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Who Am I?: Re-envisioning the question of Muslim identity in Tariq Ali’s The Stone Woman and A Sultan in Palermo

Who Am I?: Re-envisioning the question of Muslim identity in Tariq Ali’s The Stone Woman and A... AbstractThis article examines Tariq Ali’s novels The Stone Woman (2000) and A Sultan in Palermo (2005) to critique the question of identity discourse by drawing inspiration from various cultures rooted in a distinctively Islamic landscape and culture. Muslim identity, like any other, is separately constructed and determined by language, religion, sect, and various other roles. It examines the creation of Muslim identity and strives to comprehend the segregation they have demonstrated in the postcolonial context. This identity discourse emerged in colonial discursive practices that positioned Muslims as “Other” under colonial rule. This paper draws upon theoretical concepts of postcolonial theory to challenge the stereotypical representation of Islam often circulated in Eurocentric discourses. We do this by focusing on Tariq Ali’s ways of constructing Muslim identities through fictional representations. Through this discussion, we critique stereotypical tropes evident in Eurocentric discourses, which too often conflate professions of Muslim identity with religious fundamentalism. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Ars Aeterna de Gruyter

Who Am I?: Re-envisioning the question of Muslim identity in Tariq Ali’s The Stone Woman and A Sultan in Palermo

Ars Aeterna , Volume 14 (2): 15 – Dec 1, 2022

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Publisher
de Gruyter
Copyright
© 2022 Zakir Hussain et al., published by Sciendo
eISSN
2450-8497
DOI
10.2478/aa-2022-0010
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractThis article examines Tariq Ali’s novels The Stone Woman (2000) and A Sultan in Palermo (2005) to critique the question of identity discourse by drawing inspiration from various cultures rooted in a distinctively Islamic landscape and culture. Muslim identity, like any other, is separately constructed and determined by language, religion, sect, and various other roles. It examines the creation of Muslim identity and strives to comprehend the segregation they have demonstrated in the postcolonial context. This identity discourse emerged in colonial discursive practices that positioned Muslims as “Other” under colonial rule. This paper draws upon theoretical concepts of postcolonial theory to challenge the stereotypical representation of Islam often circulated in Eurocentric discourses. We do this by focusing on Tariq Ali’s ways of constructing Muslim identities through fictional representations. Through this discussion, we critique stereotypical tropes evident in Eurocentric discourses, which too often conflate professions of Muslim identity with religious fundamentalism.

Journal

Ars Aeternade Gruyter

Published: Dec 1, 2022

There are no references for this article.