Affiliation:
1. University of Texas at San Antonio
Abstract
InSpecters, her multi-genre novel-length work of life-writing, Radwa Ashour engages with the Russian Formalist Viktor Shklovsky’s theory of “enstrangement” or “defamiliarization” to explore how history shapes lives and lives shape history. The double-voiced narration andmise-en-abymestructure of the novel, a mirror-within-a-mirror plot layered with metafictional passages on writing, coheres through the motifs of ghosts, threads, and silences. These motifs bring to the fore, if only momentarily, those individuals whom history has effaced from the nineteenth century onwards. Ashour, who in her words seeks to construct a “geographical space dense with a resonant history, a composite of past and present, overlapping territories constitutive of an emotional and moral space for self-awareness and self-definition”, engages the theory of enstrangement on both counts as she crafts a personal and political history that resists final closure and affirms life.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Cultural Studies,Gender Studies
Reference74 articles.
1. America in an Arab Mirror
2. “Eyewitness, Scribe and Story Teller: My Experience as a Novelist”;Ashour;The Massachusetts Review,2000