
Faces
Mohamed Choukri(Author)
Georgetown University Press
Published on 1. October 2024
Book
Paperback/Softback
160 pages
978-1-64712-477-9 (ISBN)
Description
The first English translation of one of the novels that helped change modern Arab literature
Mohamed Choukri, one of the most important writers of modern Moroccan literature, grew up in extreme poverty in Tangier and was illiterate until the age of twenty. After learning to read, he realized that "writing could also be a way to expose, to protest against those who have stolen my childhood, my teenage-hood and a piece of my youthfulness." His vivid portrayals of marginalized people, which had been considered taboo, led to the censorship of his work and a cultural backlash in the Middle East.
In Faces, the third book in his trilogy of fictionalized autobiographical works, he describes gritty events, extreme poverty, prostitution, violence, sexual revelry, deprivation, and abuse. It is through his storytelling that Choukri reflects on human nature, love, and kindness-emphasizing the need for community and collaboration. Faces humanizes those undergoing poverty and places the blame for the violence they encounter squarely on colonial forces and the resulting postcolonial government, while opening literary traditions to a new style of writing.
Choukri's friendships with Tennessee Williams, Paul Bowles, Jean Genet, and other writers brought him attention in his lifetime. But Faces-his last novel, which was originally published in Arabic in 2000-has remained untranslated until now. In English for the first time, Jonas Elbousty's translation allows Choukri's work to reach wider international discussions of contemporary Arab literature.
Mohamed Choukri, one of the most important writers of modern Moroccan literature, grew up in extreme poverty in Tangier and was illiterate until the age of twenty. After learning to read, he realized that "writing could also be a way to expose, to protest against those who have stolen my childhood, my teenage-hood and a piece of my youthfulness." His vivid portrayals of marginalized people, which had been considered taboo, led to the censorship of his work and a cultural backlash in the Middle East.
In Faces, the third book in his trilogy of fictionalized autobiographical works, he describes gritty events, extreme poverty, prostitution, violence, sexual revelry, deprivation, and abuse. It is through his storytelling that Choukri reflects on human nature, love, and kindness-emphasizing the need for community and collaboration. Faces humanizes those undergoing poverty and places the blame for the violence they encounter squarely on colonial forces and the resulting postcolonial government, while opening literary traditions to a new style of writing.
Choukri's friendships with Tennessee Williams, Paul Bowles, Jean Genet, and other writers brought him attention in his lifetime. But Faces-his last novel, which was originally published in Arabic in 2000-has remained untranslated until now. In English for the first time, Jonas Elbousty's translation allows Choukri's work to reach wider international discussions of contemporary Arab literature.
Reviews / Votes
A collection of short stories, life writings, and a mixture of both, Faces is above all a journey into the lifeworlds of a writer...who contended with colonialism, articulated a postcolonial consciousness avant l'heure, and wrote the periphery into the center of elite culture. * World Literature Today *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Washington, DC
United States
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
Not illustrated
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 135 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
222 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-64712-477-9 (9781647124779)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Persons
Mohamed Choukri (1935-2003) was a key figure in twentieth-century Arabic literature. His oeuvre includes many works, including his autobiographical trilogy, comprising For Bread Alone, Streetwise, and Faces. Jonas Elbousty, PhD, teaches in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Yale University and is the director of undergraduate studies at the Council on Middle East Studies of the Yale MacMillan Center. He is the author or coauthor of eight books.
Content
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Love and Curses
The Inheritance
The Pier
No Travel
Baba Daddy
Flowers of the Dead
Magdalena's Face
Hamadi the Gambler
Solitude
Women: Cunning and Other Falsehoods
She Comes Back
The Death of a Hippie Fish
News about Death and the Deceased
Veronique
My Face through the Seasons
Foreword
Love and Curses
The Inheritance
The Pier
No Travel
Baba Daddy
Flowers of the Dead
Magdalena's Face
Hamadi the Gambler
Solitude
Women: Cunning and Other Falsehoods
She Comes Back
The Death of a Hippie Fish
News about Death and the Deceased
Veronique
My Face through the Seasons