The Lebanese M Community: Identities Lost (or Found) in Translation

dc.contributor.authorKaram, Michael
dc.date2023-05-17T22:15:22.000
dc.date.accessioned2023-05-23T04:43:39Z
dc.date.available2017-01-01T00:00:00Z
dc.date.issued2017-05-01
dc.date.submitted2019-07-08T12:05:04-07:00
dc.description.abstractThe first time I was exposed to the word “gay,” I was watching television at home. In the Arabic subtitles, the word shādh appeared. From around that time, I have a vague memory of one of my teachers at my Lebanese Catholic School explaining what shādh meant. The word easily translated into English as deviant – my teacher had been clear: the norm is a straight line, and anything that deviates away from the line is a shudhūdh min al-mujtama’ (deviation from society), whereby the adjective shādh becomes the noun shudhūdh in that expression. The naïve first-year student I was who left Lebanon to attend college in the U.S. was quick to discover that there are words in English to talk about these nonnormative identities – I will address that term soon – that allow for the existence of the multitude of identities within language. Stepping out of the US and back into Lebanon, I question how the discourse forms around nonnormative identities in Lebanon? What words do people use to describe themselves and what do they not use? What terminology do local advocacy groups employ? This paper begins this research with contextualizing the linguistic fabric of Lebanon. Then, I explain the specific dilemma of putting this research together, in writing, in English. Finally, I partition the state of queer language in Lebanon into the imagined intersection of Arabic and English, or which is critically constructed within the confines of Arabic, to exemplify incongruent equivalency in queer (nontextual) translation.
dc.description.commentsThis paper was part of the 2016-2017 Penn Humanities Forum on Translation. Find out more at http://wolfhumanities.upenn.edu/annual-topics/translation.
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.upenn.edu/handle/20.500.14332/48791
dc.legacy.articleid1005
dc.legacy.fulltexturlhttps://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1005&context=uhf_2017&unstamped=1
dc.source.issue5
dc.source.journalUndergraduate Humanities Forum 2016-2017: Translation
dc.source.statuspublished
dc.subject.otherArts and Humanities
dc.titleThe Lebanese M Community: Identities Lost (or Found) in Translation
dc.typeDissertation/Thesis
digcom.contributor.authorKaram, Michael
digcom.date.embargo2017-01-01T00:00:00-08:00
digcom.identifieruhf_2017/5
digcom.identifier.contextkey14883733
digcom.identifier.submissionpathuhf_2017/5
digcom.typethesis
dspace.entity.typePublication
upenn.schoolDepartmentCenterUndergraduate Humanities Forum 2016-2017: Translation
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