American Research Journal of English and Literature        cover
Open Access

American Research Journal of English and Literature

ISSN (Online): 2378-9026

DOI: 10.46568/arjel

Research Article Vol. 7, Issue 1 2020 Open Access

THE “ARAB-ORIENTAL” IN POST-9/11 AMERICA: A READING OF LAILA HALABY’S ONCE IN A PROMISED LAND

Ms. Anwesa Chattopadhyay

Directorate of Open and Distance Learning (DODL), University of Kalyani Address: DODL Building, University of Kalyani, Kalyani, Nadia, West Bengal, India. Pin -741235
Anwesa Chattopadhyay, THE “ARAB-ORIENTAL” IN POST-9/11 AMERICA: A READING OF LAILA HALABY’S ONCE IN A PROMISED LAND”. American Research Journal of English and Literature, Volume 7, Issue. 1, 2021, pp. 1-8.
Abstract
The Orientalist psychology has been persistently shaped by an ideological demarcation between Westerners and Arab-Orientals; “the former are (in no particular order) rational, peaceful, liberal, logical, capable of holding real values without natural suspicion; the latter are none of these things” (Said, p. 49). The Orientalist perspective has remained ingrained in the Western mind across the decades, persistently shaping the colonialist ideology in an era of mass migration. The latter decades of the nineteenth century witnessed a rapid upsurge in the migration of Arabs, a major part of whom settled in the United States. The continuous upsurge in the Arab migration and settlement was concurrent with the growing spur of racism, which forms the basis of the victimization of the Arab-American populace. In this regard,Steven Salaita (an eminent critic of Islamophobia and a spokesperson for the “Anti-Arab Racism” in the USA) observes, “The origin of American racism is a combination of European colonial values and interaction with Blacks and Indians” (p. 5). In the light of the above statement, this paper aims to study Laila Halaby’s novel Once in a Promised Land (2007) from an orientalist perspective, and locate the traces of Islamophobia that had victimized the Muslim immigrants in America after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.