You can edit almost every page by Creating an account. Otherwise, see the FAQ.

Oblivion woman

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki

Script error: No such module "AfC submission catcheck".

Oblivion woman
Author
Illustrator
PublisherDar Al-Aman in Rabat
Publication date
1987
Pages


The Woman of Oblivion is the first novel by Muhammad Barada. It was published in its first edition, in 1987 by Dar Al-Aman in Rabat, before it was decided by the Ministry of National Education in 1995 in the books of the secondary education corps, and its presence continues in education courses over a period of ten years until 2005. As This period was enough to make it one of the best-selling novels in Morocco, as it was printed seven times, reaching tens of thousands of copies (10,000 copies during the first two editions, 5,000 copies during the subsequent editions, and two thousand copies in the subsequent editions).[1] It was recently published in an economic edition in 2002 at Dar Al-Fanak. This work is considered as a second part of his first novel, The Game of Oblivion, in which the writer sought to draw inspiration from one of its characters in the new novel.[2] Mohamed Berrada is a Moroccan writer who writes the story, the novel and the literary article.

Content[edit]

The novel is divided into five chapters, and some characters are symbolized by the writer with a letter from the lexicon. At the beginning of each section are sayings and texts. The novel was characterized by a renewal tendency and a departure from traditional narrative templates, as well as its critical and analytical sense of new issues in society away from the rigidity of "national" identities.

This novel is the novel of three generations of different natures, features and visions that shift with place and time in their adaptation and struggle with the distinct reality between protection and independence, and the mother’s presence as a connecting character, upon whom characters gather to weave their narrative threads to create their life and death. It also brings together these characters to create life, warmth and continuity. Several themes also appear in this novel, such as: life, death, sex, self-search, childhood, homeland, struggle and freedom.[3]

Characters[edit]

Cultured personalities represented by: the narrator - the author; F. B ; Halima Sediqah F. B. These characters are characterized by a tendency to modernity and Western culture. All suffer from frustration, a sense of alienation, and an inability to fit in with their community. F's personality. B tried to integrate into society through marriage and life with her husband among the members of his large family, but she failed in this experiment, so she asked her husband for a divorce and returned to life in Paris. The narrator-author tries to delude himself that he is overcoming the feeling of alienation and incompatibility with the reality of his society, but to no avail. Where he faces alienation inside the homeland and in the presence of his friends and colleagues in the party to which he belongs. These personalities live in a rupture between the self and the other, between bonding with their society on its flaws, and falling into the warm arms of the West, between sheltering in the spirit of the community, its identity, traditions and heritage, and between immersion in a material modernity that did not achieve any stability or tranquility for it.

  • Party personalities: Si Mosleh and Al-Halaybi, the first is a loyal party fighter, and his dedication to serving his comrades and helping them in adversity, and his only goal is to work for change and reform. As for Al-Halaybi, he embodies the opportunist style who joins the party's ranks in order to achieve its own goals and interests.
  • Marginalized personalities: Al-Dawiya and Ibn Arish, the first represents the model of the Moroccan girl displaced from the desert to the city in search of a livelihood, and Ibn Arish is a Moroccan young man in whose face the doors of livelihood and hope were closed, and he faced the violence of reality through rejection, rebellion and crime.[4]

See also[edit]

  • Adjacent lives
  • Internal market
  • Barefoot bread


References[edit]

  1. أعراب, جازية (2020). "مخاطر تقلب عوائد مؤشرات الأسواق المالية:, دراسة قياسية للبيانات يومية من سبتمبر 2014 إلى سبتمبر 2018 خاصة بمؤشر بورصة فرانكفورت Dax 30". مجلة الاستراتيجية والتنمية: 53. doi:10.34276/1822-010-001-044.
  2. محمد محمد علی, أحمد (2020-03-02). "استراتیجیة الولایات المتحدة الأمریکیة فی الحرب على الإرهاب «تنظیم داعش أنموذجًا»". مجلة بحوث الشرق الأوسط. 5 (54): 109–138. doi:10.21608/mercj.2020.74844. ISSN 2536-9504.
  3. بوجحفة, عمارية; حمداوي, محمد مأمون (2018). "العلاقة بين الأسرة والروضة ودورها في تنمية الطفل : دراسة ميدانية بمجموعة من الروضات ولاية الجزائر". مجلة الحكمة للدراسات الإجتماعية: 58. doi:10.34277/1456-000-014-005.
  4. Kenderova, Stoyanka (2011-07-15). "وثائق عن تاريخ اليمن في العهد العثماني محفوظة في المكتبة الوطنية في بلغاريا بمدينة صوفيا،". Chroniques du manuscrit au Yémen (12). doi:10.4000/cmy.1937. ISSN 2116-0813.


This article "Oblivion woman" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Oblivion woman. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.