“Female Self-Attack and Suicide in TayebSalih’s Season of Migration to the North and Lian Badr’s The Eye of the Mirror”
نوع المنشور
بحث أصيل
المؤلفون

Drawing on psychoanalytic and sociocultural theories of suicide and self-harm, it is argued here that
Hosna’s suicide in Salih’sSeason of Migration to the North(1969) and Aisha’s self-harm in Badr’s The
Eye of The Mirror (1994)delineate two psychological modes of the female protagonists' coping with
patriarchal oppression. While Aisha’s self-harm is therapeutic and cathartic, Hosna’s suicide is
revolutionary on societal levels. Although Aisha’s self-harm and Hosna’s suicide stem from the
patriarchal destructive practice of enforced marriage, the extremity and quality of each act elucidate
variances in their merits. While Aisha temporarily acts out her internal distress and communicates her
discontent by cutting off her hair, Hosna’s suicide inspires a feminist agenda based on self-esteem and
resistance and threatens the sovereignty of the whole patriarchal structure.

المجلة
العنوان
Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies.
الناشر
Duke University Press
بلد الناشر
المملكة المتحدة
Indexing
Thomson Reuters
معامل التأثير
0,18
نوع المنشور
Both (Printed and Online)
المجلد
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السنة
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الصفحات
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