Hagar Poems

Hagar Poems

by Mohja Kahf
Hagar Poems

Hagar Poems

by Mohja Kahf

eBook

$14.99  $19.95 Save 25% Current price is $14.99, Original price is $19.95. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

“Mohja Kahf ’s Hagar Poems is brilliantly original in its conception, thrillingly artful in its execution. Its range is immense, its spiritual depth is profound, it negotiates its shifts between archaic and the contemporary with utmost skill. There’s lyricism, there’s satire, there’s comedy, there’s theology of a high order in this book.”

—Alicia Ostriker, author of For the Love of God: The Bible as an Open Book

“Hagar/ Hajar the immigrant/exile/outcast/refugee mother of a people is given multiple voices and significance in Mohja Kahf’s new book of dramatic monologues, which also reinvents Pharaoh’s daughter, Zuleika, Aïsha, and Mary in poems that are at once lively and learned, agnostic and devout. The sequence on an American mosque, and the poet’s ambivalent love for what it represents, is unique in American poetry.”

—Marilyn Hacker, author of A Stranger’s Mirror

“‘Where have all the goddesses gone,’ writes Mohja Kahf, ‘I tracked down Isis / incognito on Cyprus. /She told me Ishtar / lived under the radar / in southern Iraq. . . .’ In Hagar Poems, Mohja Kahf’s hallmark qualities—irreverence, imagination, wit, poignancy—are all exuberantly in evidence. A wonderful read.”

—Leila Ahmed, author of A Quiet Revolution: The Veil’s Resurgence, from the Middle East to America

“This brilliant collection captures all the ‘patient threading of relationship’ between Hagar and Sarah as between women, and then between women and men, between human and God. . . . At every turn of the page [Kahf] refuses complacency and circumstance but opts instead for exposing the tenuousness of threads that tie and bind and then come loose before our eyes.”

—From the foreword by Amina Wadud


The central matter of this daring new collection is the story of Hagar, Abraham, and Sarah—the ancestral feuding family of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.

These poems delve into the Hajar story in Islam. They explore other figures from the Near Eastern heritage, such as Mary and Moses, and touch on figures from early Islam, such as Fatima and Aisha. Throughout, there is artful reconfiguring. Readers will find sequels and prequels to the traditional narratives, along with modernized figures claimed for contemporary conflicts.

Hagar Poems is a compelling shakeup of not only Hagar’s story but also of current roles of all kinds of women in all kinds of relationships.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781610755887
Publisher: University of Arkansas Press
Publication date: 08/01/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 160
Sales rank: 865,128
File size: 733 KB

About the Author

Mohja Kahf was born in Damascus, Syria, in 1967 to parents who immigrated to the United States in 1971. She is the author of a poetry book, E-mails from Scheherazad, and a novel, The Girl in the Tangerine Scarf.

Table of Contents

Foreword Acknowledgments Contents i. The Water of Hajar The First Thing Hajar, First Woman on the Moon Hajar in America Professor and Mrs. Abraham Hajar Writes a Letter to Sarah as a Cathartic Exercise Suggested by Her Therapist Page Found Crumpled in the Wastebasket by Hajar’s Writing Desk Kin From Sarah’s Egypt Diary Sarah’s Laugh II Hajar’s Ram Isaac Wakes Up to Ismaïl and Hagar Terrorizing the House Hagar No Roses Hajar at the AIDS March Hajar’s Sandals The Caseworker Visits Abraham and Sarah Hagar Dreamwork: The Therapist’s Notes At the Snowcap The Fire of Hajar II Postcards from Hajar, a Correspondence in Four Parts The Threshold All Good Knowing at Arafat The Kaba’s Lap Lifting the Hajar Heel Hajar Triumphant Hajar Enters the Garden, Well-Pleased and Well-Pleasing Hagar Begone Hajar Thorn ii. Asiya Is Waiting for a Sign Asiya’s Aberrance (Nushuz Asiya) Daughter of the Pharisees The Last Day before Asiya’s Nervous Breakdown Asiya Meets Miriam at the Riverbank The Red Fish Arab and Hebrew Flow and Cross Over Among the Midianites on U.S. 31 Balqis Makes Solomon Sign a Pre-Nup Zuleikha Ionic Zuleikha Tantra The Ladies of the City The Zuleikha Hotline Mary Phones Her Old High School Teacher from the University Library at 4 a.m. Mary’s Glade Not the Same Riverbank The Food of Mary Khadija Gets Her Groove Back Our Lady of the Sorrows Aisha of the Pearls Aisha Fails the Good Housekeeping Seal Aisha: The Islamic Inquirer exclusive Breaking: Aisha Claims to Be Post-Feminism Nusaiba at Uhud Bilal’s Mother What Is Recorded of the Response of Ghazali’s Wife on Being Informed by Her Husband the Great Theologian That He Was Quitting His Job, Leaving Her and Their Children, and Skipping Town to Find God and the Proper Worship Thereof What al-Ghazali’s Mother Commented on the View of Her Son the Eminent Theologian that Women’s Natures Tend Not Toward Spiritual Heights but the Baser Elements of Worldly Life Such as Bearing and Nursing Children and the Muck of Cooking, Cleaning, and Sex iii. The Black Stone of My Heart From a Former Grad Student of Imam Ibn al-Qayyim The Near Eastern Goddess Alumnae Office . . . The Mihrab of the Mind Most Wanted Tortoise Prayer Little Mosque Poems References
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews