approaching them as manifestations of the Arabic word ghurba, or estrangement, as a feeling and state of being.

Distancing itself from the centrality of the “West” in postcolonial and Arabic literary studies, the book explores experiences of migration, displacement and cosmopolitanism that do not directly ensue from the encounter with Europe or the European other. Covering texts from the Levant, Egypt, the Arabian Peninsula and beyond from the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries, the book grounds narratives of dislocation in the political, social and cultural structures that affect the everyday lived experiences of individuals and communities.

An analysis of Arabic, Turkish and English texts – encompassing fiction, memoirs and translations – highlights less visible narratives of ghurba, specifically amongst ethnic minorities and religious communities. Ultimately, the chapters contribute to a picture of the Arab world as a place of ghurba where mobile and immobile subjects, foreigners and local inhabitants alike, encounter alienation.

Bringing together a diverse range of academic perspectives, the book will be of interest to students and scholars in postcolonial and comparative literary studies, history, and Arabic and Middle East studies.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

part I|42 pages

Ghurba in Narratives of Slavery and Racism

chapter 1|22 pages

Dissolving into the Nile

Ottoman Reformism and Maternal Slavery in Sergüzeşt

chapter 2|18 pages

Re-writing the Other

Uncovering the Legacies of Slavery in Suad Amiry's My Damascus

part II|55 pages

Ghurba in Narratives of Displacement

chapter 3|17 pages

The Woman from Tantoura

Structural Marginalisation and the Re-Making of Home among Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon

chapter 5|19 pages

The Refugee as a “Russian Doll”

Haitham Hussein's Readings of Ghurba and Exile at the Time of the Global “Migration Crisis”

part III|40 pages

Religious Spaces of Ghurba and Belonging

chapter 7|23 pages

Can the Qazani Speak?

Nineteenth Century Naqshbandi Migrants and Translators in Mecca during the Age of Print

part IV|36 pages

Negotiating National Imaginaries of Belonging and Exclusion