2005
DOI: 10.3200/crit.46.3.219-233
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Memory, Home, and Exile in Contemporary Anglophone Lebanese Fiction

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In a study of Anglophone Lebanese fi ction, Hout (2005) discusses the works of two authors, Nada Jarrar and Rabih Alameddinne, and illustrates the different constructions of home and exile they express. Among my respondents, Lebanese immigrant women experience and remember their homeland through physical practices and in reference to specific locations and family members.…”
Section: Mobile Homelands: Practical and Relationalmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In a study of Anglophone Lebanese fi ction, Hout (2005) discusses the works of two authors, Nada Jarrar and Rabih Alameddinne, and illustrates the different constructions of home and exile they express. Among my respondents, Lebanese immigrant women experience and remember their homeland through physical practices and in reference to specific locations and family members.…”
Section: Mobile Homelands: Practical and Relationalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such a difference is also refl ected in the works of Lebanese immigrant writers. In a study of Anglophone Lebanese fi ction, Hout (2005) discusses the works of two authors, Nada Jarrar and Rabih Alameddinne, and illustrates the different constructions of home and exile they express. While not accounting for gender as a relevant factor in shaping these reconstructions, Hout emphasizes that the two authors present oppositional attitudes towards and views of memory, war, and exile.…”
Section: Mobile Homelands: Practical and Relationalmentioning
confidence: 99%