Between Home and Exile A Reading of the Exilic Experience of the Iraqi Poet Adnan Al-Sayegh

Hana Khlaif Ghena

Abstract


This paper aims at exploring the exilic experience of the Iraqi poet, Adnan Al-Sayegh whose involuntarily departure from his homeland, Iraq, in the early 1990s made him suffer a strong sense of estrangement, nostalgia, self-fragmentation and disconnection.  The paper is divided into three sections and a conclusion. Section one sheds light on the circumstances that forced Al-Sayegh into self-exile. Investigating these circumstances necessarily entails a discussion of the concept of exile, its nature and consequences, which is the subject of section two. Section three examines a number of poems that typically translates Al-Sayegh’s deep sense of dislocation and disaffection in his new host lands. The conclusion argues that exile as a physical, geographical, and psychological state of being is a ‘basic condition,’ in Al-Sayegh’s poetry and life.

Keywords: Exile, Iraq, Al-Sayegh, estrangement, and nostalgia


Full Text:

PDF

References


Adelman, H. (2008). The refugee and the IDP problem in Iraq. In H. Adelman (Ed), Protracted displacement in Asia: No place to call home(181-209). Hampshire: Ashgate Publishing Limited.

Adnan, A. (2004). Complete poetical works. Beirut: The Arabic Institution of Studies and Publication.

Adnan, A. (2011). And. Beirut. Al-Kwakab Press Services.

Anderson, L. & G. Stansfield. (2004). The future of Iraq: Dictatorship, democracy, or division? London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Al-Athari, L. (2008). This rhythm does not please me: Women protest war in Dunya Mikhail’s poetry. Kansas: Kansas State University.

Al-Ubaidi, W. (2002). “An Interview with Adnan Al-Sayegh). Al-Thifaf Magazine. Issue no. 9. Retrieved October, 10,2015.

Al-Zareebi, W. (2008). Adnan Al-Sayegh: The poet who carried his exile under his armpit.” Tunisia: the Tunisian Company of publication and Plastic Arts development. Retrieved December, 8, 2015.

Arendt, H. (1951). On the nature of totalitarianism: An essay in understanding. Retrieved December, 8, 2015.

Camelia, A. (---). Exilic Dimension of Modernism: D.H. Lawrence’s ‘Island’-Characters. Retrieved December, 5, 2015.

Dobrinescu, A. M. (---). Travelling across cultures- Jhumpa Lahiri’s interpreter of maladies. Retrieved October, 1, 2015.

Dodge, T. (2003). Inventing Iraq: The failure of nation building and a history denied. New York: Colombia U.P.

Friedrich, C. J.(1953). The unique character of totalitarian society. In C. J. Friedrich (Ed.), Totalitarianism (47-60). Cambridge: Cambridge U.P.

Hanks, P.(Ed).(1974). Encyclopedia World Dictionary. Beirut: Color Press.

Iamandi, P. On Solaris: Exile the SF way. Retrieved December, 4,2015.

Johnson, A. (December16,2005). Putting Cruelty First: An Interview with Kanan Makiya. Retrieved December, 5, 2015.

Kurdi, M. (2010). A Woman Leaving Twice to Arrive: The Journey as Quest for a Gendered Diasporic Identity in Anne Devlin’s After Easter. Estudios Irlandeses,5, 58-67.

Mitrea, I. Re (creating) home from afar: memories of exile. Retrieved December, 4, 2015.

Nalepka, E. (2014). Saddam is Iraq and Iraq is Saddam: Saddam Hussain’s Cult of Personality and the Perception of his Life and Legacy. Retrieved January, 10, 2016.

Rodrigues, A. L. (2007). The trauma of diminished Existence: Chinua Achebe Revisited. Postcolonial Text, 3(4), 1-23.

Rohde, A. (2010). State- Society relations in Ba’thist Iraq: facing dictatorships. London: Routledge.

Ropero, L. L. (2003). Diaspora: Concept, Context, and its Application in the Study of New Literatures. Revista Alicantina de Es tudios Ingleses. Retrieved November, 3, 2014.

Said, E. (1994). Culture and imperialism. London: Vintage Books.

Said. E. (1996). Representation of the intellectual: The 1993 Reith lectures. New York: Vintage Books, 1996.

Said, E. (2000). Reflection on exile. In Reflections on exile and other essays. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.

Said, E. (1990). Reflections of exile. In R. Ferguson (Ed.), Out there: Marginalization and contemporary cultures(357-366). Cambridge: MIT Press.

Sassoon, J. (2011). Saddam Hussein's Ba'th Party: Inside an authoritarian regime. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Tabori, P. (1972). The anatomy of exile: A semantic and historical study. London: George G. Harrap & Co.

Tsaaior, J. T. (2011). Exile, exilic consciousness and the poetic imagination in Tanure Ojaide’s poetry. Tydskrif Vir Letterkunde, 48 (1) 98-109.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.




Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

2010-2023 (CC-BY) Australian International Academic Centre PTY.LTD.

Advances in Language and Literary Studies

You may require to add the 'aiac.org.au' domain to your e-mail 'safe list’ If you do not receive e-mail in your 'inbox'. Otherwise, you may check your 'Spam mail' or 'junk mail' folders.