Mahmoud Darwish’s Memory for Forgetfulness: Redeeming Worldliness through Exilic Consciousness

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Date

2020

Authors

Evren Akaltun Akan

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Routledge info@tandf.co.uk

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Green Open Access

Yes

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Abstract

This essay focuses on Mahmoud Darwish’s exilic experience as depicted in Memory for Forgetfulness: August Beirut 1982 (1986). For Darwish the siege of Beirut was a climactic moment in which he realized that he is stuck on a perpetual threshold. Imposed by the sovereign power this exilic threshold characterizes the Palestinian refugees in Lebanon bereft of their rights as citizens and held outside their homeland and political domain. I wish to argue that rather than being trapped in this condition Darwish takes it as a vantage point to critically reconstruct the notions of homeland and political belonging. This involves a contrapuntal approach to the notions of homeland diaspora and memory and acts as a form of resistance. It converts the exilic threshold that keeps the poet neither outside nor inside the political domain into a site of worldliness in both the Arendtian and Saidian sense of the term. Elaborating on Judith Butler’s account of cohabitation and diasporic thinking I argue that the exilic condition Darwish describes can give rise to a political ethic that resists the homogenization of spaces and temporalities and allows for an alternative sense of political belonging. © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

Exilic Consciousness, Mahmoud Darwish, Memory, Worldliness

Fields of Science

0602 languages and literature, 05 social sciences, 06 humanities and the arts, 0506 political science

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1

Source

The European Legacy

Volume

25

Issue

Start Page

309

End Page

323
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