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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Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge info@tandf.co.uk
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
Yes
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Publicly Funded
No
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.
Description
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
Citation
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OpenCitations Citation Count
1
Source
The European Legacy
Volume
25
Issue
Start Page
309
End Page
323
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CrossRef : 1
Scopus : 0
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