About Tunisia
Culture
Tunisian Literature
Literature |
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This desire to forge a new and distinctively Tunisian identity is
reflected in the works of a group of poets, short-story tellers,
polemicists, and journalists known as Taht Al-Sur (Under the
Ramparts), named after the cafe where they met. The most talented of
this group is Ali Du'aji (1909-1949). His short stories, full of
humor and mordant wit, are still widely read in Tunisia. Yet in the
belles lettres of the period, the most popular genre was poetry, and
in this province Abul Kacem Al-shabbi (1909-1934), the poet of love
and youth, reigned supreme. Indeed, Al-Shabbi, Tunisia's best-known
poet in the Arab world, was also the first to break away from a
classical rhetorical tradition that was out of touch with modem
sensitivity and concerns. However, Al-Shabbi was a lone voice in
Tunisia, indeed in the Maghreb, as he had little influence on his
contemporaries who continued writing traditional verse, using
time-honored rhetorical devices. |