Studyspark Study Document

Naguib Mahfouz's Midaq Alley Term Paper

Related Topics: Materialism The Pearl Dreams Greed

Pages:4 (1233 words)

Subject:Crime

Topic:Prostitution

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#96364032


Hamida

Nobel Laureate Naguib Mahfouz is given credit as the author who was first to bring the narrative art of novel writing to the world of Arabic literature. He is also the literary genius who wrote Midaq Alley - and numerous other highly acclaimed works - about the fascinating real people from a slum in Cairo who were caught in between old Arabic traditions and emerging modern behaviors and materialism from the world of the West. Among his many interesting personalities in this novel is one of the central characters, and a compelling protagonist, Hamida. She is an orphan; she yearns, dreams, and pines for a way to escape the bitter realities of the poverty her life is saturated with.

Hamida is a very interesting and unique character. Her passion to attempt to escape the dregs of an impoverished lifestyle through the seamy world of prostitution is a behavior which is probably not unlike the actions of scores of young girls in third world countries all over the planet. And on the surface, when a woman tries to escape poverty by turning to street walking, she is really trading one evil for another. But because of her particular Arab cultural and physical environment, Hamida was inclined to do some radical, daring and even dangerous things, all of which helps author Mahfouz weave his web of dramatic and colorful events for her and her interacting characters.

The description the author gives readers of Hamida (26), in a scene where her foster mother is talking about the upcoming marriage of an unlikely character, is of a twenty-something woman with "bronze-colored" skin and "black, beautiful eyes." The contrast of her white pupils with her black eyes, which were "framed with mascara," was, Mahfouz writes, "striking and attractive."

But juxtaposed with that raw, stark beauty (Hamida's figure is "slim" and her face is "pretty") was a young woman who had lice in her kerosene-saturated, knee-length, unwashed hair - and moreover, this is a woman who had a reputation as a notorious hothead.

In fact, Hamida's social position and place in the alley community is that of an attractive yet moody person with a strong temper; one who could show "an appearance of strength and determination which was most unfeminine."

Clearly, if you lived in Midaq Alley, you certainly didn't "cross" Hamida - and indeed, to illustrate how tough she was, her nickname - given her by her foster mother, who was also a match-maker - was "the khamsin," which is the name for "the vicious and unpredictable summer winds" (25).

And in the novel, while Hamida yearns for an escape from the traditions and the poverty of the part of Cairo in which she is rooted, she envies women who have managed to break the chains and free themselves from the cultural, social, and economic morass. She very much envies the Jewish factory girls she sees: "If you had only seen the factory girls!" she tells her foster mom (27). "They all go about in nice clothes. Well, what is the point of life then if we can't wear what we want?"

Her greed - a constant yearning for new clothes - and a lusting for respectability is such a strong theme for Hamida, she even suggests that death would be better than being without a new dress (27): "Don't you think it would be better for a girl to have been buried alive rather than have no nice clothes to make herself look pretty?" She had "fantasies of wealth" (40) and she allowed "envy" to nibble away at her; and in addition, she possessed a "frigid heart" (84), plus she had a "rebellious" and "unmanageable" disposition (86)…


Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Midaq Alley by Naguib Mahfouz Is a

Pages: 2 (809 words) Sources: 1 Subject: Literature Document: #68462836

Midaq Alley by Naguib Mahfouz is a portrayal of several individuals living within a particular section of Cairo. Almost all of the characters are Muslim. Several are middle class but others, the most striking of the narrative, are quite poor and simply struggle to survive. Through creating such variety of characters from different social stratum, whom all meet in the context of the alley of the title, the author

Studyspark Study Document

Midaq Alley the Central Character

Pages: 6 (2005 words) Sources: 1 Subject: History - Israel Document: #16943696

Of course, the geography of the Middle East was greatly influenced in the later Twentieth Century by the ongoing conflict between the Arab states and Israel. The creation of Israel itself in 1948 made the greatest change, and the British were involved in that struggle as well. The state of Israel was created in 1948 in a battle between the newly declared state and her Arab neighbors, ending in 1949

Studyspark Study Document

Midaq Alley Key Ideas and Its Significance

Pages: 4 (1106 words) Sources: 1 Subject: History - Israel Document: #27169654

Midaq Alley Key Ideas and Its Significance Religion Marriage Upward Mobility Egypt Nationalism In the book Midaq Alley, Naguib Mahfouz is talking about life in Egypt during the 1940s. It is focusing on several different concepts which are relevant in the Middle East today. To fully understand the importance of these insights requires examining key insights from the book. This will be accomplished by carefully examining key ideas and analyzing their significance. Together, these elements will

Studyspark Study Document

Arabic Literature Thrived From the 4th to

Pages: 6 (1773 words) Sources: 6 Subject: History - Israel Document: #31117468

Arabic literature thrived from the 4th to 7th century which mostly involved poetry about love, fighting and courage. With the arrival of Islam, literature lost its value and the Quran (Noble Book of the Muslims) became the focus of all study. Arabic poetry underwent a period of decline from which it arose during the reign of the Umayyads. Many works were translated in Arabic during the reign of the

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".