Turkey in elif shafak's (three daughters of eve)

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Turkey In Eilf Shafak's "Three Daughters of Eve" By: Bayan M. AL-Momani

Nazperi Nalbantoglu- Peri the heroine of Elif Shafak's "Three daughters of Eve," rings a bell in some aspects to Fanny Price Jane Austin's "Mansfield Park", yet this paper is not about the differences between the two characters, it is about Peri in specific and fanny will help to shed some light despite the differences in time, place and events. Fanny Price and Peri are two different poles. Three Daughters of Eve is about bringing rivals together, those with totally different perspective of each other. So, why not use some help from a rival strong woman writer, Jane Austin, those two writers of two different places know how to make a stand and leave their mark. Nazperi or Peri is presented at the beginning of "Three daughters of Eve" as a grown-up who "Time, like any skillful tailor, had seamlessly stitched together the two fabrics that sheathed Peri's life: what people thought of her and what she thought of herself." Fanny Price, is a little girl "Afraid of everybody, ashamed of herself, and longing for the home she had left, she know not how to look up, and could scarcely speak to be heard, or without crying." Is there any resemblance between the two? Well, as a reader when you read any book you will say I read this somewhere and you as an observer, will come up with your own view, judgement and like time stitch what you read to what you know. Peri learned to listen and account for every single sound. She as a little girl could feel the wall between Selma and Mansur, her mother and father, rising higher every passing year, and that has formed and shaped her personality. She never questioned her parents' relationship; she just observed and filled her mind with questions because she thought she had the answers and that turned her into indecisive reluctant and simply lost person. Peri was more like the "Mute Poet" the name of the street she lived in when she was little, the poet was a "renowned Ottoman poet who resided in the area, swore not to open his mouth again until he was suitably rewarded by the sultan." Peri's main dilemma is religion, she is torn between her mother and father, her father is devoted to Ataturk "if it weren't for him, we'd be like Iran." Peri's house is a mirror to see Turkey in it, what Turkey had gone through and what it is dealing with at the present time. Selma, her mother, had joined a religious circle led by a preacher famous for the eloquence of his sermons and the rigidity of his views. Her mother changed visibly. Turkey is divided into zones "the realm of submission and the 1


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