مجلة المنهل
Volume 8, Numéro 1, Pages 941-954
2022-06-13
Authors : Bellour Leila .
The novels of the Algerian writer Yasmina Khadra, who is the most famous Arab writer in the world, are concerned with universal and contemporary issues like Islamic fundamentalism and the debate between Islam and the West. This article is a critical reading of Khadra’s novel The Swallows of Kabul, which is set in Kabul under the reign of Taliban. The novel debunks the Western myth which associates Islam with terror and violence. The latter, as the novel vindicates, results from the misinterpretation of Islam by Taliban which used this religion to reinforce patriarchal ideologies and oppress women. In addition to his vehement criticism of Taliban’s Islamic fundamentalism, Khadra tries to deconstruct the Western myth which demonizes the burqua and considers it as a means of oppression, disempowerment, marginalization, and objectification. Though Taliban confirms the Western stereotype of the burqa as an instrument of patriarchal oppression, Khadra’s novel evinces the failure of Taliban to silence women and disempower them through imposing the burqa. The latter is used by Afghan women as a tool of empowerment, protest, and self-assertion.
The veil ; The Burqa ; Afghan Women ; The Swallows of Kabul ; Yasmina Khadra
بوسالم أحلام
.
عابد يوسف
.
ص 117-132.
Yahia Zeghoudi
.
pages 74-88.
Kaced Assia
.
pages 688-704.
Kaced Assia
.
pages 187-204.
Brahim Karima Salima
.
Sehli Yamina
.
pages 784-794.