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Za’ir al-Sin: Translating a Chinese Anti-colonial Struggle for a Nahdawi Context
Abstract
Recent scholars have challenged the previously dominant paradigm that emphasizes Western literary influences on Arabic literature by situating the Nahda in a regional comparative framework. Despite expanding the geographic scope, they continue to overlook that the Nadahwis produced a significant amount of writing on “the East”. This paper aims to re-examine Arab literary history by revealing a historical moment where Arab intellectuals actively wrote about a world outside Europe, and translated the anti-colonial resistance of other Eastern countries into a Nahdawi context. In this paper, I examine a one-act Arabic play entitled Za’ir al-Sin (The Roar of China) co-authored by Ma Tianying, a male Chinese Muslim diplomat, and Munira Sayyim Shah, a female Egyptian Muslim playwright. Published in the Egyptian literary journal al-Riwaya in 1939, Za’ir al-Sin was written during Ma’s visit to Egypt as a member of the Chinese Islamic Near East Delegation. According to Ma’s introduction, this play portrays a group of Chinese Hui Muslims and their resistance to the Japanese invasion of a mosque in Jining, and is an adaption of true events. Building on Lawrence Venuti’s notions of domesticating and foreignizing translation, I will show how the playwrights present the Chinese anti-colonial struggle as relatable to Egyptians by appropriating Egyptian revolutionary discourse. Focusing on the Arab orientation of this play, I investigate how the two playwrights strategically domesticated the Chinese anti-colonial struggle for their Arabic-speaking audience by situating China as being within the Muslim Umma and by inserting Arabic phrases, including al-Mutanabi verses, and by using direct address to the audience. In particular, I investigate how this play, through the portrayal of a Chinese female Muslim character leading the militant resistance against the Japanese invaders, used an Eastern model of womanhood to participate in Nahdawi social discourses on the New Woman.
Discipline
Literature
Geographic Area
Egypt
Sub Area
19th-21st Centuries