The American Dream, which has roots in Arabic and Islamic culture, has been unavailable to Arabs and Muslims before 9/11. After the terrorist attacks, the situation has only gotten worse, and Towelhead (Erian), Once in a Promised Land (Halaby), Amreeka (Dabis), First Writing Since (Hammad), and Usage (Charara) reflect this unrealized opportunity at achieving the American Dream. These texts do so in a variety of ways, whether they are literary, poetic, or cinematic methods
The relationship between the United States and the Arab/Muslim world has atic, to say the least, and...
The article explores the representational dilemmas reflected in post-9/11 Anglophone Arab fiction. T...
The novel in the Arab-American literature is absolutely considered a modern writing in its existence...
The American Dream, which has roots in Arabic and Islamic culture, has been unavailable to Arabs and...
This paper documents the emergence of a new sub-genre of U.S. literature, encompassing narratives fo...
Although Arab-American literature has been in existence in the U.S. for over a century, it has only ...
As a consequence of its efforts to round up suspected immigrants after the attacks of 9/11, the U.S....
This essay explores the dominant rhetoric of American society in the wake of 9/11 as seen through fi...
In 1987 E.D. Hirsh published works on cultural literacy, developing a list that sums up knowledge th...
America, being a country of extreme liberalism, individual freedom, choice and existence and modern ...
The terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York on 11th September, 2001, left behind 297...
The wounds inflicted by the September 11 terror attacks remain fresh today, nine years later. Americ...
Terrorist (2006) by John Updike has been classified within the post-9/11 novel genre where many Amer...
The events of 9/11 deeply impacted the Arab American community, initiating a renewed Orientalist nar...
Arab, Arab-American, American: Hegemonic and Contrapuntal Representations, explores the US mainstrea...
The relationship between the United States and the Arab/Muslim world has atic, to say the least, and...
The article explores the representational dilemmas reflected in post-9/11 Anglophone Arab fiction. T...
The novel in the Arab-American literature is absolutely considered a modern writing in its existence...
The American Dream, which has roots in Arabic and Islamic culture, has been unavailable to Arabs and...
This paper documents the emergence of a new sub-genre of U.S. literature, encompassing narratives fo...
Although Arab-American literature has been in existence in the U.S. for over a century, it has only ...
As a consequence of its efforts to round up suspected immigrants after the attacks of 9/11, the U.S....
This essay explores the dominant rhetoric of American society in the wake of 9/11 as seen through fi...
In 1987 E.D. Hirsh published works on cultural literacy, developing a list that sums up knowledge th...
America, being a country of extreme liberalism, individual freedom, choice and existence and modern ...
The terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York on 11th September, 2001, left behind 297...
The wounds inflicted by the September 11 terror attacks remain fresh today, nine years later. Americ...
Terrorist (2006) by John Updike has been classified within the post-9/11 novel genre where many Amer...
The events of 9/11 deeply impacted the Arab American community, initiating a renewed Orientalist nar...
Arab, Arab-American, American: Hegemonic and Contrapuntal Representations, explores the US mainstrea...
The relationship between the United States and the Arab/Muslim world has atic, to say the least, and...
The article explores the representational dilemmas reflected in post-9/11 Anglophone Arab fiction. T...
The novel in the Arab-American literature is absolutely considered a modern writing in its existence...