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The book of Khartoum : a city in short fiction

Part of the Reading the City series
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Khartoum, according to one theory, takes its name from the Beja word hartooma, meaning ‘meeting place’.

Geographically, culturally and historically, the Sudanese capital is certainly that: a meeting place of the Blue and White Niles, a confluence of Arabic and African histories, and a destination point for countless refugees displaced by Sudan’s long, troubled history of forced migration.

In the pages of this book – the first major anthology of Sudanese stories to be translated into English – the city also stands as a meeting place for ideas: where the promise and glamour of the big city meets its tough social realities; where traces of a colonial past are still visible in day-to-day life; where the dreams of a young boy, playing in his father’s shop, act out a future that may one day be his.

Diverse literary styles also come together here: the political satire of Ahmed al-Malik; the surrealist poetics of Bushra al-Fadil; the social realism of the first postcolonial authors; and the lyrical abstraction of the new ‘Iksir’ generation.

As with any great city, it is from these complex tensions that the best stories begin.

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Product Details
Comma Press
1905583729 / 9781905583720
Paperback / softback
28/04/2016
United Kingdom
English
General
xv, 80 pages : maps (black and white)
20 cm
Translated from the Arabic.