The Punishment
Tahar Ben Jelloun author Linda Coverdale translator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Yale University Press
Published:23rd Jun '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An innocent man’s gripping personal account of terrifying confinement by the Moroccan military during the reign of a formidable twentieth-century despot
In 1967 Tahar Ben Jelloun, a peaceful young political protestor, was one of nearly a hundred other hapless men taken into punitive custody by the Moroccan army. It was a time of dangerous importance in Moroccan history, and they were treated with a chilling brutality that not all of them survived. This powerful portrait of the narrator’s traumatic experience, written with a memoirist’s immediacy, reveals both his helpless terror and his desperate hope to survive by drawing strength from his love of literature. Shaken to the core by his disillusionment with a brutal regime, unsure of surviving his ordeal, he stole some paper and began secretly to write, with the admittedly romantic idea of leaving some testament behind, a veiled denunciation of the evils of his time. His first poem was published after he was unexpectedly released, and his vocation was born.
“[Provides] insight into how fear, mistrust and division are the tools of power [and how] miraculously intact faith in human nature is stacked”—Katherine Waters, The Arts Desk
ISBN: 9780300243024
Dimensions: 197mm x 127mm x 17mm
Weight: unknown
168 pages