The Phnom Penh Post

Coronaviru­s will be an inspiratio­n for writers, says Lebanese novelist

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LEBANESE novelist Jabbour Douaihy says the coronaviru­s pandemic, like past epidemics and wars, will feed the imaginatio­n of novelists.

“Great authors wrote about previous pandemics and used them a s s y mbols,” s a i d Douaihy, who has twice been shortliste­d for the prestigiou­s Internatio­nal Prize for Arabic Fiction (IPAF).

He said the novel coronaviru­s “will become part of the general literary scene and the imaginatio­n of humanity, just like wars, the plague . . . and other pandemics in history”.

While the virus will change human behaviour, he does not expect it to completely overturn our way of life.

The 71-year-old, with a doctorate in comparativ­e literature from the Sorbonne, is waiting out Lebanon’s coronaviru­s lockdown in the town of Ehden, in the hills above the northern city of Tripoli.

‘Scars on the mind’

Douaihy compared the coronaviru­s to his experience of Lebanon’s 1975-1990 ci vi l war.

He said: “I don’t think the Lebanese war was written about until it was over and done with, meaning it could be used in literature.”

He said he was avoiding writing about this period for the time being. “Writing novels takes time – we can’t write about events that are still taking place.”

But in time, he added, the coronaviru­s pandemic will begin to inspire literature.

He cited French-Romanian playwright Eugene Ionesco’s play Rhinoceros, which uses the story of a fictional pandemic to criticise political regimes.

Albert Camus used his 1947 novel The Plague, set in the Algerian city of Oran, to summarise his philosophy on futility, Douaihy added.

The coronaviru­s pandemic “will leave scars and marks on the mind, on the way we think and particular­ly on the imaginatio­n”, he said.

‘Environmen­tal movement’

Douaihy, whose novel June Rain was shortliste­d in 2008 for the inaugural IPAF, often known as the Arab Booker Prize, made the list again four years later with The Vagrant.

He said he had not been “bothered” by Lebanon’s strict coronaviru­s lockdown measures, despite finding it hard at first to adjust and to focus on reading and writing.

Douaihy said he did not expect fundamenta­l changes in the worlds of politics, society and economics as the pandemic recedes.

“It’s always said that things will be different after the current crisis, but I’m not sure that human behaviour will change drasticall­y.

“I tend towards the view that humanity will overcome this pandemic and carry on destroying the environmen­t – although I expect to see some kind of ecological movement emerge.

“Concern for the environmen­t will grow,” he said. “It will become clear that we need to return to correct, organic agricultur­e.”

Douaihy expects a shift to self-sufficienc­y and a return to national economies.

Reliance on distance learning and remote education could also grow, affecting global communicat­ion and globalisat­ion.

But “the trend of excessive consumptio­n is here to stay [ a nd] i ndi v i duali s m may become stronger”, he said.

The author compared the closure of national borders over the coronaviru­s to people retreating to their homes.

He said: “We go back to our

[The pandemic] will leave scars and marks on the mind, on the way we think and particular­ly on the imaginatio­n

homes as if they are a refuge from the virus. States have done the same, trying to shut themselves in.

“This foresees a retreat from principles the world had tried to promote, such as freedom of movement.”

But while the coronaviru­s had put the brakes on transnatio­nal movement, it was “too early to draw conclusion­s from that”.

And although the Arab world has not been hit as hard by the virus as Europe and the US, the region still faces its own crises, he said.

Despite the pandemic, “we still face our normal conflicts, as if nothing had happened”.

 ?? AFP ?? Novelist Jabbour Douaihy thinks the virus will push environmen­tal issues to the forefront, and may spur a ‘return to correct, organic agricultur­e’.
AFP Novelist Jabbour Douaihy thinks the virus will push environmen­tal issues to the forefront, and may spur a ‘return to correct, organic agricultur­e’.

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