Abstract
The Jewish character has passed in a variety of transformations through different stages of history. The study explores the position of Jewish character in the world narration, how the Arabs depict the contemporary Jewish character in their literary works compared to the Western/Christian community and their attributes in the Nobel Quran. The Jewish character becomes in a position of concern for the world writers during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The Jewish character has occupied a large part of writing, particularly in the area of narratives. Is there a difference between the past writers and the contemporary ones in addressing the Jewish character in the literary works? The focus is on some selective contemporary Arabic narratives: Ali Al Muqri’s The Handsome Jew (2009) and Ala Al Aswani’s Chicago (2007), in addition to Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Vince and Christopher Marlow’s The Jew of Malta as presented the Jew character in the Elizabethan era. The study of the narratives, whether the past or the contemporary ones, revealed the Jewish character as greedy, opportunistic, intolerant, arrogant if they are powerful, and humble if they are weak, obsessed by love of money, dealing with usury, revengeful, keeping no promises, stubborn, full of hate and spite for the community and easy to embrace a new religion for safety or love as Al Muqri’s Salem, Shakespeare’s Shylock, and Marlowe’s Abigal. Further, the narratives showed the second generation of Arabs/ Muslims and Jews in mutual understanding, tolerance, forgiving, and attempting to find common ground to build the bridges of trust and love. They work on normalizing the relations with each other. However, they found themselves social outcasts, hybrid, living in between and the third space, suffering from problematic of identity as Saeed and his son, Ibrahim, the hybrids in Al Muqri’s The Handsome Jew.
Highlights
The aim of this study is to position the Jewish character in the world narration
The question is how the world narration addressed the Jewish character in the past and how it appears in contemporary literary works
Al Aswani’s Chicago addresses Windy, the Jewish character, that appears as a prostitute who does not hesitate for a second to accompany Naji Abdelsamad, the Egyptian student who studies medicine in Illinoi, to his apartment to enjoy their night together, “I have drink my glass of wine slowly and extend my hand embrace Windy
Summary
The question is how the world narration addressed the Jewish character in the past and how it appears in contemporary literary works. The Jewish character confronted discrimination and prejudice against them by conspiracy and revenge from the members of the community That they had been revealed as selfish traders who were concerned only how to increase their trade and capital, even with illegal means, or even if it came against the others’ interests or caused the others’ destruction. The western literary works, in the past, match with the Nobel Quran portrayal for the Jews such as greedy, usurers, revengeful, breaking the promises...etc. The study will highlight the Jewish character in the Nobel Quran, and the western work as Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice and Marlow’s The Jew of Malta as a part of literature review. The study tackles the Jewish character in the selective contemporary narratives: Al Muqri’s The handsome Jew and Al Aswani’s Chicago
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More From: International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature
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