Abstract

Against common pessimistic readings of exile in postcolonial fiction, this article employs the notion of “self-actualization” that argues for people’s desire to accomplish everything they are capable of and their need to realize their potential. Within a comparative context and using identity theory and diaspora studies, the article illustrates how self-actualization keeps the immigrants from experiencing exile in two Arab American short stories by Pauline Kaldas: “Airport” (2009a) and “He Had Dreamed of Returning” (2009b). This article shows how the main characters of “Airport” and “He Had Dreamed of Returning,” Samir and Hani respectively, fulfill the American Dream and how Hoda, Samir’s wife, pictures America as the place where she can realize her ambitions. However, Nancy, Hani’s wife, achieves her potential in Egypt rather than America, where she feels needed as a teacher. Thus, Samir and Hani do not get dislocated in America, and Nancy has a sense of belonging in Egypt. Hence, the article utilizes the American Dream and a reverse side of it, and it shows how Samir’s, Hani’s, and Nancy’s self-actualization is a counter to feelings of exile. In other words, the three characters do not experience loss of identity and displacement in the countries they emigrate to. Rather, they fulfill their dreams there and find/create new identities which have been suppressed in their hometowns, which enhances a view of identity as fluid rather than fixed. Briefly put, this article presents the self-actualization of immigrants in new locales as a counter to different levels of dislocation and exile.Keywords: Pauline Kaldas, “He Had Dreamed of Returning,” “Airport,” Arab Americans, exile, self-actualization, identity, immigrant literature

Highlights

  • Arab Diaspora and ExilePostcolonial Arabic literature abounds with negative treatments of exile and the contingent trauma caused by this exile

  • Within a comparative context and using identity theory and diaspora studies, the article illustrates how selfactualization keeps the immigrants from experiencing exile in two Arab American short stories by Pauline Kaldas: “Airport” (2009a) and “He Had Dreamed of Returning” (2009b)

  • In Pauline Kaldas’s “He Had Dreamed of Returning,” Hani and his family emigrate from Egypt to America after the 1967 War, as many Egyptians and Arabs did, while Samir in Kaldas’s “Airport” emigrates to America after he wins permanent residency in a green card lottery

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Summary

Introduction

Postcolonial Arabic literature (fiction and non-fiction) abounds with negative treatments of exile and the contingent trauma caused by this exile. This article explores this option in the context of Arab American immigrant fiction by looking at two short stories by Pauline Kaldas who was born in Egypt and immigrated with her parents to the United States at the age of eight in 1969. In Pauline Kaldas’s “He Had Dreamed of Returning,” Hani and his family emigrate from Egypt to America after the 1967 War, as many Egyptians and Arabs did, while Samir in Kaldas’s “Airport” emigrates to America after he wins permanent residency in a green card lottery Both pieces of immigrant literature interrogate notions of identity construction and self-actualization as a counter to dislocation and exile. Since they set foot in America, Arab writers have proved brilliant and influential. The article shows how Samir’s, Hani’s, and Nancy’s self-actualization is a counter to dislocation and exile because the fact that the three characters realize their ambitions in the countries they emigrate to keeps them from falling victim to dislocation and exile

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