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Ajnabi, Or the Xenological Uncanny in Iranian Modernism

Tahmasebian Dehkordi, Kayvan; Gould, Rebecca Ruth

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Authors

Kayvan Tahmasebian Dehkordi



Abstract

Within Iran, the transformation in the Islamic legal understanding of the foreign (ajnabi) into a political concept was accelerated by the encounter with Europe during the nineteenth century. The classical Iranian understanding of otherness as a domain fully demarcated from the self was replaced by an internalized other, resulting in what we call here the xenological uncanny. This article examines Iranian modernism through the lens of trauma theory, whereby haunted subjects fail in distinguishing between self and other, and modernization is perceived as demonization. The three works we discuss—Sadeq Hedayat’s Blind Owl (1937), Bahram Sadeqi’s Heavenly Kingdom (1961), and Hushang Golshiri’s Prince Ehtejab (1968)—each delineate a different register in the xenological uncanny. Our lineage reveals how modernist Persian prose recapitulates a trajectory of possession and dispossession by the foreign and in the process brings about the traumatic recognition of a foreign voice within the self. In focusing on the divided modernist self from a Persian point of view, we identify an unrecognized trajectory for the uncanny within global literary modernism.

Citation

Tahmasebian Dehkordi, K., & Gould, R. R. (2021). Ajnabi, Or the Xenological Uncanny in Iranian Modernism. New Literary History, 52(1), 145-168. https://doi.org/10.1353/nlh.2021.0006

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 1, 2020
Publication Date Apr 1, 2021
Deposit Date Mar 4, 2024
Publicly Available Date Mar 4, 2024
Journal New Literary History
Print ISSN 0028-6087
Electronic ISSN 1080-661X
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 52
Issue 1
Pages 145-168
DOI https://doi.org/10.1353/nlh.2021.0006
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/nlh.2021.0006

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Ajnabi NLH 30.11.2020.pdf (435 Kb)
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Copyright Statement
This is the version of the article accepted for publication in New Literary History, 52 (1). pp. 145-168 (2021), published by Johns Hopkins University Press. Re-use is subject to the publisher’s terms and conditions.





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