دراسة مقارنة للعولمة، التهميش والتابع في الأدب العربي والفرنسي (روایة الأزمان المظلمة وروایة غلوبالیا أنموذجًا)
Résumé
The novel The Dark Times by the Syrian writer, Talib Umran, and the novel Globalia by the French writer Jean-Christophe Ruffin spread after the events of September 11, 2001 AD, and the concepts of globalization, marginalization, and dependency were clearly evident in the two aforementioned novels. The comparative reading in this research was carried out within the post-colonial analysis of the two novels, with a focus on the concepts of globalization, marginality, and dependency. The results indicate that Umran and Ruffin were among the staunch opponents and critics of globalization. It is also noted in the novel Globalia and the novel The Dark Times that the world is divided into two parts; The first section is in the center, constitutes a civilized world, has all kinds of facilities, luxury and modern technologies, and the other section is on the periphery, living in poverty, deprivation and underdevelopment with all the negative attributes attributed to it such as brutality, barbarism and terrorism.
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