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Salvation Army (Paperback)
Abdellah Taia; Introduction by Edmund White; Translated by Frank Stock
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R384
R317
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An autobiographical coming-of-age novel by the the "only gay man"
in Morocco. An autobiographical novel by turn naive and cunning,
funny and moving, this most recent work by Moroccan expatriate
Abdellah Taia is a major addition to the new French literature
emerging from the North African Arabic diaspora. Salvation Army is
a coming-of-age novel that tells the story of Taia's life with
complete disclosure-from a childhood bound by family order and
latent (homo)sexual tensions in the poor city of Sale, through an
adolescence in Tangier charged by the young writer's attraction to
his eldest brother, to a disappointing arrival in the Western world
to study in Geneva in adulthood. In so doing, Salvation Army
manages to burn through the author's first-person singularity to
embody the complex melange of fear and desire projected by Arabs on
Western culture. Recently hailed by his native country's press as
"the first Moroccan to have the courage to publicly assert his
difference," Taia, through his calmly transgressive work, has
"outed" himself as "the only gay man" in a country whose theocratic
law still declares homosexuality a crime. The persistence of
prejudices on all sides of the Mediterranean and Atlantic makes the
translation of Taia's work both a literary and political event. The
arrival of Salvation Army (published in French in 2006) in English
will be welcomed by an American audience already familiar with a
growing cadre of talented Arab writers working in French (including
Muhammad Dib, Assia Djebar, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Abdelkebir Khatibi,
and Katib Yasin).
An autobiographical portrait of a gay Arab man, living between
cultures, seeking an identity through love and writing. I had to
rediscover who I was. And that's why I left the apartment.... And
there I was, right in the heart of the Arab world, a world that
never tired of making the same mistakes over and over.... I had no
more leniency when it came to the Arab world... None for the Arabs
and none for myself. I suddenly saw things with merciless
lucidity.... -An Arab Melancholia Sale, near Rabat. The mid 1980s.
A lower-class teenager is running until he's out of breath. He's
running after his dream, his dream to become a movie director. He's
running after the Egyptian movie star, Souad Hosni, who's out there
somewhere, miles away from this neighborhood-which is a place the
teenager both loves and hates, the home at which he is not at home,
an environment that will only allow him his identity through the
cultural lens of shame and silence. Running is the only way he can
stand up to the violence that is his Morocco. Irresistibly
charming, angry, and wry, this autobiographical novel traces the
emergence of Abdellah Taia's identity as an openly gay Arab man
living between cultures. The book spans twenty years, moving from
Sale, to Paris, to Cairo. Part incantation, part polemic, and part
love letter, this extraordinary novel creates a new world where the
self is effaced by desire and love, and writing is always an act of
discovery.
Informed by post-independence avant-gardes and the vernacular
traditions of her native Morocco, Khalili's artistic approach
combine performative strategies of storytelling, reactivating the
"civil poetry" as defined by Italian poet and filmmaker Pier Paolo
Pasolini and inspired by the old tradition of Moroccan Al-Halqa. As
a political voice endorsing the collective one from the singular
experience, Pasolini's civic poet mirrors the Moroccan "Halqa," the
country's most ancient form of public storytelling. Mixing up
popular tales, ancient poems and political references the Al-Halqa
performer subverts official historiographies and narratives to
eventually become at once the people's "living archives" and its
public voice. Operating similarly, Khalili's work develops civic
platforms for first person accounts eventually forming collective
stories of resistance.
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