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Research Article | Open Access
Volume 16 2024 | None
Adopting the narrative imagination for ideological reference
Dr. Zahra khales
Pages: 564-575
Abstract
The novel is a literary genre capable of monitoring social and political transformations, and the visions in it differ, as well as the voices and ideologies. It has every ability to overcome what is in some way silent about the representations of both the intellectual and the ideological conflict and its manifestations. We find the novelist presenting to us an image that somewhat reflects his reality, and the novel often deals with the intellectual. As a struggle awareness that stems from the feeling of injustice imposed and practiced on the citizen by the prevailing regimes, this culture is transformed into a means that seeks change. The fictional text is no longer a tool for entertainment and escaping from the truth and from the current crisis, but rather it has become an act of awareness and exposure of what is hidden behind the curtain of the system. It is known that any society, whatever it may be, is not devoid of variation and disparity among its members, taking different forms and images at the level of interest, orientation and thought, which ultimately constitute what is known as societal spectra, and within the latter emerges what has been called: “the elite of intellectuals.” These Those to whom thought, culture, and awareness are attributed are a distinct and active social group, and by virtue of the similarity of their role and similarity of their status, they are known for their moderate position, if they tend towards the truth, and from here they must not fall under the influence of any sect, but considering the intellectual as a human being, he finds himself adopting a set of ideas. And the opinions that he believes in and then defends, and this means that he fell into the net of ideology. From here, the following question was posed: Do novelists produce ideology or are they a product of it?
Keywords
imagination, ideology, thought, reference, novel, conflict.
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