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The Crisis of the Arab Critic: ʽAbdullah al-Ghadhāmī as Case Study

Adel Al-Zahrani

[Thesis].University of Leeds;2014.

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Abstract

This study examines the crisis of the Arab critic at the present time; it focuses on the works of the Saudi critic ʽAbdulla al-Ghadhāmi as a case study. The function of criticism has always been affected by political and cultural developments; critics have constantly adapted their role in order to maintain their credibility as intellectual leaders of society. However, this role has been recently called into question by global changes. This research examines the critic’s anxiety about these transformations; cultural criticism provides a lifeline that helps critics to address daily-life issues and engage with reality.However, the situation in the Arab world is complicated; the cultural dilemmas of the Arabs have long affected their development. In this context, Arab intellectuals have lost their role being no longer able to influence and lead change; political reaction and social rejection have made them exiles in their own homeland. This study investigates the mechanism that rendered the discourse of modern Arabic criticism socially ineffective.Al-Ghadhāmi’s intellectual career, the study argues, illustrates the crisis of the Arab critic; his critique, in line with changes in social and political circumstances, can be divided into three distinct periods: the early works of the 1980s show his great enthusiasm for modernising the critical discourse by embracing modern structuralist and post-structuralist theories. But the efforts made by al-Ghadhāmi and his fellow modernists were crushed by the Islamic movement al-Ṣaḥwa al-Islāmiyya, which was given a virtually free hand to dominate Saudi society. The effect of this defeat is evident in al-Ghadhāmi’s works of the second period; he adopts a moderate position, from which he tries to revive the heritage and question it at the same time. But this attempt does not last long; the third period begins with al-Ghadhāmi’s dramatic announcement of the death of literary criticism, urging his fellow critics to replace it with cultural criticism. This radical proposal is the most extreme of al-Ghadhāmi’s reactions to the crisis of the Arab critic.

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Total pages:
288
Table of contents:
Acknowledgment 3Abstract 4Table of Contents 5Transliteration 8List of Abbreviations 9Methodology, Methods and Organisation 18Chapter One: The Function of Criticism between Two Cultures 211.1: Introduction 211.2: Development of Western Critical Theory: 211.2.1: Criticism and Philosophy: ‘A Special Relationship’ 211.2.2: Criticism and the Question of Function 251.2.3: The Role of the Critic in Society 291.2.4: ‘Culture’ in Cultural Criticism 331.2.5: Cultural Criticism, the Advantage of Disadvantage 351.3: Arabic Criticism: Challenges of Tradition and Modernity 381.3.1: Eloquence and Criticism 381.3.2: A Sacred Mission 411.3.3: From Heritage to the West 461.3.4 Western Paradigms of Modern Arabic Criticism 481.4: Conclusion 51Chapter Two: Modern Arab Critics and the Intellectual Crisis 522.1: Introduction 522.2: Social and Political Factors 522.2.1: Characteristic Features of Modern Arabic Society 522.2.2: Modern Political Histry: the Rise of Arab Nationalism 552.2.3: Islamism: Political Islam or Islamist Politics 592.3: The Crisis of Intellectuals in the Intellectual Crisis 632.4: Arab Critics in a Context of Crisis 712.5: Conclusion 79Chapter Three: Saudi Arabia: Politics of Establishment and Intellectual Vanguards 813.1: Introduction 813.2: Religion and Early Sociopolitics of the New Country 813.3: Civil Society between Tribalism and Nationalism 913.4: Al-Ḥijāz: the Gate to the Dream of Modernity 993.5: Pioneers of Criticism: Writing Foundations and Social Response 1033.6: Regressions of Discourse: Critics and the Indecisive Battle of Modernity 1103.7: Conclusion 119Chapter Four: The Fruits of Modern Transformations: the Boom and al-Ghadhāmi 1204.1: Introduction 1204.2: Conservatism versus the Boom 1204.3: ʽAbdulla Al-Ghadhāmi and the Revival of the Intellectuals 1294.3.1: Birth of a Controversial Critic 1294.3.2ː There Is Nothing but Linguistic Criticism 1314.4ː Thematic Analysis of the Works of This Period 1374.4.1: Traditionalism and the Crisis of Criticism 1374.4.2: Modern Critical Theory: Implementation and Complication 1404.4.3: Enthusiasm for Innovation and Creativity 1514.5: Conclusion 155Chapter Five: The Battle of Modernism 1565.1: Introduction 1565.2: The Literary Awakening: Saudi Modernism 1565.3: Al-Ṣaḥwa al-Islāmiyya: The Saudi Brothers 1615.4: Conservative Reactions: Intellectual Debate and Ideological Intervention 1655.4.1: The Fire Spark 1655.4.2: The Intellectual Response: Objections to Modernism 1705.4.3: Ideological Opposition and Social Monopolisation 1745.4.4: Calamity of the Buds 1845.5: Conclusion 189Chapter Six: the Aftermath of the Battle: Revisions of Discourse 1906.1: Introduction 1906.2: The Second Period: al-Ghadhāmi between Heritage and Woman 1906.3: Thematic Analysis of the Works of the Second Period 1936.3.1: Sense of Crisis and Transitional Stage 1936.3.2: The Modern in the Ancient: Reintroducing Arabic Theory 1966.3.3: Narrative as an Arab Invention 2066.3.4: Women in Strange Lands 2106. 4: Conclusion 216Chapter Seven: The Kingdom of Cultural Criticism 2187.1: Introduction 2187.2: The Double-Edged Sword 2187.3: Technology: A New Window for New Conflicts 2217.4: Revolutionising Theory: al-Ghadhāmi and Cultural Criticism 2237.5: Thematic Analysis of the Works of the Third period 2327.5.1: A Controversial Obituary 2327.5.2: What Is ‘Cultural Criticism’ Anyway? 2357.5.3: Al-Nasaq: the Central Ambiguity 2437.5.4: The ‘Elite’ Public and the New Role of the Critic 2487.5.5: Politics of Change, Change of Politics 2527.6: Conclusion 2587.6: Conclusion 259Chapter Eight: Conclusion 2608.1: Concept of Criticism in a Global Crisis 2608.2: Modern Arabic Criticism: The Stateless Citizen 2628.3: Saudi Arabia: Setting the Stage 2658.4: Al-Ghadhāmi: the Crisis Personified 2678.5: The Future of the Crisis 271The List of Works Cited 273English References 273Arabic References 278
Abstract:
This study examines the crisis of the Arab critic at the present time; it focuses on the works of the Saudi critic ʽAbdulla al-Ghadhāmi as a case study. The function of criticism has always been affected by political and cultural developments; critics have constantly adapted their role in order to maintain their credibility as intellectual leaders of society. However, this role has been recently called into question by global changes. This research examines the critic’s anxiety about these transformations; cultural criticism provides a lifeline that helps critics to address daily-life issues and engage with reality.However, the situation in the Arab world is complicated; the cultural dilemmas of the Arabs have long affected their development. In this context, Arab intellectuals have lost their role being no longer able to influence and lead change; political reaction and social rejection have made them exiles in their own homeland. This study investigates the mechanism that rendered the discourse of modern Arabic criticism socially ineffective.Al-Ghadhāmi’s intellectual career, the study argues, illustrates the crisis of the Arab critic; his critique, in line with changes in social and political circumstances, can be divided into three distinct periods: the early works of the 1980s show his great enthusiasm for modernising the critical discourse by embracing modern structuralist and post-structuralist theories. But the efforts made by al-Ghadhāmi and his fellow modernists were crushed by the Islamic movement al-Ṣaḥwa al-Islāmiyya, which was given a virtually free hand to dominate Saudi society. The effect of this defeat is evident in al-Ghadhāmi’s works of the second period; he adopts a moderate position, from which he tries to revive the heritage and question it at the same time. But this attempt does not last long; the third period begins with al-Ghadhāmi’s dramatic announcement of the death of literary criticism, urging his fellow critics to replace it with cultural criticism. This radical proposal is the most extreme of al-Ghadhāmi’s reactions to the crisis of the Arab critic.

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Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:292796
Created by:
Smail Salhi, Zahia
Created:
18th December, 2015, 11:26:38
Last modified by:
Smail Salhi, Zahia
Last modified:
18th December, 2015, 11:26:38

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