Deconstructing Hegemony
More Information
ISBN 9780199408467
Weight in kg 0.166
Year of Publication 2020
Binding Paperback
Pages 166
Deconstructing Hegemony
Deconstructing Hegemony is mainly informed by the deconstructionist approach, as it unravels literature, theory, and history writing, in addition to ideology, lexicon, media, and politics. The readings are also informed by, among others, Michel Foucault, Edward Said, Abdelwahab Elmessiri, and Noam Chomsky. Deconstruction, or questioning oppositions, as the recurrent approach, pairs with contrapuntalism or counterpoint; epistemology or theory of knowledge; hermeneutics or interpretation; ecocriticism or literature and nature; geopolitics; cartography or map-drawing; demography or population; marginalization or minority studies; as well as normalizing discourse or stigmatizing difference or any deviation from ‘set’ standards. In Part I of this book, El-Meligi analyses case studies in deconstructive literature by comparing works of Eastern and Western authors such as David Grossman, Mourid Barghouti, and Louise Erdrich. Part II probes deconstructive theory, philosophy, historiography, and lexicon that pertain to the geopolitical term, the Middle East. Among the writers analysed are Chomsky, Pappé, and Finkelstein.
AUTHOR DESCRIPTION
Eman El-Meligi is Professor and Chair in the Department of English at Damanhur University, Egypt. She holds a PhD and an MA from the Department of English, Alexandria University, Egypt. Among her books are Postmodernist Arab American Novel, Poetry, and Theory: Comparative Readings, Conversing with Egyptian and Chicana Literature (2015) and Edward Said’s Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory: Deconstructive Readings of Canonical Literature (2014). She also wrote Postmodernist Metafiction (2013) and Symbolism in Tawfiq al-Hakim and VS Naipaul (2012).
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