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The Writing of Violence in the Middle East: Inflictions

Hardback

Main Details

Title The Writing of Violence in the Middle East: Inflictions
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Assistant Professor Jason Bahbak Mohaghegh
SeriesSuspensions: Contemporary Middle Eastern and Islamicate Thought
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156
Category/GenreLiterary studies - general
Islamic and Arabic philosophy
Islamic life and practice
ISBN/Barcode 9781441106308
ClassificationsDewey:809.8956
Audience
Professional & Vocational

Publishing Details

Publisher Continuum Publishing Corporation
Imprint Continuum Publishing Corporation
Publication Date 26 April 2012
Publication Country United States

Description

Writing has come face-to-face with a most crucial juncture: to negotiate with the inescapable presence of violence. From the domains of contemporary Middle Eastern literature, this book stages a powerful conversation on questions of cruelty, evil, rage, vengeance, madness, and deception. Beyond the narrow judgment of violence as a purely tragic reality, these writers (in states of exile, prison, martyrdom, and war) come to wager with the more elusive, inspiring, and even ecstatic dimensions that rest at the heart of a visceral universe of imagination. Covering complex and controversial thematic discussions, Jason Bahbak Mohaghegh forms an extreme record of voices, movements, and thought-experiments drawn from the inner circles of the Middle Eastern region. By exploring the most abrasive writings of this vast cultural front, the book reveals how such captivating outsider texts could potentially redefine our understanding of violence and its now-unstoppable relationship to a dangerous age.

Author Biography

Jason Bahbak Mohaghegh is Assistant Professor of World Literature at New Jersey City University, USA.

Reviews

Perhaps the major merit of Inflictions is not only the strength of its argument, but it is more the book's relentless counter canonical approach - a timely political-methodological intervention which boldly contemplates the inscriptions of real violence as integral to the very movement of absolute laceration of writing itself and the ultimate depleting of the metaphysics of presence ... From this multi-dimensional perception of how we ought to begin reading violence, from this deferred universe, the ideas of post-apocalyptic visions emerge and unfold. By all means, one can only hope that this book excites more inquiries peeling through more engravings-of-thought contained in concealed poetic, fictional, and philosophical palimpsests waiting for their moments to emerge. -- Youssef Yacoubi, The Ohio State University * SCTIW Review *