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      Mirroring Hybridity: The use of Arab Folk Tradition in Laila Halaby's Once in a Promised Land and Alia Yunis's The Night Counter

      research-article
      Arab Studies Quarterly
      Pluto Journals
      Arab and Muslim American, hybridity, folk tradition, novel, diaspora, 9/11
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            Abstract

            This article explores the way in which Laila Halaby in Once in a Promised Land and Alia Yunis in The Night Counter utilize the Arab folk tradition in novels on Arab and Muslim American experience to counter the dominant narrative that simultaneously erases their extensive history in the United States and juxtaposes it with a forced visibility that is marked by Otherness, threat, and distrust. The article argues that by using folkloric figures and storytelling structures, Halaby and Yunis reverse the positionality of these communities by marking the multiple cultural signifiers that inform their stories in order to construct a palimpsest that reinscribes Arab and Muslim American experiences within narratives that perceive them as problems. As such, the Arab folk tradition emerges as a significant mode in the cultural memory of Arab and Muslim Americans, and the American literary fabric more broadly, and takes on a new meaning in this context.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Journal
            10.2307/j50005550
            arabstudquar
            Arab Studies Quarterly
            Pluto Journals
            0271-3519
            2043-6920
            1 October 2020
            : 42
            : 4 ( doiID: 10.13169/arabstudquar.42.issue-4 )
            : 251-271
            Article
            arabstudquar.42.4.0251
            10.13169/arabstudquar.42.4.0251
            c085d894-b6e3-4710-a0f5-40471ab48f37
            © 2020 The Center for Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies

            All content is freely available without charge to users or their institutions. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles in this journal without asking prior permission of the publisher or the author. Articles published in the journal are distributed under a http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

            History
            Custom metadata
            eng

            Social & Behavioral Sciences
            diaspora,9/11,Arab and Muslim American,hybridity,folk tradition,novel

            Bibliography

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            5. Halaby, L. (2007). Once in a Promised Land. Boston MA: Beacon Press.

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            13. Yekenkurul, S. (2011, December). Broken Narratives in the Immigrant Folktalke. Current Narratives, 1(3), 54–63.

            14. Yunis, A. (2010). The Night Counter. New York: Broadway Books.

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