Approaches to teaching the works of Naguib Mahfouz /
Naguib Mahfouz is the Arab world's best-known writer and the single most important chronicler and analyst of twentieth-century Egypt. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1988, and since then his work has been increasingly studied in North American university classrooms. This first v...
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Format: Book
Language: English
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Approaches to teaching world literature ;
119.
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Call Number: PJ7846 .A46 Z5775
- Materials. Early years
- Novels and short stories
- Memoirs, interviews, and articles
- Mahfouz and cinema
- Mahfouz in translation
- Resources for teachers
- Approaches. Introduction
- Contexts
- Teaching a seminar on Mahfouz / Waïl S. Hassan
- Teaching Mahfouz as world literature / Michelle Hartman
- Mahfouz's novels and the nation / Terri DeYoung
- Enduring left melancholia : Mahfouz's The beggar and the Nasserite intellectual / Nouri Gana
- Mahfouz's posts / Shaden M. Tageldin
- Mahfouz and The Arabian nights tradition / Justin St. Clair
- Teaching specific texts. Hamida's options : Egyptian futures versus British interests in Mahfouz's Midaq Alley / Barbara Harlow
- Teaching Mahfouz: style in translation / Maysa Abou-Youssef Hayward
- Christ and the Abrahamic legacy in Children of the alley / Nabil Matar
- Teaching Mahfouz's "Zaabalawi" / Roger Allen
- Homage to Ibn alFarid: nostalgia in "Zaabalawi" / Michael Beard
- Miramar and postcolonial melancholia / Elliott Colla
- Miramar: a pension at the intersection of competing discourses / Hala Halim.
