#DecolonizeBookshelves2022 Adult Award-Winning Books Features Lifespan of a Reader Literary Fiction Reading Themes Saturday Reads

Weapons of Disempowered Women Across Kuwait, Iraq, Jordan, Palestine, Israel in Susan Abulhawa’s “Against The Loveless World”

"I colonized the colonizer's space of authority. I made myself free in chains and held that courtroom captive to my freedom." - Against the Loveless World by Susan Abulhawa.

Myra here.

Against The Loveless World [Amazon | Book Depository]

Written by Susan Abulhawa Published by Atria Books (2020, first published 2019) ISBN: 1982137037 (ISBN13: 9781982137038) Literary Award: Arab American Book Award for Fiction (2021)Reading Women Award Nominee for Fiction (2020) Bought a copy of the book. Book quotes and layout via Canva.

I have featured around ten books from This Is The Canon: Decolonize Your Bookshelf In 50 Books (Amazon | Book Depository) as part of our annual reading theme – pretty slow-going, I think especially since I am targeting to read and feature 25 books from their list for 2022. However, the titles that I am finding on my own resonate with me more. Not surprisingly, the novels I am discovering are written by women authors of color, such as the book above, which I read as part of our book club in my institution here in the UAE.

At first glance, this book seems to have a similar plot as the translated award-winning classic Woman At Point Zero by Nawal El Saadawi from Egypt [Amazon | Book Depository] (see my review here) included and featured in This Is The Canon – both women imprisoned for criminal activity, both are sex workers, preyed on by strong women who took advantage of their vulnerabilities, and both have been raped and tormented by the men they have encountered in their lives.

However, Abulhawa is a bit more ambitious in the scope (spanning multiple countries: Kuwait, Iraq, Jordan, Palestine, Israel) and depth of this narrative introducing the reader to fierce and defiant Nahr / Yaqoot / Almas – and the sociopolitical frame undergirding her story that blurs the personal and the political in this unforgettable book. I also appreciated how explicit the notions of colonialism are in this story (see quote below):

Thus far, this is the only book that took 90 minutes for our incredibly diverse book club to discuss; usually we finish after an hour or so. GatheringReaders members who attended our Zoom discussion are from Kuwait, Syria/Armenia, the UAE, the Philippines, and the United States of America. Our fearless group talked about prostitution, the margins of honor and morality, homosexuality, what constitutes heroism, Saddam’s emancipatory figure (surprising for me – something I only learned after reading this novel), radical love, the US’ culpability – and what it means to be a woman in the face of all this.

As a transnational female of color, I was moved by Abulhawa’s description of disenfranchisement and being in between nations:

The author’s descriptions of meals and what they signify in one’s culture and one’s feelings of dispossession made me want to hunt down the types of food she mentioned in the story. I am grateful to the Emirati members of our book club who have given us stellar recommendations on places to go here in the UAE to find some of the authentic Kuwaiti and Palestinian dishes mentioned in the book.

The character growth of Nahr / Yaqoot / Almas – especially as evidenced through her relationship with her family, her mother in particular – and how her views have evolved over time with all that she has experienced as a woman struggling to survive and support her family was nuanced and moving:

And then there is the political aspect of the narrative which I devoured with my eyes, in all its painful and unadorned truths:

Nahr’s method of resistance, otherwise known as ‘weapons of the weak’ – initially dismissed and diminished by her ‘comrades’ and fellow revolutionaries, is one that I actually find to be more sustainable and organic. As I was thinking of the title of this post, however, I replaced “weak” with “disempowered” – because Nahr did not ever strike me as ‘weak’ – disempowered, yes, but always defiant and valiant in the face of oppression.

I find it interesting that stories like this did not make it in the list of books featured in This Is The Canon – which has solidified my intention to create my own list in the future. Abulhawa from Palestine and Aboulela from Sudan (see my review of Lyrics Alley here [Amazon | Book Depository]) would definitely be at the top of the list.


#DecolonizeBookshelves2022 Update: 66 out of target 100

Myra is a Teacher Educator and a registered clinical psychologist based in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates. Prior to moving to the Middle East, she lived for eleven years in Singapore serving as a teacher educator. She has edited five books on rediscovering children’s literature in Asia (with a focus on the Philippines, Malaysia, India, China, Japan) as part of the proceedings for the Asian Festival of Children’s Content where she served as the Chair of the Programme Committee for the Asian Children’s Writers and Illustrators Conference from 2011 until 2019. While she is an academic by day, she is a closet poet and a book hunter at heart. When she is not reading or writing about books or planning her next reads, she is hoping desperately to smash that shuttlecock to smithereens because Badminton Is Life (still looking for badminton courts here at UAE - suggestions are most welcome).

1 comment on “Weapons of Disempowered Women Across Kuwait, Iraq, Jordan, Palestine, Israel in Susan Abulhawa’s “Against The Loveless World”

  1. Pingback: [Monday Reading – My 2022 in Books] Favourite Fiction and Poetry Books Read in 2022 – Gathering Books

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