The Transformations of the Sudanese Novel in the 1990s and Beyond

Volume 1|Issue 2| Autumn 2012 |Articles

Abstract

Among the themes characteristic of the post 1990s Sudanese novel are: the use of many narrative techniques with a deep awareness of the features of this narrative genre; the prominence of autobiography as a felt reality that is expanded in the imagination with the novelist borrowing some of its techniques such as the shift to factual events; the dialectic of the clash with social and economic reality; the resort to history as a metaphor for opening up the questions of the present; the use of the local as microcosm; a preoccupation with the marginal, excluded, and suppressed; writing the body; the highlighting by feminist writing of certain issues; poetization of narrative; and other features.
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Professor of Literary Criticism at al-Baha University, Saudi Arabia. He is interested in issues of literary criticism, particularly in the Sudanese novel and the components of narrative discourse in the contemporary Arabic novel. He was born and raised in Sudan.

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