Description
Mahmoud Darwish has been an angry, loving, rebellious, revolting, dreamer for forty years, and he has embodied feelings of anger, love, revolution, resentment, and dream through this long experience in creative, unique glowing poems, many of which will remain in the memory of people and history, as is the case in many of Al-Mutanabbi's poems or Shakespeare or others. The author enters the world of Darwish poetry, to discuss his poems intellectually and technically, and to leave with her symbols, references, referrals, absent texts, texts, semantics, and rhythms to stand on the dimensions of anger and revolution, the inherent rejection in the depths of the poet and his poems, the wrath of the poet, the anger of the poem, and the anger of life from death. Darwish is anger first, humanly and secondly, and third, so that his rejection, protest, and anger extends to his own reality and human reality, then the reality of this age everywhere.