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The Earthquake (Middle Eastern Fiction.) par…
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The Earthquake (Middle Eastern Fiction.) (original 1974; édition 2000)

par Tahir Wattar

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"One afternoon, Shaykh Abdelmajid Boularwah embarks upon a journey from Algiers to Constantine in search of lost relatives who might help him defraud the new socialist government in its attempt to implement land reform. Through a labyrinth of back alleys and past memories, Boularwah makes his way across the seven bridges of Constantine, battling the forces of a rapidly changing society while confronting the demons of his own horrific past. The sequence of his recollections and his bizarre internal monologues construct a biographical narrative of modern Algeria from a consistently adversarial and surrealistic point of view, told by the defiantly proud scion of a family of ruthless landowners, swindlers, traitors and collaborators with colonial authorities." "This is the vision of post-colonial Algeria articulated in graphic detail and drawn from the stark images of Islamic eschatology and apocalyptic legends. Shaykh Boularwah's odyssey transports us from past to present, colonialism to independence, traditions to modernity, hope to despair, and from one failed ideology to another. Written in the early 1970s, this work is an ominous message about the evils of intolerance, ignorance and extremism, told in a language that resonates loudly, presciently foretelling the dreadful events which would later besiege Algeria."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved… (plus d'informations)
Membre:gunsaredrawn
Titre:The Earthquake (Middle Eastern Fiction.)
Auteurs:Tahir Wattar
Info:Saqi Books (2000), Paperback, 184 pages
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The Earthquake par Tahir Wattar (1974)

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"One afternoon, Shaykh Abdelmajid Boularwah embarks upon a journey from Algiers to Constantine in search of lost relatives who might help him defraud the new socialist government in its attempt to implement land reform. Through a labyrinth of back alleys and past memories, Boularwah makes his way across the seven bridges of Constantine, battling the forces of a rapidly changing society while confronting the demons of his own horrific past. The sequence of his recollections and his bizarre internal monologues construct a biographical narrative of modern Algeria from a consistently adversarial and surrealistic point of view, told by the defiantly proud scion of a family of ruthless landowners, swindlers, traitors and collaborators with colonial authorities." "This is the vision of post-colonial Algeria articulated in graphic detail and drawn from the stark images of Islamic eschatology and apocalyptic legends. Shaykh Boularwah's odyssey transports us from past to present, colonialism to independence, traditions to modernity, hope to despair, and from one failed ideology to another. Written in the early 1970s, this work is an ominous message about the evils of intolerance, ignorance and extremism, told in a language that resonates loudly, presciently foretelling the dreadful events which would later besiege Algeria."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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