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Saturday, October 15, 2016

Season of Migration to the North by Tayeb Salih

Table of table of contents\n\nIntroduction\n2. Season of Migration to the northernmost\n2.1. Initial Disarrays\n2.2. Mustafa Saeeds flat\n2.3. Mustafa Saeeds Library\n3. ratiocination\n\nIntroduction\nThis paper is an exploration of the complex development of identicalness closely related to the formation of a sense of outer space and come out of the closet in Tayeb Salihs Season of Migration to the North. Published in 1966, only ten geezerhood afterward Sudan received its independence from the British Empire, it challenges the opposition of modernism and traditionalism by word-painting the distance between capital of the United Kingdom during the 1920ies and the rural countryside of the Sudan. The paper examines the surmisal that identity and the shaping of place is static. Studying the two distinguishable yet intertwined struggles of creating a purposeful place of the protagonists, I leave aloneing take a adjacent look at Mustafa Saeed and the strange narrator and try to illuminate, how colonial politics created smart spaces and affect their way of thinking and living(a) in these spaces. A winder point of interest will be the description of Mustafa Saeeds two places, the apartment in London and the secret arena room, he created during the narrative as possible reflections of his identity, and the contrasted procedure of the unidentified narrator. In the process of examining the impudent it will become probable how Salih managed to dissolve existing boundaries of eastern and West and thus strengthened a room for new conceptualizations of social realities. Instead of pursual the dualism of North and South, he places the lecturer in the ambiguous regularize of colonial encounter with his main character Mustafa Saeed, who is symbolic for a whole society in disarray after a history of colonization. I will emphasize the consequences of imperialism presented in Season of Migration to the North, in which the close of the imperial pow er clashes with the goal of its victims and thus try to head how the author manages to resolve tradition...

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