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Title: Tayeb Salih


1
CVSP Mission Statement The mission of the
Civilization Sequence Program is to provide
undergraduate courses in the humanities that
support the American University of Beirut's goals
in general education and the advancement of
knowledge. CVSP is committed to engaging students
from all the faculties of the University in the
study of primary texts. The three major goals of
the Program are to develop critical skills and
creative, flexible thinking to promote an
awareness of different civilizations and to
uphold dialogue as an essential skill for life.
2
Tayeb Salih
  • CVSP 204
  • A. Arasoghli

3
  • I. Introduction
  • The novel Season of Migration to the North
    (Mawsim al-Hijra alal-Shamal, referred to as
    Mawsim) was published in 1966, translated into
    English in 1969 is a prose poem that deals with
    the conflicts of modern Africa, such
    traditionalism versus modernism, rural versus
    urban, men versus women and the village (the
    specific) versus the Universal.

4
  • II. Tayeb Salihs speech at AUB in 1980
  • I got stuck before Mustafa Saeed started his
    confession.I fell under the influence of Freud
    and read more than once Civilization and its
    Discontents.
  • I believe that if I have contributed anything to
    modern Arabic literature, it is my constant plea
    for toleration.
  • I created therefore a conflicting world in which
    nothing is certain, and formalistically two
    voices to force the reader to make up his/her
    mind.

5
  • The two voices in Season, already mentioned
    before- are those of the narrator and Mustafa
    Saeed.
  • their relationship with the West/North is quite
    dissimilar. The narrator considers the coming of
    the British was neither a tragedy nor yet a
    blessing. Mustafa Saaeed has a relationship of
    defiance with the West, he poisons his life
    trying to avenge the defeat of the Sudanese, the
    colonization of the East, engages in sexual
    relationships with English women, and kills one
    of them. Three commit suicide, possibly because
    of him Sheila Greenwood a waitress in a
    restaurant, Isabella Seymour wife of a
    successful surgeon and mother of two daughters
    and a son, Ann Hammond a university student.
  • Jean Morris is the woman he falls in love with,
    marries and kills with a sharp blade on a cold
    February evening.

6
Kitchener
III. The Colonial Context
  • It was in September, 1898 that the forces of
    Imperialism, the British army led by Herbert
    Kitchener invaded the Sudan.
  • After his death, the Khalifa carried on the state
    which was ended by the British occupation in
    1898. The reforming and foreign governments felt
    the fear of such religious movements and
    attempted to oppose or control them.

7
III. The Colonial Context
  • It was at Omdurman, on the banks of the Nile that
    witnessed the East /West South/North
    confrontation.
  • The battle was over in five hours and Kitchener
    remarked arrogantly that the enemy had been
    given a good dusting.

The Battle of Omdurman
8
The Battle of Omdurman
9
  • In the novel Kitchener says to Mahmoud Wad Ahmad
    after his defeat at the Battle of Atbara Why
    have you come to my country to lay waste and
    plunder? It was the intruder who said this to
    the person whose land it was, and the owner of
    the land bowed his head and said nothing. P. 94.
  • Mustafa Saeed resumes the battle of OmDurman
    more than three decades later- with the same
    spears and swords, the victims being the British
    women rather than the British army, he says I
    resumed the war with bow and sword and spear and
    arrows.The city was transformed into an
    extraordinary woman, and with her symbols and her
    mysterious calls, towards whom I drove my
    camels p. 34.

10
  • IV. Postcolonial Arab discourse traditionalism
    versus modernism Impact of the West during the
    Nahda
  • The contact between the Arab world and the
    Western one during the Nahda signaled the
    beginning of the debate between traditionalism
    and modernism. The term Nahda literally means
    awakening or renaissance, covers the period from
    the mid or late nineteenth century to the
    present. During this period the impact of the
    West became a major factor in the Arab social and
    political life. Europe, as the Self recognized
    itself as different from the (nonmodern) Other.

11
  • How could Arab Muslimsacquire the strength to
    confront Europe and become part of the modern
    world? Albert Hourani, A History of the Arab
    peoples, p. 306
  • The Arab awakening can be seen as a struggle
    between two standpoints The first adhered to
    Islam as the source legitimacy, and the second
    took the West as model to aspire to. Many
    regarded modernity as uniquely and strictly a
    European phenomenon.
  • The most prominent representatives of the Islamic
    modernists or reformers like Riftal-Tahtawi
    Jamal eddin-Din al Afghani and Muhammad Abduh
    were opposed to Western domination but
    appreciated the Western scientific and cultural
    achievements. They realized that living in the
    modern world requires certain changes which could
    be carried out while Muslims remain true to
    themselves and the purity of early Islam.

12
  • the religious reformers aimed at the following
  • 1. Tried to reconcile tradition and modernity
    hoping that the Muslim world can overcome the
    challenges it was facing.
  • 2. They stressed the need to return to the
    original sources of Islam.
  • Taha Hussein (1889-1973), a famous novelist and
    prominent literary figure took the second
    position, the West should be taken as a model to
    imitate, he asserted that We must follow the
    path of the Europeans as to be their equals and
    partners in civilization-in its good and evil,
    its sweetness and bitterness, what can be loved
    or hated, what can be praised or blamed.

13
  • V. The Narrator
  • A storm-swept feather in the North the Other in
    England.
  • A storm-swept feather in the South the Other in
    the Sudan.
  • He rejoices leaving the coldness of England and
    returning to the warmth of his people in a small
    village at the bend of the Nile.
  • I felt not like a storm-swept feather, but like
    that palm tree, a being with a background, with
    roots, with a purpose.p.2.
  • The grandfather stands for the traditional
    immutable man who has the secret of life and it
    is to live simply and die simply, a simple and
    traditional life that both the narrator and
    Mustafa Saeed were not able to lead.

14
  • Over there is like here, neither better nor
    worse. But I am from here, just as the date palm
    standing in the courtyard of our house has grown
    in our house and not in anyone elses. The fact
    that they came to our land, I know not why, does
    that mean that we should poison our present and
    our future? Sooner or later they will leave our
    country .The railways, ships, hospitals,
    factories and schools will be oursp.49.
  • I too had lived with them. But I had lived with
    them superficially, neither loving nor hating
    them.p.49.

15
  • No sooner does he find that the love he wants to
    flow from his heart has tuned into rage and
    anger. Mustafa Saeed disappears one day, by
    drowning or more possibly suicide, we dont know
    and he leaves his wife Hosna and his two boys in
    the care of the narrator. The narrator falls in
    love with Hosna Bint Mahmoud, yet he does
    nothing, he does not let love flow from his heart
    as he as he claims as the beginning of Season
    ...I want to give lavishly, I want love to flow
    from my heart, to ripen and bear fruit.p.5.

16
  • The crisis of and internal migration
  • South/South conflict
  • Two reasons for the narrators alienation
  • A. Patriarchy and tragedy.
  • B. Neocolonialism The corruption of the
    new rulers of Africa.

17
  • A. Patriarchy
  • Wad Rayess, a seventy year old man, much married
    and much divorced wants to marry Hosna who is
    very decisive when she says that she will go no
    man and threatens to kill him and kill herself if
    they force her to marry him. In that small
    village at the bend of the Nile, we see the same
    duality between the Self and the Other that
    Simone de Beauvoir refers to in The Second Sex,
    a woman is simply what man decreesshe is the
    incidental, the inessential as opposed too the
    essential. He is the Subject, he is the
    Absolute-she is the Other. The Second Sex, p.3.

18
  • B. Neocolonialism The corruption of the new
    rulers of Africa
  • The alienation of the narrator multiplies.
  • The conference is held in the Independence Hall
    (notice the name of the Hall) in a hotel in
    Khartoum.
  • The cost of the Hall (One million pounds) and the
    wealth of the ministers stand in sharp contrast
    to the poverty of the Sudanese who lack schools
    and hospitals. The minister in his speech
    considers the Bourgeoisie as being more dangerous
    to the future of Africa than imperialism. It is
    the same minister who leads a Bourgeois life, he
    is known to be corrupt and has amassed a fortune
    from the sweat of the poor, wretched, half naked
    people in the jungle.
  • The narrator starts considering going back to the
    North, he says There is no room for me here, why
    dont I pack up and go?p.130.
  • The migration that appears in the title of the
    book involves not only geographic migration to
    the North but also the internal migration of the
    narrator.

19
  • The narrator feels bitterness and hatred, the
    unfaithful wife is defended by her husband while
    the faithful Hosna suffers a tragic fate in that
    small village at the bend of the Nile, I feel
    bitterness and hatred, for after all those
    victims he crowned his life with yet another one,
    Hosna Bint Mahmoud, the only woman I have ever
    loved.p.141.

20
  • VI. Mustafa Saeed
  • Mustafa Saeeed was born in Khartoum in1898, the
    same year of the battle of Omdurman. He decides
    to avenge the colonization of the Sudan under his
    own terms. He conceives his relationship with
    the English women as a battle, inflicting pain
    and suffering on them and treating his victims as
    Kitchener treated his native people.
  • He is described as isolated, arrogant, his mind
    is like a sharp knife and his heart is as cold as
    a piece of ice, nothing in the world could shake
    him.

21
  • The mysterious call led me to the coast of
    Dover, to London and tragedy.p. 27.
  • He uses terms of Arab military campaigns every
    time he goes out to find a new victim By day I
    lived with the theories of Keynes and Tawney and
    at night I resumed the war with bow and sword and
    spear and arrows. I saw the troops returning,
    filled with terrors .p.34
  • He saddles his camels, refers to the Arab army
    conquering Spain in the eighth century, and
    claims that one of his forefathers was a soldier
    in Tarik ibn Ziyads army. The connection in
    Mustafa Saeeds mind between sexual conquest and
    his war on British colonialism is very evident,
    the description of his sexual conquests are
    similar to the description of a military conquest
    yes, my dear sirs, I came as an invader into
    your very homes a drop of the poison which you
    have injected into the veins of history.p. 95.

22
  • A. The divided self of Mustafa Saeed
  • 1. The Freudian level
  • The distant call still rings in his ears Its
    futile to deceive oneself. That distant call
    still rings in my ears, I thought that my life
    and marriage here would silence itp. 67.
  • he obeys the pleasure principle, decides to stay
    with her, completely cotroled by his id, given in
    to his desires. His love to her is the icy
    battlefield from which he would not make a safe
    return. He is the sailor and she is the shore of
    destruction I was in torment, and, in a way I
    could not understand, I derived pleasure from my
    suffering. p. 59.

23
  • 2. South/North dichotomy
  • Mustafa Saeeds relationship with the West is
    one of defiance and yearning.
  • South that yearns for the ice.
  • His love to Jean Morris unfolds the same
    dichotomy love, defiance and hatred.

24
  • 3. Conqueror/conquered
  • Modern/traditional
  • I have come to you as a conqueror.
  • I seek not glory, for the likes of me do not
    seek glory. P.42
  • The two halves of Mustafa represent the Sudanese
    traditional man and the modern London
    intellectual, the economist and university
    lecturer. Nowhere does he emerge in the novel as
    fully traditional or fully modern. He is not a
    truly modern individual, nor a genuinely
    traditional one, because of the impact of both
    forces his past identity and Western education.

25
  • Opening a note book, I read on the first page
    (My Life Story). On the next page was the
    dedication To those who see with one eye, speak
    with one tongue and see things as either black or
    white, either Eastern or Western. p. 151.
  • The ships sailing down the Nile were carrying
    guns not bread. And the railways were set up to
    transport troops. And the schools were started
    to teach the Sudanese how to say yes in
    English. P. 95

26
  • B. The contradictory selves of Mustafa Saeed
  • Mustafa lives and becomes a lie
  • Hassan , Charles, Amin, Mustafa and Richard.
  • Im like Othello, Arab African., addresses the
    jury and prosecutors in the courtroom saying
    Im no Othello, I am a lie. Why dont you
    sentence me to be hanged and so kill the lie.
    p.95.

27
  • Othello is the Moor of Venice, the tragic man, a
    hero with a flaw. Following his instincts and
    irrational desires, believes that his loyal wife
    Desdemona is a whore on the slightest of
    evidence, smothers her with a pillow on their
    marriage bed.
  • Speak of me as I am..Then must you speak of one
    that loved not wisely, but too well...
    Shakespeare, Othello, V, ii.

28
  • Conclusion
  • All my life I had not chosen, had not decided.
    Now I am making a decision. I choose Life Like a
    comic actor shouting on a stage, I screamed with
    all my remaining strength, help, help!pp.168-9.

29
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