Reassembling a World Literature: Anton Shammas's <i>Arabesques</i> between Iowa and the Galilee

Authors

  • David Hadar Free University Berlin

Keywords:

Anton Shammas, Israeli Palestinian Literature, Creative Writing Programs, the Iowa International Writers Program, World Literature

Abstract

 

The paper explores how the novel Arabesques (1986) by Israeli Palestinian author Anton Shammas (b. 1950) uses the Iowa International Writers Program in to interrogate and even relocate the consecration of world literature. Both creative writing programs and the concept and canons of world literature have become central issues in literary studies over the last two decades. My paper seeks to combine these two concerns with a view from outside Anglophone literature but in a way that comments on it and its institutions. It will do so through a critique of world literature and creative writing that can be found in the Anton Shammas’s writings. Arabesques is partly set in the University of Iowa’s International Writers Program and deals with the question of where the world’s literature is to be assembled and consecrated. The common assumption is that this process happens in big cities. But the novel (along with documents written by the founders of the Iowa program) shows how this program tries to mobilize the world’s wealth of literature into this new Midwestern location in Iowa.  This is done through the movement of people and artifacts by way of international networks of cultural and technological mediation. The novel uses Iowa’s bid for centrality in the network of world literature to show how the canon and concept of world literature can also be assembled in the peripheral location of a small Galilee village. The mobility of texts and people turn out to have a potential for unsettling the global center/periphery and East/West dichotomies, even if only for the duration of the novel’s reading.

Author Biography

David Hadar, Free University Berlin

Dr. David Hadar is a Minerva postdoctoral fellow at the John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Free University Berlin. He received his PhD from the Hebrew University, Jerusalem in 2015. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in American Imago, Studies in American Jewish Literature, a/b: a/b: Auto/Biography Studies, and Studies in Canadian Literature. He is currently working on a book project in the field of American Jewish literature.

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Published

2018-07-18