
- English
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About this book
Lasting from September 1980 to August 1988, the Iran-Iraq War was the longest conventional war fought between two states in the twentieth century. It marked a period that began just after a revolutionary government in Iran became an Islamic Republic and Saddam Hussein consolidated power in Iraq. It ended with both wartime governments still in power, borders unchanged, yet hundreds of thousands of people dead. Neither side emerged as a clear victor, but both sides would eventually claim victory in some form.
Dust That Never Settles considers how Iraqi and Iranian writers have wrestled with representing the Iran-Iraq War and its legacy, from wartime to the present. It demonstrates how writers from both countries have transformed once militarized, officially sanctioned war literatures into literatures of mourning, and eventually, into vehicles of protest that presented powerful counternarratives to the official state narratives. In writing the first comparative study of the literary output of this war, Amir Moosavi presents a new paradigm for the study of modern Middle Eastern literatures. He brings Persian and Arabic fiction into conversation with debates on the political importance of cultural production across the Middle East and North Africa, and he puts an important new canon of works in conversation with comparative literary and cultural studies within the Global South.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- A Note on Translations and Transliterations
- Map of Iran, Iraq, and the Surrounding Region
- Introduction: War, Writing, and Comparison
- 1. Mobilizing Literature
- 2. Representations of Survival and Loss
- 3. War Front Apocrypha
- 4. Writers’ Home Front Wars
- 5. Ghosts of a Violent Past
- Conclusion: Cultural Afterlives of 1979
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Series List