Hadja Nakhla BEDERINA
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
biblio centrale, université laghouat
Abstract
Amid the decades of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, many disturbing events affected the lives
of millions of Palestinians and their ‘memory’. Cultural memory and trauma are both parts of
‘memory’ studies. This dissertation seeks to investigate the role of literature in representing
Palestinian cultural memory and trauma. The chosen corpus for this study consists of Susan
Abulhawa’s Mornings in Jenin (2010) and Raja Shehadeh’s Palestinian Walks: Notes on a
Vanishing Landscape (2008). This study sheds light on Abulhawa’s narration of the loss of
Palestine. As a consequence of this loss, Palestinians developed a peculiar attachment to the
land, and hence, the literary imagery of the landscape and trees becomes “Lieux de memoire”
that acts as holder of Palestinian cultural memory. In accordance, fruitful trees, identified as
active agents of memory, not only serve as holders of cultural memory but also serve as
connectors between the past and the future of the rupture between Palestinians and their lands.
Furthermore, the study explores the ways in which trauma is represented in the
aforementioned works. Each writer offers to deal with it differently. Abulhawa focuses on the
trauma caused by the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and posits three models of working through:
either through dementia, resilience or silence. Shehadeh focuses on trauma triggered by the
loss of the land and the irreversible changes conducted by the Israeli settlement through his
portrayal of the confiscated lands as traumascapes
