Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
In most Western universities, Arabic literature is rarely studied by itself or for itself. It is subject to disciplinary traffic and intersections, on the one hand, and to what might be called a political predicament, on the other. With this in mind, I outline below some thoughts underpinned by two examples of the state of the art in Arabic literary studies, published four decades apart.
1 Stetkevych, Jaroslav, Arabic Poetry and Orientalism, ed. Khazendar, Walid (Oxford: St. John's College Research Centre, 2004)Google Scholar.
2 Ibid., 19.
3 Ibid., 18.
4 “From Orientalists to Arabists: The Shift in Arabic Literary Studies: Essays Dedicated to Roger Allen,” special issue of Journal of Arabic Literature 41 (2010).