The inclination of theorizing literary works published in the Diaspora and in the post-colonial period, that has been observed recently tends to turn the investigation of the main components of literary works into a side task. Sudanese writer Leila Aboulela’s work can be considered one of the examples of such pieces of work. The novel is based on existential alternatives which are experienced by Sudanese women living with Muslim values in western society. The ambiguous norms in the Minaret by Aboulela are examined in the light of Andrew Gibson’s critical reception and receptivity
Recent postcolonial novels have touched on Islamic faith and the Prophet, presenting a humanised ima...
This chapter examines two novels concerned with the experience of Arab Muslim women in national cont...
This article is an attempt to analyze the possibility of retaining one's Islamic identity within a p...
Leila Aboulala (1964 -) is a Sudanese-Egyptian Muslim novelist who lives in the Scottish diaspora. S...
This thesis offers a detailed investigation of Leila Aboulela’s literary oeuvre. It represents the f...
The study aims to explore as to how the portrayal of orthodox Muslim women was challenged in their i...
Born in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum in the 1960’s to an Egyptian mother and a Sudanese father, ...
The Sudanese-born author Leila Aboulela describes the position of the non-western Anglophone writer ...
This thesis focuses on Muslim literature, a diverse literature that includes literary works produced...
Leila Aboulela, a Sudanese diasporic writer living in Scotland, is a prolific contemporary immigrant...
This essay analyses Leila Aboulela's narrative techniques when depicting a Muslim “who has faith” in...
Representation of British Muslim identities in Contemporary British fiction is a thriving field of r...
Contrary to hegemonic Western representations of Muslim women as victims of Islam and Muslim men, Su...
Leila Aboulela’s novel Minaret follows the spiritual journey of a young woman exiled from her home i...
This review article explores the life and writing of Sudanese writer Leila Aboulela
Recent postcolonial novels have touched on Islamic faith and the Prophet, presenting a humanised ima...
This chapter examines two novels concerned with the experience of Arab Muslim women in national cont...
This article is an attempt to analyze the possibility of retaining one's Islamic identity within a p...
Leila Aboulala (1964 -) is a Sudanese-Egyptian Muslim novelist who lives in the Scottish diaspora. S...
This thesis offers a detailed investigation of Leila Aboulela’s literary oeuvre. It represents the f...
The study aims to explore as to how the portrayal of orthodox Muslim women was challenged in their i...
Born in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum in the 1960’s to an Egyptian mother and a Sudanese father, ...
The Sudanese-born author Leila Aboulela describes the position of the non-western Anglophone writer ...
This thesis focuses on Muslim literature, a diverse literature that includes literary works produced...
Leila Aboulela, a Sudanese diasporic writer living in Scotland, is a prolific contemporary immigrant...
This essay analyses Leila Aboulela's narrative techniques when depicting a Muslim “who has faith” in...
Representation of British Muslim identities in Contemporary British fiction is a thriving field of r...
Contrary to hegemonic Western representations of Muslim women as victims of Islam and Muslim men, Su...
Leila Aboulela’s novel Minaret follows the spiritual journey of a young woman exiled from her home i...
This review article explores the life and writing of Sudanese writer Leila Aboulela
Recent postcolonial novels have touched on Islamic faith and the Prophet, presenting a humanised ima...
This chapter examines two novels concerned with the experience of Arab Muslim women in national cont...
This article is an attempt to analyze the possibility of retaining one's Islamic identity within a p...