7 research outputs found
Wait upon Ishiguro, Englishness, and Class
In his article Wait upon Ishiguro, Englishness, and Class Mustapha Marrouchi analyzes Kazuo Ishiguro\u27s novels with focus on the writer\u27s interest in Japanese culture and his preoccupation with matters of class in England. Marrouchi analyzes Ishiguro\u27s novels as located astride of East, West, and the in-between: his precise, exquisitely made stories are shadowed by absences and silences, balanced between elegy and irony (Rushdie) and this is so whether the speaker is the obsessive butler in The Remains of the Day or one of the demented heroes in The Unconsoled or When We Were Orphans or the Japanese, guilty or exiled, in Ishiguro\u27s first two novels A Pale View of Hills and An Artist of the Floating World
Texte indigène, réception impériale
Ben T. Marrouchi Mustapha. Texte indigène, réception impériale. In: Horizons Maghrébins - Le droit à la mémoire, N°17, 1991. La perception critique du texte maghrébin de langue française. pp. 110-117
The Arab Spring: Between Hopes & Impediments
In this episode, writers and professors John Entelis, Hamadi Redissi, Sophie Bessis, and Mustapha Marrouchi discuss the popular uprisings that swept across North Africa and the Middle East in 2011 and the prospects for the future of the Arab Spring