The Question of Identity in Abdulrahman Munifs When We Left the Bridge. Studies in Literature & Language. Vol. 1, No.6, 2010, pp.52-61. Published by Canadian Academy of Oriental and Occidental Culture/Canada
This article examines Abdulrahman Munif?s novel When We Left the Bridge
(Indama Tarakna Al-Jisr) the agonizing life of the defeated soldier, Zeki Nadawi the
protagonist, and the constant process of re-defining and re-thinking his identity. Zeki is
depicted as trapped in a world of self-loathing and futility in a Darwinian existential
naturalistic context. The author takes upon him the task of translating the quotations
cited from the Arabic text into English to facilitate the task of the English reader. The
article further highlights the similarities between Munif?s novel and Joseph Conrad?s
Heart of Darkness, T. S. Eliot?s ?The Hollow Men?, Samuel Beckett?s Waiting for
Godot and Jack London?s ?To Build A Fire? in order to establish the modern aspects of
Munif?s novel and the probable influence these works could?ve had upon Munif?s
fiction.