Arabic Literature
English edition  
Oct  2001
176 pp.
Hardbound
15X23 cm
$24.50
LE 80.00
ISBN
978 977 424 667 8

For sale worldwide
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The Graying of the Raven
Cultural and Sociopolitical Significance of Algerian Folk Poetry
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Aida Bamia

Winner of the AUC Middle East Studies Award 2000


From East to West The raven has turned gray O Reader of the unknown Help us in our ordeal! With a fine touch, Aida Bamia has explored the work of Muhammad bin al-Tayyib ‘Alili (c.1894–c.1954), a hitherto virtually unknown oral poet of Algeria, bringing to her analysis new understanding of folk poetry as part of a people’s collective memory and their resistance to colonization. For ‘Alili’s audience the despair and suffering faced by poor farmers before independence is embodied by the raven, grown old and gray with ceaseless frustration and humiliation. Because of its oral—and all too often ephemeral—nature, the work of poets such as ‘Alili could escape close scrutiny by French colonial administrators who sought to eradicate nationalistic and ethnic elements. With succinct commentary, Bamia presents an outstanding historical and contextual background for ‘Alili’s repertoire, while she details the richness and variety of poetic forms that had developed in North Africa. In doing so, she shows an intimate grasp of the poet’s repertoire and technique, as well as of the colonial and postcolonial implications of Algerian folklore and poetry. In their citation for the AUC Middle East Studies Award, the judges noted The Graying of the Raven’s “insightful perspective on Algerian society and the experience of colonization as perceived by the individual folk poet.”

Aida Bamia is currently professor of Arabic language and literature at the University of Florida in Gainesville, where she has been since 1985.




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