There are several issues I'd like you to start discussing now that we will pick up in class in regard to these short stories.
First of all, how would you evaluate these short stories in terms of what Hayan said in class about writing fiction/prose and what Lisa Majaj recommended in "New Directions"?
With "Arabic Lessons," what do you make of Uncle Joe and Cousin Nour as foils for each other? What, besides Arabic itself, is the lesson that the narrator Eli and his sister learn from Nour?
How do these two short stories portray adolescence? Since adolescence is a transient state of being, the time of becoming an adult, how do these characters, Eli and Lugman, undergo their transformations? How do their cultures (Arab and American, Maronite and Muslim) play similar or different roles in that transformation?
Think about your own (recent) adolescence. Share an experience like Eli's or Lugman's where becoming aware of those around you helped initiate or assist your transformation into an adult.
Again a common thread that appears through these stories, or so it seems to me, is a young person trying to find there identity amongst their culture and their surroundings. In this story Eli is bombarded with propaganda that his Uncle Joe spouts off constantly, but he does not really feel the need to speak up and rebel until he meets Nour. SHe is a kind quiet woman from Lebanon who tried to aid as best she could in difficult times, but she is attacked towards the end of the story by Uncle Joe in which he wildly criticizes her actions. Eli yells at Uncle Joe and runs out the door. Although he felt embarrassed and ashamed at what he had done I think this was a self defining moment that we haven't seen in some of the other stories and this really helped Eli in the end know what he stood for and know that he could stand up to someone.