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Nights of Musk

Authors

  • Various authors

Book rating

Parameters

  • 128 pages
  • 5 hours of reading

More about the book

Haggag Oddoul's work documents the personal tragedy of individuals caught up in massive social transformation while casting a nostalgic light on the heritage and way of life of the Nubians: their rhythmic dancing, their beautiful women, the lively humor of their elders, and the enormous centrality of their traditions and the spirits with which they shared the environment. Two stories in this collection, "Zeinab Uburty" and "Nights of Musk," offer a bucolic and dream-like insight into the world that has disappeared forever under the water behind the dam. Meanwhile, two other stories, "Adila, Grandmother" and "The River People," document the departure of the men, while the women are left behind to go fallow, and the second and third generations born in the cities of the north have only their grandmother's tales and her pigeon Arabic to remind them of their heritage.

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Nights of Musk, Various authors

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Released
2005
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(Hardcover)
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Title
Nights of Musk
Language
English
Format
Hardcover
Pages
128
ISBN10
9774248945
ISBN13
9789774248948
Series
Rating
4.15 out of 5
Description
Haggag Oddoul's work documents the personal tragedy of individuals caught up in massive social transformation while casting a nostalgic light on the heritage and way of life of the Nubians: their rhythmic dancing, their beautiful women, the lively humor of their elders, and the enormous centrality of their traditions and the spirits with which they shared the environment. Two stories in this collection, "Zeinab Uburty" and "Nights of Musk," offer a bucolic and dream-like insight into the world that has disappeared forever under the water behind the dam. Meanwhile, two other stories, "Adila, Grandmother" and "The River People," document the departure of the men, while the women are left behind to go fallow, and the second and third generations born in the cities of the north have only their grandmother's tales and her pigeon Arabic to remind them of their heritage.