Tuesday we have the privilege and pleasure of a visit from Hayan Charara.
There are a couple of things I'd like you to consider about his writing before we meet.
First, we have two genres of writing from Hayan's work: poetry and prose. Keeping in mind what Lisa Majaj said about the move from poetry to prose, how would you compare Hayan's approach to similar themes in "8 Houses from the Birthplace of Henry Ford" and "Becoming the Center of Mystery." Also, think of questions you might ask him regarding the advantages and pitfalls of these different genres.
Second, Hayan's writing (especially "Camp Dearborn," "Becoming the Center of Mystery" and "8 Houses from") is very localized in Detroit. In that sense, it is probably more "sociological" than anything else we've read so far--except perhaps The Book of Khalid, which alludes to the communal life of the Syrian quarter of Manhattan. Think of questions for Hayan regarding the social life of Arab immigrants in Detroit.
We also have the poems "The Pregnancy" and "Hamza Aweiwi, A Shoe Salesman in Hebron," which deal with the very personal and the very political respectively. What comparisons can you make to other writers we've studied to date?
Footnote: "Hamza Aweiwi" is about a cobbler in Hebron, a mostly Arab city in the West Bank that is also home to about 5,000 Jewish settlers and the Tomb of the Patriarchs. The poem seems to take place during the first Intifada in the late 1980s.
I think that the major difference in Hayan's poetry and his prose is the ability of prose to delve into more situational detail and anecdotes, while poetry maintains a more symbloic and mysterious element. I loved Hayan's "Becoming the Center of Mystery" mainly because of the anecdotes he included, my favorite one being the one about his reply to a girl in his class' questioning his non-halal eating. He humorously engaged in a sequence of arguements with her and concluded by "blessing his frankfurter" for her. I think the prose gives more leeway to describe the entire surroundings and background that led to a specific incident- for example the prose has many details regarding stories of neighbor's lives and historical background of feelings towards Saddam and other figures. Hayan's poetry is more symbolic and each word bears more heavily on the overall outcome. For example "Pregnancy" is a very personal poem, and given that it is a poem one does not get the background or other situational details regarding the incident that prose would have accounted for, but this is also what makes the poem so strong and direct. As Majaj alluded to, I believe that the real problem is not that poetry is not effective but that poetry is less circulated and widely read than prose, so Arab American writers like Hayan need to make sure and include prose in their overall collections in order to be heard.