Najm and Sheikh Imam: the rise and decline of political song in Egypt.
Mostafa, Dalia Said
The article focuses on the artistic and innovative aspects that
were produced by the Egyptian political and musical duo, the colloquial poet Ahmed Fouad Najm and his friend Sheikh Imam Eissa, the composer and
singer. This duo constituted a very important artistic phenomenon that
developed and crystallized during the late 1960s and throughout the
1970s. The study discusses the progress of Najm/Imam's political
song during that period, its rise and radicalism as a result of its
association with the rise of the students' leftist movement and the
mass movement in general in Egypt, and the decline of this song at the
beginning of the 1980s until the final separation of the duo. Folk
motifs played a crucial role as a tool of artistic expression in
Najm/Imam's political song. The article also analyzes the poetic
devices, including the use of folk motifs, as well as the lyrical
innovation in Najm's poetry in a comparative context with other
colloquial poets such as Fouad Haddad, Salah Jahin, and Abdel Rahman
Al-Abnoudi, in addition to the innovations made by Sheikh Imam in the
political song.
Dalia Said Mostafa graduated from the Political Science Department
at the American University in Cairo. She received her M.A. in Gender
Studies from Exeter University, U.K. She worked in several development
organizations including UNICEF and Save the Children Foundation. At
present, she is pursuing her second Master's degree in the English
and Comparative Literature Department at the American University in
Cairo. She also works as a translator and researcher.