Violent encounters: narrating conflict in Leila Sebbar's Le Fou de Sherazade (original) (raw)
2005
Abstract
Leila Sebbar's Sherazade novels repeatedly take up not only themes of belonging, but also the physical violence young people experience at the hands of authorities and the psychical violence that comes from a sense of disconnection from both their parents' culture and that of France. These novels are certainly interested in questions of center and margin, especially as concerns the elaboration of a French cultural identity. Making a claim to belonging, however, is obviously not the same as having it accepted, and Sebbar's title character often faces violence as a result of being perceived as an outsider. In the first two novels, Sebbar's narrative is multi-voiced, so that the structure of the text matches the political content. This concern with belonging and violence continues in Le Fou de Sherazade, but in this third novel of the trilogy, the multiplicity is mitigated as a single anonymous narrator conducts the narrative. In this light, it is no accident that viole...
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