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Challenging Stereotypes: The Cosmopolitan Arab Woman in Fadia Faqir's Willow Trees Don't Weep

Abu Oruq, A. A. A.: Challenging Stereotypes: The Cosmopolitan Arab Woman in Fadia Faqir's Willow Trees Don't Weep.
J. Eng Stud. "Accepted by Publisher", [1-35], 2025.
Journal metrics:
Q3 Cultural Studies (2024)
Q3 Linguistics and Language (2024)
Q2 Literature and Literary Theory (2024)
title:
Challenging Stereotypes: The Cosmopolitan Arab Woman in Fadia Faqir's Willow Trees Don't Weep
authors:
  • Abu Oruq, Ayham Aref Abdallah
published:
2025
type:
article
genre:
research article/review article
journal:
Journal of English Studies (ISSN: 1576-6357, 1695-4300)
language:
English
HAC:
Humanities, Literary and Cultural Studies
subjects:
displacement, diaspora, prejudice, identity, cosmopolitan, agency
abstract:
This study investigates Fadia Faqir's Willow Trees Don't Weep, with a particular focus on the processes influencing the formation of the cultural identity of the female Arab protagonist in relation to her condition as a displaced immigrant. Drawing upon cosmopolitanism as a concept relevant to marginalised groups in the diaspora, the analysis of Faqir's text shows that the novel's protagonist, Najwa, is exposed to various forms of gendered, cultural, social, ideological, religious, and political stereotyping-constructed prejudices across different locations. These prejudices push her into a rootless existence, leading to a state of alienation and unbelonging. The textual analysis also indicates that Najwa, in response, develops a fluid identity and a cosmopolitan subjectivity as a unique means of acquiring agency amidst several disempowering counter-cosmopolitan forces.
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