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park with his body. Eamonn, who has been sent to a family friend's home in
Normandy, returns to the public eye with the release of a video denouncing his father for preventing Aneeka from burying her brother in the UK. He then departs Normandy to join her, still keeping a vigil with her brother's body in Karachi. In London, reports of terrorist "chatter" sends Karamat Lone and his wife and daughter in a safe room. They soon receive the all clear, informed the chatter had been a hoax, but as they depart the safe room, they learn this is mistaken: there was a threat, but for Eamonn. Attacked as he arrived in the Karachi park in search of Aneeka, two men strap Eamonn into a belt loaded with explosives. The gathered crowds flee as Eamonn struggles in vain to free himself and he screams at Aneeka to run away, but she runs toward him. For a final few seconds, they embrace.
321:. He receives a panicked call from his sisters, who know he has missed his flight and are being interrogated by police in London, cementing Parvaiz's regret for his decision, but he is trapped. He works for the media wing of ISIS until his twin calls a few months later saying she is making a plan to help him escape, promising a new passport for him. A trip to Istanbul with Farooq to collect new recruits and audiovisual equipment provides Parvaiz an opportunity to meet Aneeka and make his escape. But Aneeka is stopped at the airport in London and, as Farooq has discovered Parvaiz has tried to escape and is now determined to find and kill him, Parvaiz decides to put himself at the mercy of the British consulate, though his father had died in the custody of British allies. But the point is moot: Parvaiz is killed in a drive-by shooting as he approaches the building.
263:, prompting Eamonn to discover Isma both knows and sharply dislikes his father. Offended, Eamonn abruptly leaves. Isma is very hurt but Hira advises her to open up to Eamonn, as Isma clearly has feelings for him. Isma is initially reluctant but in the meantime she receives a distraught call from Aneeka, who demands to know why Isma had informed on Parvaiz to the police. Aneeka says that it is Isma's fault Parvaiz cannot return to the UK. She cuts off contact with Isma, who is devastated and texts Eamonn asking to meet. She greets him without her hijab for the first time and tells him the story of her father, who was absent much of her life (and the entire lives of her young siblings), fighting as a jihadi in various conflicts. Her father was captured and held at
256:, where she sees both her younger siblings' names appear briefly each day. Isma is in contact with Aneeka, but Aneeka's twin brother Parvaiz is a source of conflict between them. At the cafe one morning, Isma spots a young man, Eamonn Lone, the son of British politician Karamat Lone, for whom Isma has a fierce dislike. Nevertheless, she strikes up a friendship with 24-year-old Eamonn, not acknowledging she is aware of his father, and soon Eamonn is joining her daily at the cafe. He is in Massachusetts staying with his white, American mother's relatives and living off family money while taking a year off from work, contrasting sharply with Isma's own modest circumstances; she worked at a drycleaner to support her younger siblings when they were orphaned.
300:, she invites herself to his apartment and the two of them begin a romantic relationship. Eamonn finds himself falling for Aneeka and though they grow close, Aneeka insists on secrecy around their relationship, not even giving Eamonn her phone number; she tells him this is a sexual fantasy but he does overhear her once on a furtive phone call saying, “I’m making sure of things here.” The secrecy stresses their relationship but they reconcile and grow closer, with Eamonn giving her a set of keys to his apartment and ultimately proposing to her. Eventually, Aneeka confesses that her brother—who she had previously described vaguely as traveling to see the world—has in fact gone to Syria to join
196:''When I read the play—which has at its center two sisters who respond differently to the legal repercussions of their brother's act of treason—I knew immediately that I wanted to connect it to a story that was very much in the news at the time, that of young British Muslims and their relationship with the British state...When you write a novel you don't think about subjects as being sensitive or not—you just think of them as being interesting and complex, and you wonder how to tell them in a story that's about a group of characters.''
304:. Aneeka says he wants to come home but that as Home Secretary, Eamonn's father has made it very difficult. Eamonn realizes Aneeka is using him to seek assistance for her brother and is furious. However, Aneeka insists that she has fallen for him and the two make up. Eamonn goes to talk to his father about Parvaiz. But Karamat Lone absolutely refuses to help and forbids Eamonn from any further contact with Aneeka.
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Pakistan, but skips his connecting flight in
Istanbul and instead travels with Farooq to the Syrian border to join ISIS. While the house they arrive at is beautiful, the rest of Farooq's promises immediately prove empty—Parvaiz's passport is confiscated on arrival and Farooq departs for the battlefront without helping him locate anyone who knew his father, leaving Parvaiz behind in
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to learn the details of his fate—they don't know where or even if he was buried—but the MP had brusquely turned them away, declaring the family was better off without him. This MP was
Karamat Lone, Eamonn's father. Eamonn is pained to learn this, though he tries to defend his father. They reconcile,
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Parvaiz, the UK refuses to repatriate his body and sends it to relatives in
Pakistan instead. Karamat's denunciations of the Pasha family draw praise in Parliament but Aneeka is outraged and travels to Pakistan to insist that her brother be returned to the UK for burial, setting up camp in a public
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A media frenzy around the
Istanbul shooting of the British-born jihadi ensues. Karamat Lone, who has ordered an investigation, publicly discloses that Parvaiz's sister, Aneeka, had seduced his own son in an (unsuccessful) attempt to win special consideration for her terrorist brother. Additionally,
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in Syria has remedied all this, showing him photos of his own time there. With Farooq's assurances that
Parvaiz would be allowed to leave at any time if he wished, and also that Farooq would introduce him to others who had fought with Parvaiz's father, Parvaiz makes arrangements to visit family in
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The concerns of the novel include the identity and security of
Muslims in Britain. It speaks of the troubles of Muslims as they struggle to maintain a unique cultural identity while defending their ''Britishness'' and loyalty to the state against political and social activists who wish to alienate
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Moving back in time to just prior to Isma's departure, Parvaiz is working at a grocery and pursuing his interest in sound engineering; while a scholarship allows Aneeka to attend university, he cannot afford tuition. The twins spend more and more time apart, and
Parvaiz encounters Farooq, whose
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Karamat Lone, who has built his political career on his rejection of his own Muslim background. The effort to bring
Parvaiz home fails when he is shot to death trying to escape ISIS, then Eamonn and Aneeka, trying to return Parvaiz's body to the UK over the objections of Karamat Lone, die in a
424:, Katharine Weber said the novel "blazes with the kind of annihilating devastation that transcends grief." Garner said the novel "may seem to wobble" in middle portions, "lurching shifts of tone as it moves between matters of the heart and of state," but strongly encouraged readers to stick
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partially, though Isma is wounded when he refers to his relationship to her as like a "brother" and she makes an excuse not to see him again before he ends his sojourn in the U.S. and returns to London. But seeing photographs of her siblings as well as a pack of
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father had fought in Bosnia with
Parvaiz's father. Farooq encourages Parvaiz to learn about what happened to his father at Bagram; he is also sharply critical of the matriarchal family in which Parvaiz grew up, as well as of the British
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In regards to Karamat Lone, Shamsie stated that initially she felt the concept of a Briton of Pakistani descent becoming a Conservative Party Home Affairs Minister as something not plausible, but reconsidered when she saw the rise of
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woman who has been raising her younger, twin siblings since their mother's death when the twins were 12, their reaching adulthood (now 19) has allowed Isma to pursue her long-deferred graduate studies, doing so in
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she has wrapped to send to her aunt, he insists on carrying the candy back to mail for her in London. When he leaves, Isma breaks down in tears, heartbroken that he does not reciprocate her romantic interest.
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unfolding among British Muslims. The novel follows the Pasha family: twin siblings Aneeka and Parvaiz and their older sister Isma, who has raised them in the years since the death of their mother; their
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pulls off a fine balancing act: it is a powerful exploration of the clash between society, family and faith in the modern world, while tipping its hat to the same dilemma in the ancient one." In
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296:—the neighborhood where his own father's family had lived—to deliver the M&M's in person. He encounters Aneeka, who is very cold to Eamonn, though when they meet a little while later on the
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in Syria. He soon decides he has made a serious mistake and his twin sister attempts to help him return to Britain, in part through her romantic relationship with Eamonn Lone, son of British
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183:. Shamsie was interested in the project and quickly decided on what the story she would tell, though she preferred to pursue it as a novel rather than a play.
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558:"'When ultra-nationalism is on the rise, it divides citizens into those whom the state should be proud of, and everyone else'"
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363:. The novel is also set in five locations: London; Amherst, Massachusetts; Istanbul; Raqqa, Syria; and Karachi, Pakistan.
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Akin to a play's five acts, the book is in five sections, each focusing on a different character's point of view, told in
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argued the novel "hews to themes: civil disobedience, fidelity and the law, especially as regards burial rights."
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father, whom the twins never knew, is also dead. Parvaiz attempts to follow in his father's footsteps by joining
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1075:"British Pakistani author Kamila Shamsie wins UK's most prestigious literary award for women"
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where she settles into a routine, spending mornings in a cafe working and keeping an eye on
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measures that affect Parvaiz's life as well. He persuades Parvaiz that the ISIS
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414:, Natalie Haynes said, "Shamsie’s prose is, as always, elegant and evocative.
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772:"Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie review: what if you love an enemy of the state?"
588:"Interview: Kamila Shamsie talks about 'Home Fire', minorities and terrorism"
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882:"Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie review – a contemporary reworking of Sophocles"
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1040:"Women's Prize for Fiction: Kamila Shamsie wins 2018 award for Home Fire"
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475:"Kamila Shamsie wins Women's prize for fiction for 'story of our times'"
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911:"In 'Home Fire,' Lives Touched by Immigration, Jihad and Family Love"
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The reveal kickstarts the BBC's year-long celebration of literature.
1057:"Women's Prize for Fiction 2018: Kamila Shamsie wins with Home Fire"
527:"Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie: provocative work from a brave author"
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and shortlisted for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature 2018.
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713:"True story: Kamila Shamsie on predicting the rise of Sajid Javid"
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275:. After his death, Isma's family had sought help from the local
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622:"What is a sister's responsibility to her 'terrorist' brother?"
501:"Kamila Shamsie's 'Home Fire' wins Women's Prize for Fiction"
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The novel received widely favorable reviews. According to
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The novel begins with Isma Pasha detained in security at
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Back in London, Eamonn treks to Isma's aunt's house in
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The 288-page novel was published on 15 August 2017, by
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208:: "The ones we love ... are enemies of the state."
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1092:"100 'most inspiring' novels revealed by BBC Arts"
806:"Sound and Fury : Kamila Shamsie's Home Fire"
325:as Karamat Lone's policies as Home Secretary had
1734:Modern adaptations of Antigone (Sophocles play)
259:Meanwhile in Britain, Eamonn's father is made
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848:"'The ones we love are enemies of the state'"
741:"'The ones we love are enemies of the state'"
676:; Producer: Mary Ward-Lowery (1 April 2019).
169:at the suggestion of London theatre director
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672:Abridger: Sara Davies; Readers: Lisa Zahra,
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1019:"Announcing the 2018 Women’s Prize winner!"
434:was longlisted as a candidate for the 2017
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240:at the invitation of her former tutor at
1779:Women's Prize for Fiction-winning works
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974:from the original on 21 September 2019
248:, but she eventually makes her way to
173:that Shamsie write a modern update of
1684:Feminist views on the Oedipus complex
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858:from the original on 15 February 2021
751:from the original on 15 February 2021
692:from the original on 15 February 2021
598:from the original on 17 November 2018
374:is a contemporary reimagining of the
192:, she described her writing process:
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1232:(Jocasta's brother/Laius' successor)
1104:from the original on 8 November 2019
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1055:Hedges-Stocks, Zoah (6 June 2018),
568:from the original on 16 August 2017
161:Development and publication history
1226:/Epicaste (biological mother/wife)
1131:"Sound and Fury: Kamila Shamsie's
880:Haynes, Natalie (10 August 2017).
846:Chambers, Claire (5 August 2017).
739:Chambers, Claire (5 August 2017).
620:Weber, Katharine (7 August 2017).
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993:Images Staff (15 November 2018).
537:from the original on 12 June 2018
909:Garner, Dwight (8 August 2017).
499:Associated press (6 June 2018),
200:The book's epigraph quotes from
1201:Theban kings in Greek mythology
556:Dutta, Amrita (6 August 2017).
111:(2017) is the seventh novel by
1764:Novels set in the 21st century
804:Chambers, Claire Gail (2018).
711:Shamsie, Kamila (3 May 2018).
147:Women's Prize for Fiction 2018
1:
770:Rahim, Sameer (6 June 2018).
647:"HOME FIRE by Kamila Shamsie"
473:Flood, Alison (6 June 2018),
271:before dying in transport to
149:, and was longlisted for the
962:Beer, Tom (14 August 2017).
16:2017 novel by Kamila Shamsie
1774:Bloomsbury Publishing books
1744:Novels set in Massachusetts
456:100 most influential novels
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1643:The Gods Are Not to Blame
1029:Women's Prize for Fiction
440:Women's Prize for Fiction
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1143:The Massachusetts Review
964:"What to read this week"
215:. It was serialised for
1568:Funeral Parade of Roses
361:free indirect discourse
231:. A 28-year-old Muslim
1769:Novels about terrorism
1759:Novels set in Pakistan
1754:Novels set in Istanbul
1256:(half sister/daughter)
1238:(half sister/daughter)
678:"Home Fire: Episode 1"
250:Amherst, Massachusetts
198:
1408:The Gospel at Colonus
825:10.1353/mar.2018.0029
351:in British politics.
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186:In an interview with
151:Man Booker Prize 2017
1739:Novels set in London
1442:The Burial at Thebes
1394:The Infernal Machine
1346:The Phoenician Women
1294:Seven Against Thebes
813:Massachusetts Review
513:The Washington Times
1749:Novels set in Syria
1729:2017 British novels
1208:(biological father)
1100:. 5 November 2019.
1079:The Express Tribune
626:The Washington Post
454:on its list of the
444:On 5 November 2019
421:The Washington Post
23:
1690:Hamlet and Oedipus
1381:(Dryden & Lee)
1320:Oedipus at Colonus
1250:(half brother/son)
1244:(half brother/son)
1212:Polybus of Corinth
1194:Titles and lineage
1129:Chambers, Claire.
1024:2019-04-01 at the
915:The New York Times
562:The Indian Express
506:2018-06-12 at the
480:2019-04-30 at the
204:'s translation of
139:terrorist attack.
33:First edition (US)
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1214:(adoptive father)
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1418:Other (Antigone)
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115:. It reimagines
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819:(2): 202–219.
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261:Home Secretary
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171:Jatinder Verma
165:Shamsie began
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113:Kamila Shamsie
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1276:Theban plays
1268:(later wife)
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1106:. Retrieved
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1002:. Retrieved
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886:The Guardian
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860:. Retrieved
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753:. Retrieved
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722:. Retrieved
718:The Guardian
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694:. Retrieved
681:
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655:. Retrieved
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629:. Retrieved
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600:. Retrieved
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1650:Oedipus Tex
1611:Other works
1552:Oedipus Rex
1536:Oedipus Rex
1487:Oedipus rex
1327:Euripides:
1313:Oedipus Rex
1301:Sophocles:
1289:Aeschylus:
1108:10 November
1004:17 November
936:"Home Fire"
686:BBC Radio 4
602:17 November
541:17 November
341:Sajid Javid
269:Afghanistan
217:BBC Radio 4
1723:Categories
1389:(Voltaire)
1266:Astymedusa
1262:(2nd wife)
1260:Euryganeia
1146:: 202–219.
947:16 January
941:Book Marks
462:References
402:Book Marks
345:Sadiq Khan
334:Characters
71:Bloomsbury
22:Home Fire
1657:Home Fire
1619:Oedipodea
1466:(Traetta)
1437:(Anouilh)
1429:(Cocteau)
1283:Antiquity
1248:Polynices
1133:Home Fire
978:15 August
920:15 August
891:15 August
862:15 August
852:The Hindu
833:165900902
784:0307-1235
755:15 August
745:The Hindu
724:23 August
682:Home Fire
657:15 August
631:15 August
572:15 August
452:Home Fire
432:Home Fire
416:Home Fire
395:Reception
372:Home Fire
314:Caliphate
310:austerity
282:M&M's
181:Sophocles
167:Home Fire
143:Home Fire
117:Sophocles
108:Home Fire
67:Publisher
1600:Antigone
1544:Antigone
1510:Edipo re
1498:(Enescu)
1472:Antigona
1464:Antigona
1434:Antigone
1426:Antigone
1353:Seneca:
1332:Antigone
1306:Antigone
1242:Eteocles
1236:Antigone
1102:Archived
1097:BBC News
1044:BBC News
1022:Archived
972:Archived
856:Archived
749:Archived
690:Archived
596:Archived
566:Archived
535:Archived
504:Archived
478:Archived
447:BBC News
379:Antigone
223:Synopsis
206:Antigone
176:Antigone
145:won the
122:Antigone
119:'s play
49:Language
1707:The End
1667:Related
1626:Thebaid
1584:Voyager
1517:Oedipus
1386:Oedipus
1378:Oedipus
1358:Oedipus
1339:Oedipus
1224:Jocasta
1186:Oedipus
968:Newsday
684:. BBC.
450:listed
294:Wembley
52:English
1603:(2019)
1595:(1996)
1587:(1991)
1579:(1982)
1571:(1969)
1563:(1968)
1555:(1967)
1547:(1961)
1539:(1957)
1520:(Rihm)
1456:Operas
1254:Ismene
1218:Merope
999:Images
831:
789:23 May
782:
696:22 May
367:Themes
347:, and
246:Boston
233:hijabi
157:them.
128:jihadi
39:Author
1528:Films
1503:Greek
1495:Ĺ’dipe
1401:Greek
1230:Creon
1206:Laius
1138:(PDF)
829:S2CID
809:(PDF)
355:Style
319:Raqqa
254:Skype
179:, by
61:Novel
57:Genre
1110:2019
1006:2018
980:2017
949:2024
922:2017
893:2017
864:2017
791:2019
780:ISSN
757:2017
726:2021
698:2019
659:2017
633:2017
604:2018
574:2017
543:2018
381:and
302:ISIS
298:Tube
132:ISIS
94:ISBN
78:(US)
73:(UK)
821:doi
408:In
292:in
267:in
242:LSE
1725::
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811:.
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624:.
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277:MP
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