Subjectivity, agency, and the question of gender in Fadwa Tuqan’s post-naksa poetry
After the naksa, Palestinian poet Fadwa Tuqan composed her famous “I Shall Not Weep,” which she later included in her first resistance-themed collection: The Night and Knights. In this poem, Tuqan openly proclaims her intention to enter the male-dominated political arena and join the Palestinian poets of resistance. However, Tuqan's turn toward the nationalist cause did not come without a struggle. She had, for long, resisted this move as a performative denunciation of women's paradoxical location within the nationalist symbolic order. Focusing on The Night and Knights, this article traces the poetic representations of Tuqan's emerging attachment to the collective and investigates the meanings of her engagement with Palestinian nationalist discourse. I argue that while the construal of the gendered self in the collection illuminates the generative power that the Palestinian experience holds, it also reveals how Tuqan's location within various systems of power informs her strategies of representation and resistance.
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Middle Eastern Literatures on 2023-05-04, available online: https://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/1475262X.2024.2309640.
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Work Title | Subjectivity, agency, and the question of gender in Fadwa Tuqan’s post-naksa poetry |
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License | CC BY-NC 4.0 (Attribution-NonCommercial) |
Work Type | Article |
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Publication Date | May 4, 2023 |
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Deposited | January 31, 2025 |
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