Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.univ-ouargla.dz/jspui/handle/123456789/40742
Title: The Desert as Myth and Memory in the Face of Modernity in The Bleeding of the Stone by Ibrahim al-Koni
Authors: KHELFAOUI Benaoumeur
Keywords: Ibrahim al-Koni
Saharan desert
cultural memory
ecopoetics
extractivist modernity
Issue Date: 22-Apr-2026
Series/Report no.: numéro 65 SSH V18 N1 2026;
Abstract: This article offers an analytical reading of Ibrahim al-Koni’s The Bleeding of the Stone, showing how the desert is crafted as a narrative agent, a living archive, and an ethical matrix. Combining an ecopoetic approach with memory studies and an anthropology of nomadism, the study demonstrates how al-Koni’s poetics interweaves Tuareg orality, ritual practice, and a critique of extractivist modernity. Close readings of key scenes (erased tracks, mechanized hunting, mineral and animal motifs) sustain a step-by-step argument moving from myth to memory and finally to cultural resistance. Findings indicate that the novel does not merely represent loss; it stages an ethics of survival grounded in slowness, interdependence, and attention to the nonhuman. The conclusion stresses the text’s transnational relevance to current debates on ecology, identity, and knowledge regimes.
Description: Revue EL-Bahith en Sciences Humaines et Sociales
URI: https://dspace.univ-ouargla.dz/jspui/handle/123456789/40742
ISSN: 2170-1121
Appears in Collections:numéro 65 SSH V18 N1 2026

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