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Browsing by Author "Khireddine, Amel"

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    Gender and the nation in the novels of ahlam mosteghanemi and ahdaf soueif
    (2019) Khireddine, Amel
    "Arab Nationalism" and "National Identity" have long been chief concerns in the Arab world. It goes without doubt that Western colonisation, which plagued most Arab nation-states, has the greatest impact on bolstering Arabs' nationalist sentiments and reformulation of national and communal identity. Although every Arab nation-state sets its own denominators for its foundation, shared history, religious moral values, and the Arabic language remain the indisputably revered national unifiers and signifiers of the Arab identity. Arab national discourse, outstandingly male-dominated, applauds these constituents which are supposed to stand for a homogeneous authentic Arab identity. Yet, while projecting man as the unsurpassed national hero, this discourse looks at women merely as the nation's boundary markers, as symbols or, at best, bearers and transmitters of national culture. However, with the advent of a feminist trend in the Arab world- a trend which coincided with the rise of nationalist resistance movements- iconic female figures staggeringly inscribed their names in the contemporary male-led Arab literary agenda. While being concerned with giving a voice to the silenced subaltern women, some of those postcolonial feminist Arab women writers go further towards reimagining a new construction of the national identity and community which undoubtedly disrupts the conventional definition of an Arab "imagined community". On those grounds, the present thesis, entitled Gender and the Nation in the Novels of Ahlam Mosteghanemi and Ahdaf Soueif, attempts to offer two different alternative feminist narrations of the nation which, in a way or another, counteract the Arab hegemonic patriarchal national discourses. By comparing and contrasting the writers' novels: Dhakirat al-Jasad and Fawda al-Hawas by the Algerian writer Ahlam Mosteghanemi and In the Eye of the Sun and The Map of Love by the Egyptian writer Ahdaf Soueif, I aim at demonstrating the extent to which those writers are conformists or not to the Arab conventional conception of national identity and community in its relation to gender politics. Though in her novels, Mosteghanemi seeks to reclaim a pure Algerian Muslim Arab national identity, she is certainly intent to speak out her heroine's female-self and cultural agency and hence her conformism is partial. Conversely, Soueif, in her artistic output, pushes aside all historical, moral and linguistic frontiers deemed to mark Arab national identity. Unlike her Algerian contemporary, Soueif's national map incorporates the Western Other while her pen draws unconventional scenes relating to Arab woman's sexuality
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    Introduction to discourse analysis /Master 1: Literature & Civilization Option (Curriculum and Lectures)
    (M’hamed Bougara University of Boumerdes Faculty of Letters and Languages : Department of English, 2023) Khireddine, Amel
    In recent times, both educators and students have come to recognize a fundamental objective in English language instruction within Algeria: the nurturing and enhancement of communicative competence among Algerian learners. This realization signifies a shift away from viewing language as a mere assemblage of grammatical rules to be memorized and subsequently forgotten. While the significance of grammatical elements remains undeniable, the core principle guiding English language acquisition is, in fact, effective communication. Consequently, numerous innovative approaches have been introduced to bolster English language education in Algeria, with a primary focus on cultivating the communicative proficiency of Algerian learners.....
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    Writing the female body in mosteghanemi’s chaos of the senses : a counter narrative Discourse = كتابة الجسد الانثوي في رواية فوضى الحواس لمستغانمي : خطاب سردي معاكس
    (2021) Khireddine, Amel
    By being represented in the mainstream national discourse as national symbols and their bodies as boundary markers, Arab women tend to lose their right of being significant members in their nations. In order to empower their heroines, a number of contemporary Arab women writers appeal to their female protagonists’ erotic bodies as a language to voice loud their womanhood. In her attempt to transform the female body from a national symbol into a private erotic dominion, the Algerian novelist Ahlam Mosteghanemi adopts a unique approach in writing about her heroine’s body and sexuality in her second novel Fawda al-Hawas (Chaos of the Senses). As such, drawing upon Hélène Cixous’ theory of écriture feminine, this paper aims at shedding light on Mosteghanemi’s special approach of sexual politics which saves her text from falling in the pitfalls of linguistic pornography. The novelist astutely deploys metaphors and poetic expressions in depicting her heroine’s body and sensual desires

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