New Books in Middle Eastern Studies

Amir Moosavi, "Dust That Never Settles: Literary Afterlives of the Iran-Iraq War" (Stanford UP, 2025)

Sep 14, 2025
Amir Mousavi, a Rutgers professor of modern Arabic and Persian literatures and author, discusses how Iraqi and Iranian writers have grappled with the Iran-Iraq War. He traces wartime state-sanctioned literatures evolving into mourning and protest. He compares literary trajectories across borders and explains his comparative methodology and key themes.
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ANECDOTE

Origins In Graduate Comparative Study

  • Mousavi traces the book's origin to his graduate studies at NYU combining Arabic and Persian literatures.
  • He aimed to bring both languages into conversation around late-20th-century cultures.
INSIGHT

Persistent Dust As Central Image

  • Dust recurs as both a literal and metaphoric image in Iran-Iraq War literature and photography.
  • Writers treat the war's residue as a persistent presence that 'never settles'.
INSIGHT

From State War Literature To Counternarratives

  • The book traces literary engagements from wartime propaganda to postwar mourning and protest.
  • After the war, writers transformed official war literature into counternarratives and acts of mourning.
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