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Historicizing the Arab apocalypse with Walter Benjamin : Etel Adnan’s “Master of the eclipse” and Rabih Alameddine’s The angel of history -

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dc.contributor.author Breeding, Vanessa Katherine Bond,
dc.date.accessioned 2018-10-11T11:43:04Z
dc.date.available 2018-10-11T11:43:04Z
dc.date.copyright 2021-02
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.date.submitted 2018
dc.identifier.other b21055385
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10938/21415
dc.description Thesis. M.A. American University of Beirut. Department of English, 2018. T:6735$Advisor : Dr. Syrine Hout, Professor, English ; Members of Committee : Dr. Sirene Harb, Associate Professor, English ; Dr. Sami Khatib, Postdoctoral Researcher, Research Training Group Cultures of Critique , Leuphana Universitat Luneburg.
dc.description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 85-87)
dc.description.abstract In 2009 the prominent Lebanese American painter, poet, and author Etel Adnan published a book of short stories whose title story, “Master of the Eclipse” focuses on the life of Iraqi poet Buland al-Haydari and his interest in angels. In the story, Adnan situates this interest in relation to the Marxist German dialectician Walter Benjamin’s famous allegory from his theses “On the Concept of History” (1940), i.e., the angel of history. Recently, in 2016, another prominent Lebanese American author, Rabih Alameddine, published a novel that also revolves around the life of a poet, and which bears the title The Angel of History. Both Alameddine and Adnan have been recognized as offering complex literary presentations of the Lebanese civil war in their previous work by scholars such as Syrine Hout and Sonja Mejcher-Atassi. Hout and Mejcher-Atassi also link these authors to the problem of narrating the unnarrateable, a conundrum that has been related to post-war Lebanon by Saree Makdisi and Sune Haugbolle. This project extends this investigation of narrative experimentation in the Lebanese context by asking: How can we understand the angel in the context of Benjamin’s philosophical work in order to better interpret Adnan’s and Alameddine’s literary re-glossings of said angel? What narrative mode surfaces in the confluence of post-war Lebanese themes about remembrance and Benjamin’s materialist historiographical vision for using the past as a tool to combat danger in the present? Highlighting Benjamin’s 6th, 9th, and 17th theses from “On the Concept of History,” this research shows that Adnan and Alameddine are confronting images from the past constructively in order to combat the personal and poetic dangers of silence, depression, and despair during an ongoing historical moment of loss and destruction in the Arab world. Within the frames of philosophical and literary-generic explication with Benjamin and Mikhail Bakhtin, close readings of these two
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (vii, 87 leaves) : illustrations
dc.language.iso eng
dc.subject.classification T:006735
dc.subject.lcsh Adnan, Etel. Master of the eclipse.$Alameddine, Rabih. The angel of history.$Benjamin, Walter, 1892-1940.
dc.subject.lcsh Apocalypse in literature.$Arabic poetry -- 21st century.$Lebanese literature -- 21st century.$American literature -- Arab American authors.$Socialism.$Historiography.
dc.title Historicizing the Arab apocalypse with Walter Benjamin : Etel Adnan’s “Master of the eclipse” and Rabih Alameddine’s The angel of history -
dc.type Thesis
dc.contributor.department Faculty of Arts and Sciences.$Department of English
dc.contributor.institution American University of Beirut.


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