Conscience of the Nation: Writers, State, and Society in Modern EgyptAmerican Univ in Cairo Press, 2008 - 355 pages Artfully combining social and literary history, this unique study explores the dual loyalties of contemporary Egyptian authors from the 1952 Revolution to the present day. Egypt's writers have long had an elevated idea of their social mission, considering themselves 'the conscience of the nation.' At the same time, modern Egyptian writers work under the liberal conception of the writer borrowed from the European model. As a result, each Egyptian writer treads the tightrope between authority and freedom, social commitment and artistic license, loyalty to the state and to personal expression, in an ongoing quest for an elusive literary ideal. With these fundamentals in mind, Conscience of the Nation examines Egyptian literary production over the past fifty years, surveying works by established writers, as well as those of dozens of other authors who are celebrated in Egypt but whose writings are largely unknown to the foreign reader. Novelists and poets, scriptwriters and playwrights, critics and journalists all have battled with and tried to resolve the tensions inherent in the conflicting forces of self and society. |
Contents
Genesis of the Modern Egyptian Literary Field | 5 |
The Egyptian Arab and International Fields | 12 |
Censorship and Censors | 35 |
The Literature Market | 69 |
Consciences of the Nation | 83 |
Foreign Languages and Translation | 109 |
Literature and Identity | 131 |
Margins and Boundaries | 145 |
Social Hierarchies | 167 |
Literary Genres | 193 |
Conclusion | 221 |
Postscript | 227 |
Writers and Critics | 237 |
State Literature Prizes 19582006 | 291 |
Notes | 297 |
330 | |
Common terms and phrases
able academic according aesthetic American University appeared Arabic literature Arabic orig artistic associated avant-garde awarded become beginning born Cairo Press career censorship classical close collections commitment continued criticism cultural dominant Egypt Egyptian elite English example expression fiction foreign freedom French give given hand Ibrahim idea important institutions intellectual interest Islamic kind language later legitimate less letters literary field literature lived London Mahfouz major material movement Muhammad narrative novel Organization Paris particular period plays poems poetic poetry poets political popular position present Press Prize production published question reader realist Reference regime remained represented result short stories social space studies success symbolic taken texts theater traditional translated turned University in Cairo values various whole writers written young Yusuf
Popular passages
Page 328 - Islamic tradition, see Michael Cook, Commanding Right and Forbidding Wrong in Islamic Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000). 20. Qur'an 2:143; 3:110. 21. Qur'an 4:135; 5:8. 22. Interestingly, the expression "false universalisms...