2012
DOI: 10.3366/edinburgh/9780748643424.001.0001
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Post-War Anglophone Lebanese Fiction

Abstract: At one point in Syrine Hout's rich analytical work on postwar Anglophone Lebanese literature, she references Elias Khoury on the nature of memory and civil war. Khoury writes, "civil wars can be erased from neither reality nor memory. Instead, they are reborn or reincarnated…if erased from memory, they colonize the subconscious" (151). In many ways, this passage seems to encompass much of what Hout argues in this work-namely that despite the years that have elapsed since the Civil War was officially declared t… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Hage expresses concerns that immigration literature may slip into reconfirming the rhetoric of salvation: In a lot of Western literature, and maybe Canadian literature too, you cannot portray an immigrant as somebody that is evil […] But if you create characters who do only good, who are all oppressed, who were the victims of something and then come here and are saved, then you are not presenting them as humans. (Hout, 2012: 163).…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…Hage expresses concerns that immigration literature may slip into reconfirming the rhetoric of salvation: In a lot of Western literature, and maybe Canadian literature too, you cannot portray an immigrant as somebody that is evil […] But if you create characters who do only good, who are all oppressed, who were the victims of something and then come here and are saved, then you are not presenting them as humans. (Hout, 2012: 163).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…In this sense, the novel does not romanticize immigration. Neither does it portray another story of “the stereotypically eager and grateful immigrant”; in stark contrast, the narrator curses his luck and this northern terrain (Hout, 2012: 160). The novel narrates the anxieties of a young man who has emigrated to Canada as a refugee from the Middle East and has been living in Montréal for several years.…”
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confidence: 99%
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