France's economy rebounds in Q1 '25    Germany's regional inflation ticks up in April    Kenya to cut budget deficit to 4.5%    Taiwan GDP surges on tech demand    Germany among EU's priciest labour markets – official data    UNFPA Egypt, Bayer sign agreement to promote reproductive health    Egypt to boost marine protection with new tech partnership    Eygpt's El-Sherbiny directs new cities to brace for adverse weather    Cabinet approves establishment of national medical tourism council to boost healthcare sector    CBE governor meets Beijing delegation to discuss economic, financial cooperation    Egypt's investment authority GAFI hosts forum with China to link business, innovation leaders    Egypt's Gypto Pharma, US Dawa Pharmaceuticals sign strategic alliance    Egypt's Foreign Minister calls new Somali counterpart, reaffirms support    "5,000 Years of Civilizational Dialogue" theme for Korea-Egypt 30th anniversary event    Egypt's Al-Mashat urges lower borrowing costs, more debt swaps at UN forum    Egypt's Al-Sisi, Angola's Lourenço discuss ties, African security in Cairo talks    Two new recycling projects launched in Egypt with EGP 1.7bn investment    Egypt pleads before ICJ over Israel's obligations in occupied Palestine    Egypt's ambassador to Palestine congratulates Al-Sheikh on new senior state role    Sudan conflict, bilateral ties dominate talks between Al-Sisi, Al-Burhan in Cairo    Cairo's Madinaty and Katameya Dunes Golf Courses set to host 2025 Pan Arab Golf Championship from May 7-10    Egypt's Ministry of Health launches trachoma elimination campaign in 7 governorates    EHA explores strategic partnership with Türkiye's Modest Group    Between Women Filmmakers' Caravan opens 5th round of Film Consultancy Programme for Arab filmmakers    Fourth Cairo Photo Week set for May, expanding across 14 Downtown locations    Egypt's PM follows up on Julius Nyerere dam project in Tanzania    Ancient military commander's tomb unearthed in Ismailia    Egypt's FM inspects Julius Nyerere Dam project in Tanzania    Egypt's FM praises ties with Tanzania    Egypt to host global celebration for Grand Egyptian Museum opening on July 3    Ancient Egyptian royal tomb unearthed in Sohag    Egypt hosts World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup in Somabay for 3rd consecutive year    Egyptian Minister praises Nile Basin consultations, voices GERD concerns    49th Hassan II Trophy and 28th Lalla Meryem Cup Officially Launched in Morocco    Paris Olympic gold '24 medals hit record value    A minute of silence for Egyptian sports    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



INTERVIEW: Sahar El-Mougy talks about her recent novel 'The Hill's Musk'
Published in Ahram Online on 22 - 07 - 2017

At one level it is the story of three women from different times and different worlds who cross paths against all odds and go through a taxing journey of self-searching that opens the door towards revision, for themselves as for others. On another level it is perhaps the story many women of different backgrounds have been living in pursuit of elusive self-fulfillment.
In all events, Sahar El-Mougy's recent novel Misk El-Tal (The Hill's Musk) is about giving a second chance to women whom she has known, in an emotional and literary sense, for close to 30 years, and to women she believes must have been there even though they never met.
Amina, the fictional submissive early 20th century Egyptian middle class mother of the trilogy of Naguib Mahfouz, Catherine Earnshaw, the indomitable protagonist of Emile Brontë's Wuthering Heights, and Mariam a clinically depressed psychiatrist who is always standing between two worlds of sobriety and bewilderedness, or maybe even between life and death, are the protagonists.
They are joined in the course of El-Mougy's novel with other women, some fictional and some not, and they stand face to face, or side by side with men, from Amina's misogynist husband Si ElSayyed and tender son Kamal to Cathy's Heathcliff and later Youssef or Mariam's Raouf.
“The novel is really about these women. I mean when I started writing I started more with the characters rather than with the plot. I said let us follow these characters and see where they go, how they would meet and what they would be doing,” El-Mougysaid in interview with Ahram Online.
El-Mougy was speaking not long after successful launch late June of her novel, which topped a widely welcomed thread of literary production that started with a short stories collection Sayedat El-Manam (The Lady of the Dreams), followed by Aleiha Sagheira (Little Deities), also a short stories collection, and then her first novel Daryah, followed by her most celebrated novel Noun (She) that came out in 2008 with publisher Dar El-Shorouk.
“It was an intense experience to follow these women beyond the worlds we knew them to be; to see what they would do if given another chance with life; to explore the unvisited elements of their characters and the choices they would have made should they come back to the world of today – especially if they do so together and in the company of women of today's world,” El-Mougy said.
“It started as a playful take on fiction but it developed into an intense labour as the novel was being constructed of layers over layers and as the characters wondered about many worlds liberated from time and space as if endowed with the bliss of eternity almost,” El-Mougy added.
El-Mougy "saw" Cathy with her first encounter with Brontë's Wuthering Heights at school. She added, “I guess I developed an early affinity to this character who might not have necessarily been so inherently strong but who was always willing to try.”
It was later, in her twenties as she ventured from one Mahfouz volume to the other, that she read of Amina. As intended by the author of the trilogy, she saw her as many others saw her – and maybe as Mahfouz himself put her across – a submissive wife and loving mother.
In a sense, through her early youth, El-Mougy herself was both Cathy and Amina. She conformed through adulthood and early marriage. But she was willing to explore and to push the boundaries of what could have led to deep depression.
In reality, for El-Mougy, writing was an unintentional exercise of psychotherapy. It helped this English literature professor, who has forever been immersed in endless volumes of fiction and poetry, to assemble the many pieces of the world around her as of herself.
Having painstakingly grown out of her own submissiveness, El-Mougy has been on the path of challenging the norms women are expected to comply with.
This is a thread that runs uninterrupted in all her works, and particularly so in her Misk Al-Tal.
El-Mougy's Amina is very different from that of Mahfouz. “Or at least we get to see her through a different lens, because after all Mahfouz did not have – due the norms of the time and to his way of living – a close up on the lives of housewives, as opposed to his easy access to the women of the night in early 20th century middle class Cairo. And this is why in his trilogy the women who actually have a determining role in the path of events are essentially those coming from the corners of entertainment saloons frequented by his main male protagonist, Si El-Sayyed,” she argued.
But when Amina comes to the world of El-Mougy she is not coming from the male dominated house of her aggressive and self-loving husband. She is coming to 21st century Cairo from the house of the Sirens where she has been along with Cathy Aernshaw, Virginia Woolf, Lady Macbeth and Laila from Latifa El-Zayyat's novel The Open Door.
El-Mougy's women in Misk Al-Tal have truly capturing voices, even in the case of Mariam, who is more living in her trauma and nightmares than in the world around her. In the hands of El-Mougy, Amina is the one taking the lead and making advances.
“I just wanted to challenge this collective consciousness about the role of women as underlined in the much celebrated archetype of Amina and Si El-Sayyed,” El-Mougy said.
Perhaps, El-Mougy said, Amina was not meant by Mahfouz to be as submissive as she was made to be in the cinema production of the trilogy directed by Hassan Imam. “She came across as a more influencing character in a drama production where she was seen to have a role in providing refuge for the young men who were challenging the British occupation of Egypt – friends of her son Fahmy who died in the demonstrations of 1919."
In El-Mougy's novel, Cathy is also making a transformation, although not as strong as the one Amina made and maybe even not as strong as the one Mariam made when she actually managed to hang on to life rather than to slip towards death. Cathy does manage to slowly find her path away from her past life.
“I think I could say that what I was following when I was writing Misk Al-Tal were the moments of transformation as they came along with the characters,” El-Mougy said.
"Moments of transformation" are essential to the works of El-Mougy as are deep thoughts on feminism that cannot be missed in any of her works, particularly in Darya and Misk Al-Tal.
El-Mougy settled on “The Hill's Musk” as a translation of her perplexing title. Musk is a strong and sweet odor that is hard to ignore, just as the charm of the Sirens. It was there in the Siren's house, in that unknown sphere of time and space, and it was there in the house where Amina, Cathy and Mariam lived together in 20th century crowded Cairo.
“The smell of musk kept coming through and the hill is where the Sirens house was,” El-Mougy said.
From the "Sirenum" that hangs somewhere in the world of eternity come the women of El-Mougy's Misk Al-Tal. They search for serenity, one ultimately elusive.


Clic here to read the story from its source.