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Description
The book examines how imprisoned Arab authors challenge regimes that seek to reduce them to “docile bodies” or worse-subject them to haywana, the process of animalization that strips prisoners of their humanity. Through clandestine writing, fragmented memory, and testimonial prose, these writers reclaim agency, redefine political subjectivity, and subvert hegemonic narratives.
Political Prison Discourse in the Arab World: An Analysis of Selected Writings from Egypt and Syria looks at the prison as more than a site of incarceration but a battlefield of meaning, memory, and identity. This study explores the political, cultural, and literary force of Arab prison writing, arguing that prose written from or about prison under authoritarian regimes constitutes a powerful form of resistance against state-sponsored silencing and dehumanization.
Table of Contents
1. The Concept of Discourse: Power, Truth, and Resistance
2. Carceral Sovereignty and the Birth of the Prison Writer: Surveillance, Power, and the Authoritarian State in the Arab World
3. Caged Masculinities: Power, Dehumanization, and Resistance in Arab Men's Prison Writings
4. Rewriting Captivity: Endurance, Solidarity, and Resistance in Arab Women's Prison Narratives
Conclusion
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Product details
| Published | Jul 23 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 168 |
| ISBN | 9781666977004 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Prison Narratives in the Arab World is a rare, and profoundly powerful, account of the human experience of incarceration inside Arab prisons. Weaving a Foucauldian analysis alongside works by prominent novelists from Egypt and Syria, Obeid masterfully argues that prison writing is not only a response to the brutality of authoritarian regimes and the intimate on-the-ground systems of subjugation they engender, but productive of new subjectivities and modes of resistance. This timely book offers a wealth of insight into how men and women writers have endured injustice, and persevered, under extreme forms of physical and psychological violence in Arab prisons. This book is an important, and timely, testament to the overwhelming resiliency and creativity of the human spirit in and beyond the region.
Rania Kassab Sweis, Associate Professor, University of Richmond, USA
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At the time when the whole world witnessed the horrors of the Assad regime's Saydnaya Prison after its collapse in Syria on December, 8, 2024, Dina Obeid's powerful account of the prisons' atrocities in Syria and Egypt is a timely intervention that renders presence and agency to the haunting testimony of the victims' voices. A unique book that examines the intricacies of authoritarianism and domination in contemporary Arab states written with exceptional wit, verve, and determination to bespeak the power of the witnessing testimony and its ability to resist and defy systematic dehumanization
Hanadi Al-Samman, Associate Professor, University of Virginia, USA

























