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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper examines how the British European experience for both Mustafa Sa'eed of Season of Migration to the North by Tayeb Salih and Ram of Beer in the Snooker club by Waguih Ghali cements their status as outcasts in their respective post-colonial cultures. There are 2 sources cited.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: PG56_GPAmustafa.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. Mustafa & Ram Research Compiled for The
Paper Store, Inc. by P. Manuel 10/2010 Please Written in 1966 by the late novelist Al-Tayyib Salih, Season of
Migration to the North is about a man named Effendi who has made his way back to his small village in the Sudan after nearly a decade of his life
is spent furthering his education in England. On his return home to his native village, everyone treats him with the utmost respect and wants to learn about his experiences in
England. That is everyone except fellow villager Mustafa Saeed. For it turns out Mustafa also spent time studying in England where he developed not only friends and acquaintances but enemies
and mistresses as well. The novel then turns to Mustafas story and it troubles Effendi to the brink of insanity. In fact, Mustafa is seen as an outcast in Sudanese
culture because of his experience in European society. This is very similar to Waguih Ghalis book, Beer in the Snooker Club, published two years earlier in 1964. Ghalis book, his
only novel, portrays Egypt during the turbulent 1950s as seen through the eyes of the narrator, Ram. Ram, like Mustafa, is also educated in England and the book serves as
a semi-autobiography recapturing the thoughts of Ghali during a very tumultuous time in Egypt. Therefore, it is clear to see how the British/European experience for both Mustafa Saeed and Ram
cements their status as outcasts in their respective post-colonial cultures of Sudan and Egypt. Imperialism is the predominant theme in both these novels. And both Egypt and the Sudan were
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