Thursday, March 12, 2020
12 p.m. – 1 p.m.
McKinney Conference Room, 111 Thayer Street
In support of our community's continued health, if you are not feeling well for any reason, please consider staying home rather than attending the event. For up-to-date information, including campus travel restrictions, please visit the University’s COVID-19 Updates website.
Thrilling and suspenseful, steeped in darkness and mystery, crime fiction is one of the world’s most widely read genres. Yet in the recent resurgence of interest in global fictions of detection, literature from the Arab world has been largely neglected. In this talk, Professor Drumsta will give a brief tour through her book project, Ways of Seeking: The Arabic Novel and the Poetics of Investigation. The book offers a selective history of Arab detective fiction in the twentieth century, focusing in particular on how the formal features of crime, noir, and detection have consistently enabled Arab authors to explore questions of power, knowledge, and the social in the modern era. Far from staging awe-inspiring feats of logical ratiocination or cultivating sympathy for the police, however, the Arab detective novels examined in this project mock the truth-seeking practices on which modern exercises of colonial and national power tend to be premised, including criminology, academic research, psychoanalysis, and even literary criticism itself. At the same time, they also return to the archives of Arabic folklore, Islamic piety, and mysticism to translate and explore different, less coercive ways of seeing, seeking, and knowing. Ways of Seeking ultimately tells a different story about the novel’s place in the constellation of Arab modernism, crafting an innovative and hopefully transportable method of open-ended, self-effacing inquiry based on the investigative poetics of literary texts themselves. The talk will focus in particular on the work Drumsta completed as an NEH fellow at the American Research Center in Egypt (ARCE) in 2018-2019.