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The Other Arabia


Article # : 15616 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 2 / 1989  3,198 Words
Author : Muhammad Siddiq
Muhammad Siddiq teaches Arabic and comparative literature at the University of Washington. He is the author of Man Is a Cause, a critical study of the Palestinian writer Emile Habibi, and a frequent contributor to World Literature Today, Journal of Arabic Literature, and Arab Studies Quarterly.

       Cities of Salt, a trilogy, is Abdelrahman Munif's latest. Thus far, only the first two volumes have appeared in Arabic; the third is expected any time. The Arabic title of the first volume. Al-tih, means "the wilderness"; that of the second volume, Al-ukhdud, "the excavation"; and the third volume, Taqasim al-layl Washington-al-nahar, "divisions of night and day." The English translation of the first volume has been published by Random House under the title of the whole, namely Cities of Salt.
       
        The trilogy recounts the story of the emergence of cities in the Arabian Peninsula as the result of the discovery of oil during the first half of this century. Although the fictitious kingdom in which the action takes place remains unnamed in the novel, it is clear from the preponderant correspondence between the imaginative and the historical accounts that it is Saudi Arabia.
       
        The first volume covers the period from the discovery of oil in the early thirties to the death of the founder of the fictitious kingdom, Sultan Khraibet. (This corresponds to the reign of King Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud, the founder of the present Saudi dynasty, who died in 1953.) The next volume parallels the reign of King Khazael, Khraibet's eldest son, which ends with his overthrow by his younger brother. (This corresponds to the reign of King Saud, Abd al-Aziz's successor, who was overthrown by his younger brother Faisal in 1964.) The final volume is expected to extend from 1964 to the present.
       
        Since the narrative of Cities of Salt consciously evokes the history of present-day Saudi Arabia, it is important to keep the general outline of that history in mind while ... (1995 of 18604 Characters)
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