Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1245Hits:24685500Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID183881
Title ProperKurdish subjectivity
Other Title InformationLiminal Kurd characters stymied in harsh liminal contexts in Sherzad Hassan’s short fiction
LanguageENG
AuthorBezdoode, Zakarya ;  Amani, Golchin
Summary / Abstract (Note)Investigating the way Sherzad Hassan represents the liminal status of the leading characters in his short fiction, this paper attempts to probe into the question of Kurdish subjectivity and Identity by discussing the liminal position of Kurds in Iraq in decades that culminated in their Anfal by Saddam Hussein. Victor Turner’s concept of liminality forms the theoretical background of the analysis. ‘Lausanne’, ‘Marlin’, ‘The Game of Changing Beds’, ‘The Sad Song of Being a Stranger’, ‘Secret’, ‘Smoke’, ‘The Alley of the Scarecrows’, and ‘Azrael’ among others are the selected short stories in which liminality has been scrutinized. Sherzad Hassan has employed music, incoherence, heteronomy, anonymity, verisimilitude, nakedness, limbo, tomb, womb, indeterminacy, hospital, patients, paralysis, gate, curtain, widowhood, smoke, scarecrows, portmanteau, and angels as the conventions of representing liminality. Given these facts, the paper comes up with the conclusion that the characters’ aspirations for development in their circumstances are mouldered. Tranquillity, cohesion and reintegration into the Kurdish society seem to be a mere mirage for the individuals.
`In' analytical NoteBritish Journal of Middle Eastern Studies Vol. 49, No.1; Feb 2022: p.23-37
Journal SourceBritish Journal of Middle Eastern Studies Vol: 49 No 1
Key WordsKurdish Subjectivity


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text