2013
DOI: 10.1093/melus/mlt031
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Feeling Embodied and Being Displaced: A Phenomenological Exploration of Hospital Scenes in Rabih Alameddine's Fiction

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Therí Pickens, Syrine Hout, and Zuzana Tabačková, however, come startlingly closest to making the point, focusing on Alameddine's fiction in general. Pickens (2013) pens her view on disease and bodily concerns that dwell at length in Alameddine's The Perv (1999), I, the Divine (2001), Koolaids (1998), andThe Hakawati (2008), saying that all his characters "do not find the state of so-called normalcy or belonging curative, they prefer illness and exile because return and wellness do not offer rest or peace " (2013: 68). Hout concerns herself with trauma, arguing that Lebanese writers' (Alameddine among them) "protagonists' preoccupations with converting traumatic memory into narrative memory www.plutojournals.com/asq/ designate them as postwar trauma writings" (2008: 60).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therí Pickens, Syrine Hout, and Zuzana Tabačková, however, come startlingly closest to making the point, focusing on Alameddine's fiction in general. Pickens (2013) pens her view on disease and bodily concerns that dwell at length in Alameddine's The Perv (1999), I, the Divine (2001), Koolaids (1998), andThe Hakawati (2008), saying that all his characters "do not find the state of so-called normalcy or belonging curative, they prefer illness and exile because return and wellness do not offer rest or peace " (2013: 68). Hout concerns herself with trauma, arguing that Lebanese writers' (Alameddine among them) "protagonists' preoccupations with converting traumatic memory into narrative memory www.plutojournals.com/asq/ designate them as postwar trauma writings" (2008: 60).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%