Researcher Image
أزهار نوري فجر - Azhar Noori Fejer
PhD - professor
College of Education Ibn Rushd for Human Sciences , Department of English Language
[email protected]
Summary

Azhar Noori Fejer, a professor in in the University of Baghdad. She is specialised in English literature/ Novel and literary theories. I taught in the English department for 30 years during which I taught different literary courses for undergraduate students. I teach the Riseof the English novel and Modern English novel courses for MA students.

Qualifications
  • Bachelor's Degree from the Unibersity of Baghdad in 1985
  • MA Degree from the University of Baghdad in 1990
  • PhD Degree from UPM in 2015
Responsibility

An Instructor in the department of English since 1993 A coordinato 2023-2011 A Head of the English department 2018-2023

Awards and Memberships

a member in a lot of committes in the Minestery of HIger Education, University of Baghdad, The College of Education Ibn Rushid in addittion to the membership in many Discussion Committes inside and Abroad.

Research Interests

English Novel, World Literature, Fiminist Studie, Cultural Studies, and Postcolonial Studies

Academic Area

English Language/ English Literature/ Novel

Teaching

I teach Novel for fourth year student

Supervision

I superviced 32 master

Publication Date
Tue Jan 01 2019
Journal Name
The International Journal Of Literary Humanities
The Stereotypical Representation of Black Women in Caryl Phillips’ "Cambridge"
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Scopus (1)
Scopus Crossref
Publication Date
Tue Jul 01 2014
Journal Name
Sage Open
Individual Mobility and the Sense of “Deadlock”
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Individual mobility is an outcome of the rapid changes in life; it is revealed in particular literary works within the end of the 19th century. Mobility is clearer in modern time as the individual has become physically freer in his movement. But the individual’s freedom is often conditioned by restrictions. Usually, change stimulates individuals to obtain new structure of feeling; the individual mocks or rages against institutions, or he would comply, suffering rapid personal deterioration as he faces effective stability or institutions. There is a continuous sense of “deadlock.” Sylvia Plath’s novel reflects the depression of an intellectual young woman who fails to find her right path muddled by an inconsistent, confusing

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Scopus Crossref
Publication Date
Thu Jan 02 2014
Journal Name
Sino Us
“Actual Experience”: Correcting Misconceptions Through Analyzing Harriet Wilson’s Our Nig
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African-American writers during the 19th century wrote in the shadow of the prominent romance, sentimental, and domestic fiction. Harriet Wilson’s Our Nig (1859) reflects an “alternative social character”, for the female protagonist suffers racism in the free North, because she is a mulatto child. Through depicting the life of free blacks, who supposedly lives a better life than Southern slaves, Wilson exposes how she has actually lived and sensed life in antebellum America. According to Raymond Williams (2011), there are two kinds of literary writings. The first represents the general tendency of the age, and he calls it “dominant social character”; representing the majority content of both the public writing and speaking. But, a

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Publication Date
Thu Dec 19 2024
Journal Name
Al-adab Journal
Oppositional Values Stimulated by ‘Structure of Feeling’: Analysing Hester’s Character in Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter
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Publication Date
Tue Aug 02 2016
Journal Name
European Academic Research
‘Resymbolization’ of a Text; a Relatively Different Perspective of Graham Greene’s The Quiet American
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The Quiet American could be considered as one of Graham Greene’s most distinguished books; it is an epochal novel written during the phase of the cold war between the United States and the Soviet Union. The novel deals with the interference of the United States in Vietnam ten years before Vietnam’s war. The role the Americans played in arousing an inner political crisis in the country previous to her military invention. The book reflects that this action was not out of American government concern about Vietnamese people themselves but merely a political foreign affair. They wanted to stop communism from spreading widely and reducing its role in the East. This paper attempts to analyse the novel concentrating on the message Greene intend

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Publication Date
Mon Aug 02 2021
Journal Name
Al Ustath
Normalizing Society in George Lamming’s In the Castle of My Skin
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This study examines the effect of colonialism on Caribbean society during the colonial period. Through normalization, the British colonial power diminished Caribbean identity and planted a new hybrid identity. Discipline institutions and surveillance techniques had a vital role in normalizing Caribbean society. Caribbean authors have adopted this notion of normalization to represent the reality of colonialism and its consequences. George Lamming, one of the Caribbean political activist and influential novelist in his novel In the Castle of My Skin (1953), reflects normalization as theorized by Michael Foucault. Lamming depicts the story of villagers and their life under colonial domination. Through discipline institution, like school, colo

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Publication Date
Wed Jun 03 2015
Journal Name
Al-ustath
Witchcraft and Women’s Spaces; A cultural Materialism Study of John Updike’s The Witches of Eastwick
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Witch stories are part of American popular culture, and this culture is extremely influenced by a continuing reliance on its past. The modern obsession of Americans with witches, whether real or metaphorical, is related to politics especially when it came to issues of gender politics. This article exposes a modern image of the female character seen from a male author point of view. John Updike, influenced by the changes that happened to women within second wave of feminism, attempted to write The Witches of Eastwick (1984). Actually, he presented women who did have a sort of careers. His witches are professional active and dynamic. What do witches stand for in American Culture? Why did Updike choose to write

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Publication Date
Wed Jan 02 2019
Journal Name
International Journal Of Research In Social Sciences And Humanities
MUSLIM AMERICANS DELIMMA POST 9/11 IN LAILA HALABY’S ONCE IN A PROMISED LAND
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September 11th attacks held the biggest tragedy in American history. It was a day of grief, and it proved that America was not immune to attacks and threat. Afterwards life has changed not only for the American Muslims but also American Christians and Jews and to people from other religions. The cruelty of that day has left its shed particularly on the Muslims’ life in America who in reality had nothing to do with the attacks. Arab American Muslim writer Laila Halaby’s novel, Once in a Promised Land, intensely displays the problems that Arab Muslims went through after September 11th attacks. This paper discusses this issue through analysing Halaby’s novel, where she deals with the issues such as discrimination, stereotype, and prejudi

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Publication Date
Sun Aug 05 2018
Journal Name
Al Ustath
Healing Powers in Gloria Naylor's Mama Day
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This paper examines Gloria Naylor's Mama Day (1988) that shows the mixing of African and American culture. Afro-American authors reject the Eurocentric hypothesis that slavery had ended the Afro-American cultural engagement in Africa. African Americans represent an essential fabric of American society, sharing many traditions, habits, and traits with the American society. Yet, at the same time, Naylor portrays Afro-American individuals in Mama Day as a separate unit with a unique and rich culture. These mannerisms expose a kind of resistance, appreciation to her African identity, history, and roots. A tale of a conjure woman located in Willow Springs' mythical isle, Mama Day, highlights the mystical, storytelling, and folkloristic customs.

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Publication Date
Wed Oct 02 2019
Journal Name
Al Anbar
Precarity and Gender Performativity in Morrison’s Home
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Precarity means the lack of social and economic networks; a considerable exposure to danger and harm. Minority groups are precariat for they lack rights and full citizenship. Precarity is related, states Judith Butler, with the individual’s performativity, and his ability to perform his gender role. Toni Morrison continually goes to past to retell the history of African Americans. The issues of race, gender and national identity are recurrent in her work. Reading her book Home (2012) evokes the idea of precarity and performativity since the two main characters, Frank and Cee are precarious characters that fail to perform their gender role properly, and eventually are exposed to hazard and harm. This research displays how African American

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Publication Date
Wed Oct 02 2019
Journal Name
Alanbar Journal
Precarity and Gender Performitivity in Morrison’s Home
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Precarity means the lack of social and economic networks; a considerable exposure to danger and harm. Minority groups are precariat for they lack rights and full citizenship. Precarity is related, states Judith Butler, with the individual’s performativity, and his ability to perform his gender role. Toni Morrison continually goes to past to retell the history of African Americans. The issues of race, gender and national identity are recurrent in her work. Reading her book Home (2012) evokes the idea of precarity and performativity since the two main characters, Frank and Cee are precarious characters that fail to perform their gender role properly, and eventually are exposed to hazard and harm. This research displays how African American

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Publication Date
Sat Jun 05 2021
Journal Name
Al Ustath
he Treatment of 9/11 Trauma in Don DeLillo'sFalling Man (2007)
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The danger of the attacks of 9/11 in America, mainly on the WorldTrade Center at Ground Zero, had brought America into a position thatnever seen before. People who lived there faced a historical calamity marked a turning point in history and a beginning of a new era. Thepaper examines the behavior of traumatized individuals in relation tosociety that trauma involves both. The socio cultural approach willachieve the goal. It studied the responses of the individuals to the event and the motives behind these reactions. Don DeLillo, a member of apost 9/11 group of writers, an American novelist of Italian origin, through his portrayal of the characters, tries to present a vivid image t

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