The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english

Arab women's images in contemporary Western literature are generally negative. They are often portrayed as weak and oppressed. Negative representation may hold good for some women, in limited places and periods; however, negative depiction is generalized to all women, making this issue problema...

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Main Author: Jaleel, Eman Mahir
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
English
English
Published: 2018
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spelling my.uum.etd.89342021-12-16T06:43:41Z https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/ The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english Jaleel, Eman Mahir PE English Arab women's images in contemporary Western literature are generally negative. They are often portrayed as weak and oppressed. Negative representation may hold good for some women, in limited places and periods; however, negative depiction is generalized to all women, making this issue problematic, and therefore, a befitting subject of study. The current study explores Arab women’s images in the eyes of three 21st century Arab, Western, and Arab diaspora novelists, as well as verifies whether Chandra Mohanty's (1984) reflection of Arab women's representation in Western feminist writings supports women's images in the selected novels or not. The selected novels are Zoe Ferraris’ (2010) City of Veils, Maha Gargash’s (2009) The Sand Fish, and Fadia Faqir’s (2007) The Cry of the Dove. The dominant female characters' images in these novels were examined following Mohanty's theoretical framework on Third World women's depictions in Western feminist writings. The study concludes that Arab, Western, and Arab diaspora novelists portray Arab women negatively in various domains. The female characters in the novels are depicted as weak, inferior, subordinate, marginalized, and persecuted by men. Although they are sometimes portrayed as revolutionary, their rebellion is not an indication of their being powerful; it indicates, rather, a reaction to oppression. This study verifies the eleven images of Mohanty’s framework on Third World women's depictions, which are: powerful mother, obedient wife, traditional, religious, veiled, domestic, poor, uneducated, sexually oppressed, chaste virgin, and revolutionary. The findings of this study also support Mohanty’s theory in“Under Western Eyes” (1984). However, in addition to verifying the images suggested by Mohanty vis-à-vis Arab women’s representation, the present study finds two new images of Arab women in the novels analyzed, which are: liar and immoral. The study is significant as it throws a new light on a persistent issue, that is, misrepresentation of Arab women in Western creative literature. The researcher hopes that future studies would address the Arab women's images in other literary genres, for instance, poems and plays, to add more understanding of the Arab women's images in Western literature, which may encourage Third World feminists, particularly Arab feminists, to refrain from stereotyping Arab women. 2018 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/1/depositpermission-not%20allow_s95673.pdf text en https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/2/s95673_01.pdf text en https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/3/s95673_02.pdf text en https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/4/s95673_references.docx Jaleel, Eman Mahir (2018) The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english. Doctoral thesis, Universiti Utara Malaysia.
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Electronic Theses
url_provider http://etd.uum.edu.my/
language English
English
English
English
topic PE English
spellingShingle PE English
Jaleel, Eman Mahir
The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english
description Arab women's images in contemporary Western literature are generally negative. They are often portrayed as weak and oppressed. Negative representation may hold good for some women, in limited places and periods; however, negative depiction is generalized to all women, making this issue problematic, and therefore, a befitting subject of study. The current study explores Arab women’s images in the eyes of three 21st century Arab, Western, and Arab diaspora novelists, as well as verifies whether Chandra Mohanty's (1984) reflection of Arab women's representation in Western feminist writings supports women's images in the selected novels or not. The selected novels are Zoe Ferraris’ (2010) City of Veils, Maha Gargash’s (2009) The Sand Fish, and Fadia Faqir’s (2007) The Cry of the Dove. The dominant female characters' images in these novels were examined following Mohanty's theoretical framework on Third World women's depictions in Western feminist writings. The study concludes that Arab, Western, and Arab diaspora novelists portray Arab women negatively in various domains. The female characters in the novels are depicted as weak, inferior, subordinate, marginalized, and persecuted by men. Although they are sometimes portrayed as revolutionary, their rebellion is not an indication of their being powerful; it indicates, rather, a reaction to oppression. This study verifies the eleven images of Mohanty’s framework on Third World women's depictions, which are: powerful mother, obedient wife, traditional, religious, veiled, domestic, poor, uneducated, sexually oppressed, chaste virgin, and revolutionary. The findings of this study also support Mohanty’s theory in“Under Western Eyes” (1984). However, in addition to verifying the images suggested by Mohanty vis-à-vis Arab women’s representation, the present study finds two new images of Arab women in the novels analyzed, which are: liar and immoral. The study is significant as it throws a new light on a persistent issue, that is, misrepresentation of Arab women in Western creative literature. The researcher hopes that future studies would address the Arab women's images in other literary genres, for instance, poems and plays, to add more understanding of the Arab women's images in Western literature, which may encourage Third World feminists, particularly Arab feminists, to refrain from stereotyping Arab women.
format Thesis
author Jaleel, Eman Mahir
author_facet Jaleel, Eman Mahir
author_sort Jaleel, Eman Mahir
title The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english
title_short The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english
title_full The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english
title_fullStr The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english
title_full_unstemmed The images of Arab women in selected 21st century Arab novels written in english
title_sort images of arab women in selected 21st century arab novels written in english
publishDate 2018
url https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/1/depositpermission-not%20allow_s95673.pdf
https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/2/s95673_01.pdf
https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/3/s95673_02.pdf
https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/4/s95673_references.docx
https://etd.uum.edu.my/8934/
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