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The Harafish

di Naguib Mahfouz

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
406962,051 (4.06)16
Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1988, Naguib Mahfouz is perhaps the best-known living Arab writer. His books have had great success in this country, particularly The Cairo Trilogy. Fans of the famed trilogy will be delighted with The Harafish, an epic novel that chronicles the dramatic history of the al-Nagi family -- a family that moves, over many generations, from the height of power and glory to the depths of decadence and decay. The Harafish begins with the tale of Ashur al-Nagi, a man who grows from humble beginnings to become a great leader, a legend among his people. Generation after generation, however, Ashur's descendants grow further from his legendary example. They lose touch with their origins as they amass and then squander large fortunes, marry prostitutes when they marry at all, and develop rivalries that end in death. The community's upper class keeps a watchful eye on the descendants of al-Nagi for fear of losing their privileges, but they find no threat of another such as Ashur. Not, that is, until the al-Nagi who, like his noble ancestor, finds his power once again from among The Harafish, or the common people. Through the strength of their numbers and their passion, the glory of the name of al-Nagi is restored. "Of all Mahfouz's experiments in recent decades, this is the one which owes least to western inspiration and is probably the most successful. The Harafish, fluently translated by Catherine Cobham, makes accessible and engrossing reading." -- The Washington Post Book World.… (altro)
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Reminded me of one of my absolute favorite books (of his and of all books), Children of Gebelaawi, a story of the life in a Cairo alley through many, many generations. The rise and fall of a family; an unsubtle, un-nuanced book about power. I just thought it a little too slap-dash, too superficial. He takes a theme and beats it to death. Very disappointing ( )
  Gypsy_Boy | Aug 26, 2023 |
أعجبتني نهاية الرواية عندما

وقف عاشور الحفيد ضد هوى نفسه و تغييره بذلك مستقبل الحارة بعكس عاشور الجد الذي تسببت زلته بفساد أولاده تدريجياً من بعده

و لكن لم أفهم رمزية كون عاشور الجد لقيطاً؟ ( )
  AmmarAlyousfi | Aug 12, 2023 |
Draft: with every new generation you see a glimour of hope as a new member of the Nagi family aspires to reach the great heights of Ashur or Shams Al-Din, ultimately for them to fall to their vices of money, power, lust. One can only imagine how the Harafish themselves feel as they see a new Nagi member become clan chief, only to fall from their once great heights. Indeed, Mahfouz positions you to make you feel as part of the Harafish. They, we the readers feel and share the same despair as our hopes are raises of seeing the return of Nagi to power, only to become more frustrated, pessismestic, and indeed even angers when we see them rise to clan chief or aspire to do so. Could this even be an analogy for the frustration the common people feel when there is a change in government? How often are we to get our hopes up with a change in party, with promises to fix the mistakes performed by the former, to make things right, only for promises to be unfulfilled, while the Harafish are left once again in the dark. ( )
  SabaNaghipour | Nov 25, 2022 |
Un recién nacido abandonado en las calles de Husayn, y cuyo nombre será Ashur al Nayi, dará comienzo a la fantástica, hermosa y fascinante historia de la familia Nayi. Durante décadas los diversos descendientes de Ashur gobernarán las calles del barrio. Cada uno de ellos será recordado de manera diferente... pero ninguno pasará inadvertido: algunos serán presa de la codicia y el lujo, otros, sin embargo, intentarán regir según los preceptos de un gobierno justo y equitativo. Muertes, traiciones, destierros, venganzas, lecciones no aprendidas, tragedias... y como telón de fondo la siempre larvada y feroz lucha entre los harafish, o miserables, y los ricos y poderosos. La epopeya de los harafísh es una de las obras cumbre de su autor. Una novela que mezcla magia y fantasía, que une presente y pasado, que recuerda a Las mil y una noches y a Hijos de nuestro barrio, que aúna tradición y modernidad. Un texto clave de la prosa mundial. ( )
  BibliotecaUNED | Jun 6, 2018 |
Hmm a review of a Nobel prize winner’s work?. Nah just impressions from a lowly reader-a harafish- a commoner, rabble. A great word. The harafish are the down trodden filler people. It's not their lives that are chronicled through the generations in this book rather it is the clan chiefs, sheiks, merchants and power mongers that Mr Mahfouz follows. Noble clan leaders sow security for the harafish. But when corruption slithers into the leader’s heart the money flows to a few rather than benefiting all. Then the harafish harvest only suffering. The wonder of the book is that it is about ancient clan systems but gives insight to current western politics and universal family dynamics. The Nagi family’s struggles with greed, pride and dreams are not distant at all. Nor is the political dimension of how power alters intentions and commoners do or don't weld their own collective power to put just leaders in place or succumb to tyranny. ( )
  77nanci | Apr 30, 2016 |
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Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1988, Naguib Mahfouz is perhaps the best-known living Arab writer. His books have had great success in this country, particularly The Cairo Trilogy. Fans of the famed trilogy will be delighted with The Harafish, an epic novel that chronicles the dramatic history of the al-Nagi family -- a family that moves, over many generations, from the height of power and glory to the depths of decadence and decay. The Harafish begins with the tale of Ashur al-Nagi, a man who grows from humble beginnings to become a great leader, a legend among his people. Generation after generation, however, Ashur's descendants grow further from his legendary example. They lose touch with their origins as they amass and then squander large fortunes, marry prostitutes when they marry at all, and develop rivalries that end in death. The community's upper class keeps a watchful eye on the descendants of al-Nagi for fear of losing their privileges, but they find no threat of another such as Ashur. Not, that is, until the al-Nagi who, like his noble ancestor, finds his power once again from among The Harafish, or the common people. Through the strength of their numbers and their passion, the glory of the name of al-Nagi is restored. "Of all Mahfouz's experiments in recent decades, this is the one which owes least to western inspiration and is probably the most successful. The Harafish, fluently translated by Catherine Cobham, makes accessible and engrossing reading." -- The Washington Post Book World.

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