The Imaginary of the Colonial Era: Duality of Speech and Self-Rupture in Yasmin Khadra’s What the Day Owes the Night

Volume 5|Issue 21| Summer 2017 |Articles

Abstract

This article offers a formal and careful reading of Yasmin Khadra's novel What the Day Owes the Night in light of cultural and post-colonial criticism. Methodologically, the study employs the imaginary at an important stage of the colonial context in Algeria, although it expands to include the various nations that lived under colonialism and were subjected to its tools of Westernization and exclusion, as can be observed nowadays in the Palestinian reality. The issue is both new and old at the same time, on the other hand, the text forces us to address the hidden aspects of the French milieu, which are neither completely innocent nor purely literary.

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Professor of World and Comparative Literature, critic, and researcher at Blida 2 University, Algeria. He received his PhD with the thesis “The poetics of place in the Algerian novel of the 1990s” from the School of Literature and Languages, University of Algiers. His publications include “Narcissism without riverbanks: Self-imagination in the work of Waciny Laredj” and “Orbits of fear: the space of violence in the Algerian civil war novel.”

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