Document Type

Article

Publication Date

Winter 2017

Abstract

The focal point of this study is the date 9/11 which history immortalized as it witnessed the sudden attacks on one of the world’s super powers, the United States of America. The repercussions of this date boomed in the world’s four corners leaving behind feelings of insecurity and fears from the unknown. Whereas 9/11 had many influences on the international and domestic economic, political and social arenas, such influences were reflected in the literary arena as well. Many American playwrights were influenced by the attacks to the extent that such attacks have become the raw material formulating the dramatic substance of their post 9/11 plays and have induced the plays' dramatic conflicts. This study probes into postmodernism and postcolonialism, as two interrelated literary approaches having many intersecting points, to unravel the ideological and textual significance of the 9/11 events as depicted in the two post 9/11 American dramas: The Domestic Crusaders (2005) by Wajahat Ali (1980-) and Dirty Story (2003) by John Shanley (1950-). The study, moreover, proves that the combination of postmodern and postcolonial notions of marginality versus the centrality, cultural hybridity, and the representation of history along with examples of metaphor, irony, allegory, intertextuality, and metatheatre at unequal intervals in both plays stresses that the dramatic meaning of the date 9/11 is explicitly simple and transparent but implicitly sophisticated and multisided.

Comments

Dr. Shaimaa Saeed is currently a lecturer of English language & literature, majoring in drama, and the continuing education coordinator in the Faculty of Arts & Humanities (FOAH) at the British University in Egypt (BUE). She obtained her Ph.D. degree in English literature from the Faculty of Arts, English Department, Ain Shams University. However, she completed her preliminary M.A. studies and obtained her M.A. degree in English literature from the Faculty of Alsun, Minia University. Additionally, Dr. Saeed is generally interested in drama, culture studies, translation, ESL, TEFL, and EAP. Her research reflects a high interest in interdisciplinary studies that correlate drama to psychology or culture studies. She is also a freelance English/Arabic/English translator and interpreter.

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