Contrary to hegemonic Western representations of Muslim women as victims of Islam and Muslim men, Sudanese-Scottish Leila Aboulela’s The Translator depicts a Muslim woman, Sammar, whose sense of home and belonging is predicated on her romantic love for her late cousin and husband, Tarig. Therefore, after his death, she feels alienated from her home in Sudan and leaves for Aberdeen, Scotland, where she is ostracized because she is Muslim. While this Muslim identity proves indispensable for her survival and gradual healing, ultimate normalcy and belonging are restored when she reclaims the world of love and acceptance she has lost with Tarig’s death through a new relationship. The romantic love and the language she uses in this re...
This article explores Leila Ahmed’s A Border Passage, and Nawal El Saadawi’s Memoirs from the Women...
This study focuses on the relationship between translation and migration in a postcolonial text prod...
The concepts of home and identity are at the heart of any Postcolonial examination of literature and...
Contrary to hegemonic Western representations of Muslim women as victims of Islam and Muslim men, Su...
This article is an attempt to analyze the possibility of retaining one's Islamic identity within a p...
This thesis offers a detailed investigation of Leila Aboulela’s literary oeuvre. It represents the f...
In most of her works, Leila Aboulela focuses on Sudanese characters in the diaspora. Her protagonist...
Leila Aboulela, a Sudanese diasporic writer living in Scotland, is a prolific contemporary immigrant...
The Sudanese-born author Leila Aboulela describes the position of the non-western Anglophone writer ...
Leila Aboulala (1964 -) is a Sudanese-Egyptian Muslim novelist who lives in the Scottish diaspora. S...
This study focuses on the role of translation as an instrument of construction of places and immigra...
The inclination of theorizing literary works published in the Diaspora and in the post-colonial peri...
This paper discusses the practice of religious rituals and doctrines and the effects that these have...
[eng] The displacement that migration entails is a challenging issue to overcome, especially when a ...
Master's thesis in Literacy StudiesThis thesis analyzes the representation of the migrant woman in M...
This article explores Leila Ahmed’s A Border Passage, and Nawal El Saadawi’s Memoirs from the Women...
This study focuses on the relationship between translation and migration in a postcolonial text prod...
The concepts of home and identity are at the heart of any Postcolonial examination of literature and...
Contrary to hegemonic Western representations of Muslim women as victims of Islam and Muslim men, Su...
This article is an attempt to analyze the possibility of retaining one's Islamic identity within a p...
This thesis offers a detailed investigation of Leila Aboulela’s literary oeuvre. It represents the f...
In most of her works, Leila Aboulela focuses on Sudanese characters in the diaspora. Her protagonist...
Leila Aboulela, a Sudanese diasporic writer living in Scotland, is a prolific contemporary immigrant...
The Sudanese-born author Leila Aboulela describes the position of the non-western Anglophone writer ...
Leila Aboulala (1964 -) is a Sudanese-Egyptian Muslim novelist who lives in the Scottish diaspora. S...
This study focuses on the role of translation as an instrument of construction of places and immigra...
The inclination of theorizing literary works published in the Diaspora and in the post-colonial peri...
This paper discusses the practice of religious rituals and doctrines and the effects that these have...
[eng] The displacement that migration entails is a challenging issue to overcome, especially when a ...
Master's thesis in Literacy StudiesThis thesis analyzes the representation of the migrant woman in M...
This article explores Leila Ahmed’s A Border Passage, and Nawal El Saadawi’s Memoirs from the Women...
This study focuses on the relationship between translation and migration in a postcolonial text prod...
The concepts of home and identity are at the heart of any Postcolonial examination of literature and...