
Will Saudi's 2030 Vision Raise the Students’ Awareness to National Literature? Saudi Literature and Identity
Author(s) -
Mubarak Altwaiji,
Majed Alenezi,
Sajeena Gayathrri,
Ebrahim Mohammed Alwuraafi,
Maryam Naif Alanazi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of education and information technologies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2074-1316
DOI - 10.46300/9109.2021.15.10
Subject(s) - national identity , identity (music) , cultural identity , identity formation , sociology , openness to experience , gender studies , psychology , political science , social psychology , self concept , aesthetics , social science , law , negotiation , politics , philosophy
Forming national identity is placed on top of the seven aspects of High-Impact Educational Practices (HIEPs) in Northern Border University. Similarly, the concept of academic awareness to national literature has been one of the main challenges to national literature in the Middle East. Just as the strong presence of national identity in Saudi’s 2030 vision has initiated re-evaluations of how national identity is shaped, Saudi novel has similar concerns that inform social constructs of national identity through overarching themes and comprehensive representations of cultural issues. This study investigates the ways in which two Saudi novelists interrogate the intertwined issues shared by 2030 vision and national novel which address the archetypal Saudi identity: first, that the construction of modern identity requires much cultural openness with the world; second, that construction of Saudi identity needs exclusion of otherness; and third, that national identity depends on the rich history of two historical regions – Najd and Hijaz - that binds identity to a unified territory. The study focuses on how these novels give visibility to issues that are at the core of 2030 vision’s social and cultural aspect such as life style, appearance behaviours, attitudes, accepting differences and willingness to work and volunteer. Drawing on this narrative analysis, the study advocates for the utility of introducing national novel for undergraduate students to help them perceive identity as a position and support their identity enactment.