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Let There Be Nahdah!

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 August 2015

Abstract

This essay examines the movement of Arab national and cultural revival known as nahdah (meaning renaissance or awakening) as a speech act and a performance involving a nuhūd (rising) and an uncertain practice of civilization (tamaddun) that seek to bring about a culture of knowledge. Contesting its treatment as a homogeneous project of modernity that rose and fell and as a historical period with clear epistemic breaks, it argues that nahdah civilizational practices could not be reduced to notions of civilization associated with Orientalism as system of othering and cultural superiority. This approach frees up nahdah texts from the dominant narrative of rise and decline, and from their intertextual and ideological dependency on European modernity as a model to be borrowed or resisted.

Type
Forum on Literary World Systems
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2015 

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References

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4 The examples are too many to list, but I mention here the works of Khaled Fahmy, Yoav Di-Capua, Marwa Elshakry, Samah Selim, Orit Bashkin, Lital Levy, Kamran Rastegar, Thomas Bauer, Muhsin al-Musawi, Omnia El Shakry, Marilyn Booth, Ziad Fahmy, Ussama Makdisi, Jacob Wilson, Shaden Tageldine, Michael Allen, Elizabeth Holt, Jeffrey Saks, Ghenwa Hayek, and others.

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9 Al-Bustani, “Lecture.”

10 See selections from Baydas, Khalil, “Stages of the Mind (1924),” The Arab Renaissance: A Bilingual Anthology of Nahda Literature and Culture (1707–1937), ed. Tarek El-Ariss, trans. Spencer Scoville and Farah Antun (New York: Modern Language Association Book Series, Texts and Translations, 2016)Google Scholar. “The New Jerusalem,” The Arab Renaissance, trans. Ghenwa Hayek.