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ID113397
Title ProperAnd then there were two
Other Title Informationwhat is Sudan now?
LanguageENG
AuthorHale, Sondra
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)How can scholars of Sudan now write about the landmass still called "Sudan"? What do we mean when we use the word? How can the name, which denotes a whole, encompass the fragments that make up its official boundaries? For the last several years, events in Sudan have been changing more rapidly than we Sudanists can analyze them or than Sudanese themselves can process them. Now, in its truncated form, delineating national identity-always problematic in the past-becomes far more complex. Considering extant cultural flows of art, language, customs, and religion, the dividing lines are, at best, dubious. A number of events are transpiring at the moment of writing this brief essay that have changed and will continue to change the future of not just one country but now two. For example, nothing is resolved in Darfur (in western Sudan), with peace talks stalled, more violence being perpetrated by the northern central government and its proxies, guerilla groups proliferating and battling among themselves, and a probable link among some Darfur groups and South Sudan forces.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 44, No.2; May 2012: p.321-323
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 44, No.2; May 2012: p.321-323
Key WordsSudan ;  National Identity ;  South Sudan Forces