textThis report examines the use of grandmother figures in the construction of imagined communities in Arab American literature. Through the lens of diaspora studies, it argues that grandmother figures become integral in the creation of an Arab American imagined community based on two main tropes: a theoretical collapse between notions of patriotism and the maternal figure (in which the homeland becomes the Motherland) and the tendency of second-generation Arab American authors to connect their immigrant grandmothers to ethnic homelands. In exploring this connection, the report argues that the creation of an Arab American imagined community is necessitated by anti-Arab racism in the United States and the need for the community’s authors to ...
This thesis is in two parts. First, the short story collection, Alligator and Other Stories, which f...
AbstractThis paper discusses the current postgraduate level research into the corpus of Muslim Diasp...
In the wake of multiculturalism, the canon began to make room for the literary production of several...
Despite the fact that Arab American writers have been contributing to the literary scenes in the Uni...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.This study highlights the strat...
American society has been described as a melting pot of different peoples of multiple nationalities ...
This thesis aims to examine how the experience of migration to the Arab Gulf States is represented i...
America’s military involvement in the Middle East along with globalization, Islamophobia, and the in...
Mosaics of Identity: Reading Muslim Women's Memoirs From Across the Diaspora addresses Muslim women'...
Contemporary Arab-American women's writing is preoccupied with the ambivalence of the Arab-American ...
The attempt to come to terms with the meaning of home, both literally and metaphorically, has become...
In 1987 E.D. Hirsh published works on cultural literacy, developing a list that sums up knowledge th...
This project examines the struggle of American-Muslim women to negotiate their identities in literar...
This project focuses on Leila Ahmed\u27s A Border Passage (1999), Mohja Kahf\u27s Emails from Schehe...
Arabs and Jews are thought to inhabit the Middle East or urban areas in the United States, not Kentu...
This thesis is in two parts. First, the short story collection, Alligator and Other Stories, which f...
AbstractThis paper discusses the current postgraduate level research into the corpus of Muslim Diasp...
In the wake of multiculturalism, the canon began to make room for the literary production of several...
Despite the fact that Arab American writers have been contributing to the literary scenes in the Uni...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.This study highlights the strat...
American society has been described as a melting pot of different peoples of multiple nationalities ...
This thesis aims to examine how the experience of migration to the Arab Gulf States is represented i...
America’s military involvement in the Middle East along with globalization, Islamophobia, and the in...
Mosaics of Identity: Reading Muslim Women's Memoirs From Across the Diaspora addresses Muslim women'...
Contemporary Arab-American women's writing is preoccupied with the ambivalence of the Arab-American ...
The attempt to come to terms with the meaning of home, both literally and metaphorically, has become...
In 1987 E.D. Hirsh published works on cultural literacy, developing a list that sums up knowledge th...
This project examines the struggle of American-Muslim women to negotiate their identities in literar...
This project focuses on Leila Ahmed\u27s A Border Passage (1999), Mohja Kahf\u27s Emails from Schehe...
Arabs and Jews are thought to inhabit the Middle East or urban areas in the United States, not Kentu...
This thesis is in two parts. First, the short story collection, Alligator and Other Stories, which f...
AbstractThis paper discusses the current postgraduate level research into the corpus of Muslim Diasp...
In the wake of multiculturalism, the canon began to make room for the literary production of several...