Amir Moosavi is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Rutgers University-Newark.
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Description
A Note on Translations and Transliterations Map of Iran, Iraq, and the Surrounding Region Introduction: War, Writing, and Comparison 1. Mobilizing Literature 2. Representations of Survival and Loss 3. War Front Apocrypha 4. Writers' Home Front Wars 5. Ghosts of a Violent Past Conclusion: Cultural Afterlives of 1979 Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index
"Dust That Never Settles is an illuminating comparative analysis of fiction written in Arabic and Persian about the devastating war between Iran and Iraq. Amir Moosavi's compelling study captures how Iraqi and Iranian writers work through the afterlife of a traumatic and violent war whose impact transcends boundaries of language and nation." -Nasrin Rahimieh, author of Iranian Culture: Representation and Identity "Amir Moosavi's command of Arabic and Persian allows him to assemble a wartime archive otherwise inaccessible to scholars of Iraqi or Iranian literature, thus accomplishing the first thorough comparative presentation of the literature of the Iran-Iraq war. Dust That Never Settles is a must-read for anyone interested in the fraught relationship between wartime official narrative and the collective authorial agency that subverts it." -Yasmeen Hanoosh, author of The Chaldeans: Politics and Identity in Iraq and the American Diaspora