
Language of Feminine Consciousness A reading of the Novel (The Beloveds “Al-Muhboubat”) by (Aliyah Mamdouh)
Author(s) -
Maha Farouk Abdul Qader Al-Hindaw
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of research in social sciences and humanities(online)/international journal of research in social sciences and humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2454-4671
pISSN - 2249-4642
DOI - 10.37648/ijrssh.v11i04.013
Subject(s) - deed , surrender , consciousness , psychology , homeland , reading (process) , gender studies , linguistics , sociology , history , philosophy , law , archaeology , neuroscience , politics , political science
This research is an attempt to reveal the manifestations of (Homosexuality),which is any attitude, deed or language issued by both men and women that says theinferiority of the female, and how women resist it at different levels, the most importantof which is (language) in an Iraqi novelist text (Al- Muhboobat) by (Aliyah). Mamdouh)published by Dar Al- Saqi in Beirut in 2003, and the recipient of the Naguib MahfouzPrize for Novel from the American University in Cairo in 2004.The method followed in this study was the analytical method, which came on threelevels:1. Quantitative content analysis: in which the number of male and femalecharacters as they appeared in the novelistic text was compared.2. The qualitative analysis of the content: It included a comparison between thespecifications given to the male and female characters in the novelistic text.3. Analyzing the homosexuality of the dominant language in the text: by which wemean the way in which language is employed in this text.The research concluded that the number of female characters exceeded the malecharacters in the novel. Andthe heroine’s desire for rejection, Suhaila, to the reality oftyranny and the invasion that she suffered in the homeland and exile through the rejectionletter that represented her in the novel, in contrast to the state of complacency,surrender, and weakness suffered by the son Nader, which was represented by the letter ofhis machine that he adopted in the novel.