CROSS-WORLD NARRATIVES AND TRAVELS: RECONSTRUCTING THE HISTORY OF EARLY SYRIAN-AMERICAN IMMIGRANTS

Otared Haidar

Abstract


Narratives of travel are part of world literature and cultural history. Scholarly research on migrant narratives and literature is a subfield of intercultural studies and comparative literature which allow cultures to bond and interact. Written histories of Arab Americans start with the Foundational Period (1880-1920) which revolves around the early immigrants from Historical Syria. This period is one of the least documented eras which is still difficult to reconstruct due to its many gaps and various obstacles. This paper examines the strategies and approaches used by Philip Hitti, the founder of Arabic Studies in the United States, who established the master models and approaches for the study of the Syro-Lebanese immigrant community. This model is based on locating alternative sources that include ̶ in addition to official sources and written accounts ̶ folksongs, literary texts, popular stories, and personal memories. It makes use of them to reconstruct the history of this community, which is characterized by its rich popular culture and long tradition of story-telling. There may be polemics and prejudices in presenting the wealth of the oral and cultural tradition of Historical Syria’s communities in the mainstream popular and official narratives about Arabs and Muslims. When presented with scholarly research and comparative perspectives, immigrants’ narratives can have a valuable contribution to world literature on immigration.

Keywords


Narrative; travel; Syria-American; immigrant; literature;

Full Text:

PDF

References


Ayalon, A. (2016). The Arabic print revolution. Cambridge University Press.

Bachelet, S. (2019). “Looking for One's Life”: Trapped Mobilities and Adventure in Morocco. Migration and Society, 2(1), 40-54.

Bertacco, S., & Vallorani, N. (2021). The Relocation of Culture: Translations, Migrations, Borders. Bloomsbury Publishing USA.

Crawley, H., & Jones, K. (2021). Beyond here and there:(Re) conceptualising migrant journeys and the ‘in-between’. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 47(14), 3226-3242.

Dibs, Z. (2020). Antonius al-Bishallany, the son of the town of Salima: the first immigrant to the new world. Retrieved September 5, 2023, from Manateq website: https://manateq.net/أنطونيوس-البشعلاني-إبن-بلدة-صليما-الم/

Elder, C. (2020). Being Australian: Narratives of national identity. Routledge. Hitti, P. K. (1924). The Syrians in America. New York: George H. Doran Company.

Fadda, C. W. (2019). Intersections of Arab American and Asian American literature. In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature.

George, G., & Selimos, E. D. (2019). Searching for belonging and confronting exclusion: A person-centred approach to immigrant settlement experiences in Canada. Social Identities, 25(2), 125-140.

Gualtieri, S. M. (2019). Arab Routes: Pathways to Syrian California. Stanford University Press.

Hoar, G. F. (1903). President Roosevelt and the Syrian Children. In Autobiography of Seventy Years (pp. 296–299). New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons.

Kayal, P. (2002). The Community of Many Worlds: Arab Americans in New York City. New York: Syracuse University Press.

Khater, A. F. (2019). Arabs in America. In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History.

Marks, R. B. (2024). The origins of the modern world: A global and environmental narrative from the fifteenth to the twenty-first century. Rowman & Littlefield.

Rashed, R. (2019). Encyclopedia of the history of Arabic science. Routledge.

Ryu, M., & Tuvilla, M. R. S. (2018). Resettled refugee youths’ stories of migration, schooling, and future: Challenging dominant narratives about refugees. The Urban Review, 50(4), 539-558.

Semaan, G. (2014). Arab Americans: Stereotypes, Conflict, History, Cultural Identity and Post 9/11. USA Intercultural Communication Studies, 23(2), 17–32.

Spickard, P., Beltrán, F., & Hooton, L. (2022). Almost all aliens: Immigration, race, and colonialism in American history and identity. Routledge.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.18860/ling.v19i1.26187



Copyright (c) 2024 LiNGUA: Jurnal Ilmu Bahasa dan Sastra

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Member of:

Crossref

Indexed by:

Dimension Google Scolar  Sinta Sinta   Journal TOCS     

Editorial Office:
Laboratory of Information and Publication, Faculty of Humanities
Universitas Islam Negeri Maulana Malik Ibrahim Malang
Jalan Gajayana 50 Malang, Jawa Timur, Indonesia 65144
Email: jurnallingua@gmail.com
Phone: +62 (0)341 570872


Creative Commons License
LiNGUA by Laboratory of Information and Publication, Faculty of Humanities is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at http://ejournal.uin-malang.ac.id/index.php/humbud/index.