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Alif 22  
The Language of the Self: Autobiographies and Testimonies  
Edited by Ferial Ghazoul

Sep 2002
460pp.    Paperback
14.50 x 24.00 cm
$19.95
LE 30.00
ISBN 978 977 424 759 0
For sale worldwide


Autobiography is a protean genre: it covers so many forms and styles. When narrating one’s life, the narrator has to choose what he or she considers to be relevant and decisive. Beside the differences on what is fundamental in a life, the notion of the Self is culturally defined and thus varies from one place to another. The author of an autobiographical text may express only a fragment of his or her life, follow a thread in the trajectory through reminiscences, memoir, diaries, testimony, interview,letters, poems, etc. The author may declare openly that he or she is identical with the protagonist or may give the principal character a different name or no name. The author may depict private or public events, at times taking imaginative license or even including fantastic motifs. Autobiographical discourse is not only culturally conditioned; it is also symptomatic of the cultural moment. Thus it is important to explore the varieties of self-presentation, and not assume a fixed paradigm. In this revisionist spirit that looks for different and alternative ways of recording one’s life, Alif presents the autobiographical drive in multiple contexts: ancient and contemporary Egyptian; nineteenth-century and twentieth-century Arab, Moroccan, and Iraqi; South African and West African; Canadian and American; Palestinian and Sudanese; English and Irish; and even that of a hybrid background Chinese American and Algerian French. There has been a tremendous surge in autobiographical writing in recent years, and the field has been redefined by literary and cultural critics. From James Olney (ed.), Autobiography: Essays Theoretical and Critical (1980) to Dwight Reynolds (ed.), Interpreting the Self: Autobiography in the Arabic Literary Tradition (2001), a range of works have appeared challenging established views and approaches on the subject of autobiography. The epigraphs (whose English translation is drawn from the works mentioned above) attest to the complexity and diversity of motivations in writing about one’s past life.

Contributors: English Section: Sahar Sobhi Abdel-Hakim, Shereen Abou el-Naga, Leila Aboulela, Marwa Elnaggar, Mustapha Hamil, Wail S. Hassan, Jalal Uddin Khan, Samia Mehrez, William Melaney Arabic Section: Tahia Abdel Nasser, Noha Abou Sedera, Georges Bahgory, Muhammad Birairi, Laila Doss, Hossam Elouan, Ibrahim Fathi, Sabry Hafez, Nancy Huston, Alia Mamdouh, Fatma Massoud, Gharaa Mehanna, Fatma Moussa-Mahmoud, Saphinaz-Amal Naguib, Lamis Al Nakkash, Malak Rouchdy, Leila Sebbar.

Also available by this author:
Alif 19 (Paperback)Alif 20 (Paperback)Alif 21 (Paperback)
Alif 24 (Paperback)Alif 25 (Paperback)Alif 26 (Paperback)
Alif 27 (Paperback)Alif 28 (Paperback)Alif 30 (Paperback)

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