Tükendi
Gelince Haber VerIn an era marked by endless conflict, media saturation, and cultural polarization, stories matter more than ever.
A Tinted View examines two defining post-9/11 novels, John Updike`s Terrorist and Amy Waldman`s The Submission, reading them not as isolated responses to trauma but as cultural texts shaped by enduring ideas about Islam, the West, and difference. Though radically different in style and intention, both novels expose how Neo-Orientalist assumptions continue to surface, sometimes loudly, sometimes through the language of tolerance and reason.
By placing these novels in conversation, the book traces how fear is articulated, how empathy is carefully delimited, and how belonging is granted or withheld. It reveals how fiction can gesture toward understanding while remaining anchored to inherited structures of power.
Written with clarity and restraint, A Tinted View invites readers to look again at post-9/11 literature and to consider not only what these narratives reveal, but also what they leave unsaid.