Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on the Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- Introduction: Literature and Nation in the Middle East: An Overview
- 1 The Production of Locality in the Oral Palestinian Poetry Duel
- 2 Irony and the Poetics of Palestinian Exile
- 3 Gender and the Palestinian Narrative of Return in Two Novels by Ghassan Kanafani
- 4 Darwish's ‘Indian Speech’ as Dramatic Performance: Sacred Space and Transformation
- 5 Israeli Jewish Nation Building and Hebrew Translations of Arabic Literature
- 6 Between Myth and History: Moshe Shamir's He Walked in the Fields
- 7 Writing the Nation: The Emergence of Egypt in the Modern Arabic Novel
- 8 Arabic Poetry, Nationalism and Social Change: Sudanese Colonial and Postcolonial Perspectives
- 9 Marginal Literatures of the Middle East
- 10 The Predicament of In-Betweenness in the Contemporary Lebanese Exilic Novel in English
- 11 The Nation Speaks: On the Poetics of Nationalist Literature
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Irony and the Poetics of Palestinian Exile
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on the Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- Introduction: Literature and Nation in the Middle East: An Overview
- 1 The Production of Locality in the Oral Palestinian Poetry Duel
- 2 Irony and the Poetics of Palestinian Exile
- 3 Gender and the Palestinian Narrative of Return in Two Novels by Ghassan Kanafani
- 4 Darwish's ‘Indian Speech’ as Dramatic Performance: Sacred Space and Transformation
- 5 Israeli Jewish Nation Building and Hebrew Translations of Arabic Literature
- 6 Between Myth and History: Moshe Shamir's He Walked in the Fields
- 7 Writing the Nation: The Emergence of Egypt in the Modern Arabic Novel
- 8 Arabic Poetry, Nationalism and Social Change: Sudanese Colonial and Postcolonial Perspectives
- 9 Marginal Literatures of the Middle East
- 10 The Predicament of In-Betweenness in the Contemporary Lebanese Exilic Novel in English
- 11 The Nation Speaks: On the Poetics of Nationalist Literature
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
No, I do not have an exile
To say that I have a homeland
– Mahmoud DarwishThe subject of this study was inspired by the seemingly unanswerable question asked by a colleague at a conference. ‘Where is Palestine, then?’ she wanted to know. The more thought I gave it, the more I realised Palestine has remained a question whose answer was like the Hindu meditational practice called ‘neti, neti’. Whenever a thought comes into the mind, you negate it by saying to yourself ‘neti, neti’, meaning ‘not this, not this’. Thus Palestine is not the West Bank, and it is not Gaza; and it is not the West Bank and Gaza combined. It is not the Palestinian Authority; and it is not Israel. It is not even historic Palestine except as a dream. Palestine exists in exile as a signifier whose signified does not match its shape or magnitude. To a large extent then, this nation exists in the dream of signification projected on it by its members because the historical process that would create a correspondence between signifier and signified seems to be endlessly postponed. Like the Buddhist Self, it is something that is, and is not; it is both present and absent. More than anything else, it is perhaps a metaphysical condition resembling Hamlet's dilemma. ‘Nothing is left for us,’ says Mahmoud Darwish, ‘except the weapon of madness [al-junun].
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Literature and Nation in the Middle East , pp. 31 - 47Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2006