White as a Symbol of Death and Eternity in Darwish’s and Lorca’s Poetry: A Comparative Study

Authors

  • Mohammad D. Ababneh the Hashemite University
  • Bakri H. Al-Azzam the Hashemite University
  • Baker Bani-Khair the Hashemite University
  • Abdullah M. Al-Amar University of Jordan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/jltr.1404.29

Keywords:

Lorca, Darwish, white, death, eternity

Abstract

This article investigates the symbolism of white color in the works of the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish and the Spanish Federico Garcia Lorca. The white color is exceptionally employed in their poetry, which is different from its normal symbolism in Arabic and Spanish cultures. In their poetry, the white color is used to symbolize a duality of opposites, death as an end to mortal life and eternity as an infinity phase of afterlife. This paradoxical use of the white color cannot be grasped by readers without considering the poetic context. This color is employed by the two poets to reflect their psychology, feelings, and emotions toward death and eternity. The color white symbolizes death in all forms; the self-death as shown in Darwish’s poem Mural, the death of the other as illustrated in Lament for the Death of a Bullfighter of Lorca, the divine death as in Lorca’s The Martyrdom of Saint Eulalia and the instant death of humans as in Remainder of a Life of Darwish. In addition, the white color is used to symbolize eternity as an afterlife phase. The two poets have exploited the white color to express their interrogation about man’s destiny after death being eternal or not.

Author Biographies

Mohammad D. Ababneh, the Hashemite University

Language Center

Bakri H. Al-Azzam, the Hashemite University

Department of English language and Literature, Faculty of Arts

Baker Bani-Khair, the Hashemite University

Department of English language and Literature, Faculty of Arts

Abdullah M. Al-Amar, University of Jordan

Department of English Language

References

Al-Tarawnih, J. (2009). Lorca’s influence in Mahmoud Darweesh’ Poetry. The Journal of Mu’tha: Humanities and Social Sciences Series, 24(5), 128-129.

Arango, M. (1995). Simbolo y simbologia en la obra de Federico Garcia Lorca [Symbol and symbology in Federico Garcia Lorca’s works]. Editorial Fundamentos.

Arvio, S. (2017). Poet in Spain. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

Azzam, A. (2016). Reflection on white eternity in the poetry of Mahmoud Darwish In Yitzhak, Y. M (ed.), Eternity: a history 1st ed., pp. 239-244). Oxford University Press.

Bly, R. (1997). Lorca & Jimenez: Selected Poems. Beacon Press.

Darwish, M. (2017). I Don’t Want This Poem to End: Early and Late Poems. Interlink Publishing Group Incorporated.

Darwish, M. (2009). New Works, Mural. Riad El-Rayyes Books and Publishing.

Darwish, M. (2007). The Remainder of Life, translated by Fady Joudeh. The New Yorker, 14(1). Condé Nast Traveler: USA.

Dwivedi, A. N. (1998). The poetry of T.S.ELIOT: A study in Images and symbols, Language Forum, 14(2), 18-29.

Gale, Cengage Learning. (2016). A study Guide for Federico Garcia Lorca’s “Lament for Ignacio Sanchez Mejias”. Gale Cengage Learnin.

Harvard, R, G. (1972). The Symbolic Ambivalence of “Green” in Garcia Lorca and Dylan Thomas. The Modern Language Review, 67(4), 810-819. URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3724499. Retrieved January, 29, 2023.

Hollis, C. (1965). Color in selected dramas of Federico Garcia Lorca. Kansas State University.

Issa, A., & Daragmeh, A. (2018). Aspects of Intertextuality in Mahmoud Darwish’s Poetry Collection “Do Not Apologize for what you have Done”. International Journal on Studies in English Language and Literature, 6(2), 23-33. http://dx.doi.org/10.20431/2347-3134.0602003. Retrieved January, 22, 2023

Lorca, F., G. (2007). Federico Garcia Lorca: Selected Poems translated by Martin Sorrell. Oxford University Press.

Lorca, F., G. (1953). Lament for the Death of a Bullfighter: And Other Poems. William Heinemann Limited.

Lorca, F., G. (1990). Lorca: Gypsy Ballads translated by Robert Harvard. Oxford University Press.

Lorca, F., G..(2005). The Selected Poems of Federico Garcia Lorca. New Directions Publishing.

Mattawa, K. (2014). Mahmoud Darwish: The Poet’s Art his Nation. Syracuse University Press.

McAuliffe, M. (2015). Through the colour lens. Lulu Enterprises.

Matinson, B., & Delong, M.. (2013). Color and design. A & C Black.

Oropesa, S., & Ihrie, M. (2011). An Encyclopedia: World Literature in Spanish. ABC-CLIO.

Parrot, L. (1965). A Poet Crazy About Color. In Duran, M. (ed.), Lorca: A Collection of Critical Essays (1st ed., 321-342). Prentice-Hall.

Rahaleh, A., & Amayrah, H. (2015). Poetic Colors in Mahmoud Darweish’s Las Divan “I Don’t Want this Poem to End”. Journal of Al-Najah University, 29(10), 1930-1960.

Ramazani, J. (1990). Yeats and the Poetry of Death: Elegy, Self-Elegy, and the Sublime. Yale University Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt211qw4f. Retrieved January, 25, 2023

Ritcher, D. (2014). Garcia Lorca et the edge of surrealism: The Aesthetics of Anguish. Bucknell University Press.

Tiwari, N. (2001). Imagery and symbolism in T. S. Eliot’s Poetry. Atlantic Publishers & Dist.

Downloads

Published

2023-07-01

Issue

Section

Articles