Abstract
The development of modern Egyptian drama has been shaped by confrontations with and attempted hybridization of the Self (traditional poetics) and the Other (Western poetics). Arabic poets have operated within well-established and often hegemonic traditions and have had giant ancestors to look up to or challenge. Arabic dramatists, on the other hand, had little or no indigenous traditions to ground themselves in, and most relied on Western traditions to introduce the genre into Arabic literary tradition. Unlike poets who struggled to escape from hegemonic literary traditions, playwrights had to develop, nourish, and promote every indigenous form they could find, like al-samir and al-muqallid. This paper shall investigate, compare, and critique three attempts by Tawfiq al-Hakim, Yusuf Idris, and Najib Surur to simultaneously revitalize indigenous dramatic forms and employ Western theories and devices in order to forge what they view as a truly Egyptian drama. My investigation shall be restricted to drama because there has not been any worthwhile theorization of this issue in Egyptian theater and because very little of the playwrights’ theorization about theater has been put into practice. However, performance will occasionally be discussed whenever it intersects meaningfully with the issue of the invention of a truly Egyptian theater, especially in the works of Idris, and Surur.
Presenters
Hala GhoneimAssociate Professor, Languages and Literature, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, Wisconsin, United States
Details
Presentation Type
Paper Presentation in a Themed Session
Theme
Critical Cultural Studies, Literary Humanities
KEYWORDS
"Egyptian Drama", " Arabic Literature"
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