|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Translated by Marilyn Booth Longlisted for the 2023 Dublin Literary
Award An extraordinary novel from a Man Booker International
Prize-winning author that follows one young Omani woman as she
builds a life for herself in Britain and reflects on the
relationships that have made her from a “remarkable” writer who
has “constructed her own novelistic form” (James
Wood, The New Yorker). ‘Alharthi makes lyrical shifts
between past and present, memory and folklore, oneiric surrealism
and grimy realism.’ Guardian [A] stirring tale of a woman who
battles every social and religious constraint. The
juxtaposition with the narrator’s reflections on modern life and
the speed of change is brilliantly judged in Marilyn Booth’s
agile translation from Arabic.’ The Observer Zuhour, an Omani
student at a British university, is caught between the past and the
present. As she attempts to form friendships and assimilate in
Britain, she can’t help but ruminate on the relationships that
have been central to her life. Most prominent is her strong
emotional bond with Bint Aamir, a woman she always thought of as
her grandmother, who passed away just after Zuhour left the Arabian
Peninsula. As the historical narrative of Bint Aamir’s
challenged circumstances unfurls in captivating fragments, so too
does Zuhour’s isolated and unfulfilled present, one narrative
segueing into another as time slips, and dreams mingle with
memories. The eagerly awaited new novel by the winner of
the Man Booker International Prize, Bitter Orange
Tree is a profound exploration of social status, wealth,
desire, and female agency. It presents a mosaic portrait of one
young woman’s attempt to understand the roots she has grown from,
and to envisage an adulthood in which her own power and happiness
might find the freedom necessary to bear fruit and flourish.
|
Celestial Bodies (Paperback)
Jokha Alharthi; Translated by Marilyn Booth
|
R436
R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
Save R62 (14%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Jokha Alharthi re-appraises the relationship between love, poetry
and Arab society in the 8th to 11th centuries. She avoids familiar
cliches about the purity of love in 'Udhri poetry - broadly
speaking, an Arabic counterpart to the western medieval concept of
unconsummated courtly love - and instead questions the traditional
much-vaunted emphasis on chastity and the assumption that this
poetry omits any concept of the body. Alharthi focuses on the key
differences between what the poetry itself says and the views of
later sources about 'Udhri poets and their works. She also
documents how the representation of the beloved in the 'Udhri
ghazal was influenced by pre-Islamic poetry, showing how this
tradition developed with a series of overlapping historical layers.
And she breaks new ground by examining how this poetry treats not
only the body of the beloved but also that of her lover, the poet
himself.
Jokha Alharthi re-appraises the relationship between love, poetry
and Arab society in the 8th to 11th centuries. She avoids familiar
cliches about the purity of love in 'Udhri poetry - broadly
speaking, an Arabic counterpart to the western medieval concept of
unconsummated courtly love - and instead questions the traditional
much-vaunted emphasis on chastity and the assumption that this
poetry omits any concept of the body. Alharthi focuses on the key
differences between what the poetry itself says and the views of
later sources about 'Udhri poets and their works. She also
documents how the representation of the beloved in the 'Udhri
ghazal was influenced by pre-Islamic poetry, showing how this
tradition developed with a series of overlapping historical layers.
And she breaks new ground by examining how this poetry treats not
only the body of the beloved but also that of her lover, the poet
himself.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.