The Search of a ‘Room of One’s Own’: Gender and Space in Saudi Women’s Fiction
Abstract
Since the last decade of the twentieth century, Saudi women novelists have made tremendous
strides, entering the literary scene in ever increasing numbers and distinguishing themselves
with the richness and diversity of their novels’ themes and styles. This richness and diversity,
however, has not attracted appropriate scholarly attention; scholarship so far has tended to
underrepresent the literary contribution of women novelists. The current study aims at
bridging the gap in literary reception of the Saudi women’s novels by bringing to focus works
that have been given little attention inside and outside of Saudi Arabia. It will pay particular
attention to Saudi women novelists’ search for ‘a room of [their] own’ in the Saudi literary
scene since the late twentieth century and on how they have confronted and continue to
challenge the politics of space, gender and power. The time frame of the study covers the
period from the Gulf War of 1990, to the Arab Spring of 2010. This period marked a new era
for Saudi women novelists; it was one in which women writers started to voice in their works
their discontent with dominant gender hierarchies, spatial restraints and unequal power
relations. The rising feminist consciousness that had begun to emerge in Saudi women’s
novels by the end of the twentieth century is one of the main foci of this study. It is through
the lens of feminism that I will examine the intersections of the themes of gender, space and
power in the novels of Laila Al-Juhani’s Alfirdaus Alyabāb (Barren Paradise, 1998), Raja
Alem’s Khatam (Khatam, 2001) and Siter (Cover, 2005), Nourah Al-Ghamdi’s Wijhatu
Albūṣalah (Point of the Compass, 2002), Seba Al-Herz’ Alakhrūn, (The Others, 2006) and
Atheer Al-Nashmi’ Aḥbabtuka Ᾱktharu mima Yanbaghī (I Loved You More Than I Should,
2009). In my analysis of the selected novels I will pay specific attention to forms of
resistance, rebellion and empowerment in the authors’ engagement with such themes.