The World’s Tsunami: Covid-19 and the Relief Aid of Literature

Document Type : Original Article

Author

English Department, Faculty of Education, Alexandria University

Abstract

This paper discusses the shocking and deadly effect caused by the eruption of Covid- 19, which can be regarded as a tsunami- like pandemic. It focuses on the therapeutic effect of literature and its role as a crisis-relief -aid through examining four texts of different genres; two of which chronicle the occurrence of an actual pestilence, Cholera, in Egypt, and the other two imagine the outbreak of a deadly pandemic. All texts appeal to our Covid -19 situation and prove the lasting power and impact of literature, regardless of time and place. The first two texts, written in Arabic, are The Days (originally published in 1929), the autobiography of the Egyptian writer Taha Hussein (1889-1973), and the second is “Cholera” (1947), a poem by the Iraqi poet Nazek al- Malaika (1923-2003). The third is TheScarlet Plague (1912), a post-apocalyptic novel written by Jack London (1876-1916). The last one is About Birds We Talk (2010), a novel by Ahmed Khaled Tawfiq (1962-2018).

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