Bridge Too Soon

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A01=Elizabeth Claire Saylor
al-Hoda
al-nahda
Arab American studies
Arab women writers
Arabic novel
Author_Elizabeth Claire Saylor
Category=DSK
class hierarchy
cross-cultural dialogue
diaspora identity
East-West encounter
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
feminism
feminist history
forthcoming
gender reform
historical fiction
historiography
hybridity
immigration
Lebanese migration
literary canon
literary criticism
Little Syria
mahjar literature
Maronite community
melodrama
Mount Lebanon
Naoum Mokarzel
nationalism
polyphony
religious critique
romance novel
storytelling
Syrian diaspora
translation
transnationalism
women's and gender studies
women's awakening
women's education
women's labor
women's magazines
women's solidarity

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815612193
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Syracuse University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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More than a century before contemporary debates about Arab American identity, a Lebanese immigrant woman in New York City was championing intercultural dialogue and women’s solidarity across cultural divides through the radical medium of the Arabic novel. ʿAfifa Karam (1883–1924) not only wrote groundbreaking fiction; she also theorized the novel as a genre that could empower immigrant women readers at a time when the Arabic novel itself had yet to gain acceptance as a legitimate literary form.

Elizabeth Saylor offers the first comprehensive study of Karam’s life and work, recovering a pivotal yet overlooked figure in the nahda, the Arabic cultural renaissance. Drawing on Karam’s journalism in the New York-based newspaper al-Huda and her three published novels, Saylor reveals how this writer, journalist, and translator developed a distinctly gendered theory of fiction while addressing the urgent questions facing Syrian immigrants navigating between Arab and American cultures. Karam’s novels—Badiʿa wa-Fuʾad, Fatima al-Badawiyya, and Ghadat ʿAmshit—feature heroines who embody hybrid identities, forge unlikely cross-cultural friendships, and resist patriarchal oppression both in their ancestral homeland and their adopted country. Karam emerges as a bold social critic and literary innovator whose work remains strikingly relevant to contemporary discussions of transnational feminism and cultural hybridity.

Elizabeth Claire Saylor is assistant professor of Arabic at North Carolina State University.

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