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  1.  5
    The poetics of identity making: precarity and agency in Tahmima Anam’s The Good Muslim.Xin Yan Chew & Moussa Pourya Asl - 2023 - Journal for Cultural Research 28 (1):86-101.
    Bangladesh experienced a massive surge in humanitarian crises after the 1971 Liberation War due to the systematic use of violence at both public and private spheres. Fictional accounts of the post-conflict period depict women as subjected to institutionalised sexism and aggravated physical and mental violence. Critical studies on such narratives often reiterate a stereotypical and essentialising discourse surrounding women’s identity, characterising them as helpless and passive victims of discrimination and exploitation. Drawing upon Judith Butler’s notions of precarity and agency, we (...)
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    Narrative strategies of transrealism: the interplay of satire, fantasy, and science in American dystopian fiction.Behzad Pourgharib, Hamta Mahdavinataj, Moussa Pourya Asl & Henry Oinas-Kukkonen - 2024 - Journal for Cultural Research 28 (2):163-178.
    The rise of transrealism in the second half of the twentieth century embellished the literary landscape in America with a new mode of expression that offered new understanding of time, space, identity, and social values and norms. This study situates the American novelist Kurt Vonnegut’s Player Piano within this literary context to map out the qualities that distinguish it as a transrealistic fiction. We argue that through innovative coalescence of fantasy and realism, this postmodern novel provides a satirical commentary against (...)
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    Reimagining spatiality in South Asian diasporic literature: a Lefebvrian reading of Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Lowland.Zhang Qiuchen, Moussa Pourya Asl & Mohamad Rashidi Bin Mohd Pakri - 2023 - Journal for Cultural Research 28 (1):70-85.
    The examination of power, space, and identity formation within diasporic literature has garnered significant attention due to the escalating global mobility of migrants across the world. This article studies the complex integration of spatial hierarchy, civil violence, and gendered responses to power representations in Jhumpa Lahiri’s novel, The Lowland (2013). We utilise Henri Lefebvre’s theories to dissect the spatial dynamics of the novel across three dimensions: representations of space and conceived space, spatial practice and perceived space, and representational space and (...)
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