Life from the Prism of Death: Life Narratives of the Old in three novels | ||||
Cairo Studies in English | ||||
Article 6, Volume 2023, Issue 1, August 2023, Page 46-61 PDF (428.76 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/cse.2023.258127.1147 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Author | ||||
Lamis Ragaa Al Nakkash | ||||
Department of English Language and Literature, Faculty of Arts, Cairo University | ||||
Abstract | ||||
The paper deals with three novels that present life narrative in the face of death. The main character in the three novels is a man in his seventies facing different forms of death, while his own approaching death is looming, leading to a kind of reassessment of his whole life. The three novels studied are: Philip Roth’s The Dying Animal (2002), Andre Brink’s Before I Forget (2005), and Adel Esmat’s The Commandments (2018) (in Arabic). It is an intense dramatically loaded moment in life that has been artistically used for its power to provide a distinct point of view on the life narrative of the protagonist. It is a moment of revaluation that possibly changes much of one’s revered and established values. Although one would not classify these narratives as a distinctive and independent sub genre within life writings, yet they do share distinctive traits that makes studying them as a corpus of works productive. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
Memory; Loss and change; Andre Brink; Adel Esmat; Philip Roth | ||||
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