Mummy Awaken
Mummy Awaken
Mummy Awaken
SEMESTER 7TH
• Naguib Mahfouz
• Film writer
• Naguib Mahfouz was an Egyptian writer who won the
1988 Nobel Prize for Literature. He is regarded as one of
the first contemporary writers of Arabic literature, along
with Tawfiq el-Hakim, to explore themes of existentialism.
• Born: December 11, 1911, Cairo, Egypt
• Died: August 30, 2006, Cairo, Egypt
• Movies: The Alley of Miracles, Bidaya wa Nihaya, more
• Awards: Nobel Prize in Literature
• Children: Fatima Mahfouz, Umm Kulthoum Mahfouz
Existentialism
Existentialism is a form of philosophical inquiry
that explores the issue of human existence.
Existentialist philosophers explore questions
related to the meaning, purpose, and value of
human existence. Common concepts in
existentialist thought include existential crisis,
dread, and anxiety in the face of an absurd
world as well as authenticity, courage, and
virtue.
NAGUIB MAHFOUZ
1911-2006
The Mummy Awakens: Introduction
The story brings before us the poor condition of the poor Egyptians. The
Mummy comes alive and kills all the rich and demolishes their buildings for
not giving their due right to the poor Egyptians. The story has true to life
characters and story line. “The Mummy Awakens” has all the trappings of a
mummy story, complete with the obligatory disclaimer that prefaces many
tales of the supernatural:
“I am deeply embarrassed to tell this tale–for some of its events violate the laws
of reason and of nature altogether. If this were merely fiction, then it would not
cause me to feel such embarrassment. Yet it happened in the realm of reality….”
It isn’t just any mummy who wakes, it is General Hur, likely based on the last
18th Dynasty ruler Horemheb, as Stock notes. Other pharaohs have been
brought to life in fiction, but Hur isn’t like the lumbering, enigmatic but
ultimately benevolent Khufu in Jane Loudon’s The Mummy, or the urbane
revivified royalty hobnobbing late one night in the Cairo Museum in H. Rider
Haggard’s “Smith and the Pharaohs. General Hur is not a happy camper.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
MAHMUD PASHA: Around whom the whole
story revolves, lives in country mansion upper
Egypt. He is a Frenchman in his heart and soul.
The narrator calls him fervent admirer of culture
and language. He is poet and composed
romantic poetry. He is the greatest Francophile
in the middle East. Turks by origin, Egypt by
nationality and French by taste and avocation.
DARYEN: A friend of Pasha, professor of
Egyptology at Fu’ad the First University in Cairo.
MAJOR CHARACTERS
Mr. SAROT: Director of the Higher College for Fine
Arts.
Dr. PIERRE: The specialist of mental disorder.
JADULLAH: Sheikh Jadullah local personage in the
story. He is a noble and old fellow. He has his own
theological researches about the golden past of Egypt
and humane by heart. He gives an interesting proposal
for digging in the Pasha's Garden and Professor Dayren
tells that it is he who incited him to digging the valley
of the King to discover the Prized Qumma’s Tomb.
FARMER: Who is beaten by Pasha’s servant on
snatching bread from the mouth of his dog.
GENERAL HUR
General Hur has been the key figure of 15k Dynasty. His
mummy lies asleep in the secret vault lying below the
ground of Pasha’s garden. It is through Jadullah’s
occult that his coffin is revealed. The mummy rises up
from the coffin and addresses them in an astonishing
manners. The Mummy awaken and his face resemble
local Egyptian Peasant who is caught up for stealing
food of the Pasha’s dog. He admonishes Pasha in harsh
manners as:
“ Don’t not you recognize me, slave”? Aren’t you
content to plunder my descendent? Why you ‘ve come
to plunder my grave as well? Speak, slave!”
THEMES
MADNESS
SLAVERY AND POVERTY
HATE AND LOVE
MAN AND ANIMAL
CIVILITY AND UNCIVILITY.
INJUSTICE
EXISTENTIALISM
POLITICAL AND SOCIAL LIFE.
LOYALITY
ABSOLUTISM
MAJOR WORK