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Al-Ṭayyib Ṣāliḥ's Season of Migration to the North, the CIA, and the Cultural Cold War after Bandung
- Author(s):
- Elizabeth M. Holt (see profile)
- Date:
- 2020
- Group(s):
- 2019 MLA Convention
- Subject(s):
- Arabic literature, African literature, Cold War (1945-1989), Arabian nights
- Item Type:
- Article
- Tag(s):
- Magazine, novel, Surveillance, CIA, Cold War, Literatures of empire, 1001 Nights, Modernism
- Permanent URL:
- http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/an1d-9p96
- Abstract:
- In the fall of 1966, Ḥiwār magazine published al-Ṭayyib Ṣāliḥ's novel Mawsim al-hijrah ilā al-shamāl [ Season of Migration to the North ]. Arabic literary critics both hailed the novel in the Arabic press and mourned that it had been published by the Paris-based Congress for Cultural Freedom's Ḥiwār, part of a global covert cultural front of the Cold War founded and funded by the CIA, maintaining an extensive list of high profile literary magazines, including not only the Beirut-based Arabic magazines Ḥiwār and briefly Adab , but also the London-based Encounter , Bombay's Quest , and the African journals Black Orpheus in Ibadan and Transition in Kampala. A calculated response to the 1955 Bandung conference for Afro-Asian solidarity, the CIA's domination of Afro-Asian literature would give way to the publication of the Afro-Asian Writers Association's trilingual (Arabic/English/French) journal Afro-Asian Writings (later to be called Lotus), a broadly imagined legacy of the Bandung's celebration of decolonization, various forms of communism and socialism, and resistance literature in the third world. Season of Migration to the North , oft read as a postcolonial novel, is better understood as a product of American Cold War cultural imperialism. As it reaches back intertextually to pre-Islamic poetry, the wine odes of 'Abbasid poet Abū Nuwās, and the tales of A Thousand and One Nights in British translation, Ṣāliḥ's novel exposes the long chain of empires subtending the dissemination of Arabic literature that left it vulnerable to becoming a terrain of cultural Cold War after Bandung's call for Afro-Asian solidarity.
- Metadata:
- xml
- Published as:
- Journal article Show details
- Pub. DOI:
- 10.2979/reseafrilite.50.3.07
- Publisher:
- Indiana University Press
- Pub. Date:
- 2020-3-6
- Journal:
- Research in African Literatures
- Volume:
- 50
- Issue:
- 3
- Page Range:
- 70 - 90
- ISSN:
- 0034-5210
- Status:
- Published
- Last Updated:
- 4 years ago
- License:
- All Rights Reserved
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Al-Ṭayyib Ṣāliḥ's Season of Migration to the North, the CIA, and the Cultural Cold War after Bandung