About the Journal

Diwan: Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra Arab

Diwan: Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra Arab

Diwan: Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra Arab is an internationally peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the critical study of Arabic language and literature. Published by the Department of Arabic Language and Literature, Faculty of Adab and Humanities, State Islamic University Imam Bonjol Padang, in partnership with the Association of Researchers on Arabic Language and Literature "Lisaniya Adabiya", the journal reads language and literature as the medium through which power is exercised, identity is constructed, and resistance against oppression finds voice.

Diwan proceeds from the premise that Arabic language and literature are never neutral instruments of communication, but are always implicated in the production of social meaning — sustaining authority, defining subjects and communities, or giving voice to those rendered silent. The merit of a submission therefore rests on the depth of its engagement with this premise, not on whether its method is linguistic or literary, and Diwan welcomes any qualitative or quantitative approach capable of sustaining such an inquiry.

By choosing Diwan, authors join a cross-disciplinary community of inquiry organised around these critical questions rather than around disciplinary labels. Whether an established scholar, an early-career researcher, or a graduate student, contributors are invited to advance a tradition of rigorous, theoretically grounded scholarship on Arabic language and literature as sites of power, identity, and resistance. Diwan thereby seeks its place among journals shaping how the Arabic-speaking world is studied, within the region and across the wider scholarly community.

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Current Issue

					View Vol. 18 No. 1 (2026)
Vol. 18 No. 1 (2026)


This edition features studies addressing crucial and strategic issues in contemporary Arabic linguistics and literature. Ideological practices and semantic expansion are revealed through the translation analysis of cultural and religious lexicon in al-Jamāl Jarḥ and al-Raḥīq al-Makhtūm. The reinterpretation of classical religious texts is enriched through Qur'anic intertextuality in Bayt Baws and the reinterpretation of imperative meaning in Mukhtār al-Aḥādīth al-Nabawīyah. The dynamics of living language are highlighted through Acehnese interference in students' spoken Arabic and the Arabization of English culinary vocabulary in digital media. Diwan further affirms its contribution to discourse on political rhetoric and new media amid the region's geopolitical turbulence by unpacking bilingual audience design in Al Jazeera's coverage of the recent Iran–Israel–US conflict, as well as the metaphorization of Palestine in Abdel Fattah El-Sisi's speeches. This edition concludes with literature as spiritual-ideological expression and resistance on the eve of martyrdom, through a semiotic reading of the pesantren poem Yā Nahḍat al-'Ulamā' and Hiba Abū Nadā's last Facebook posts before her martyrdom in Khan Yunis, Gaza.

The editorial team extends its gratitude to the authors who entrusted Diwan with the publication of their prestigious research. Thanks to this trust, this edition has facilitated academic collaboration among 38 authors from 20 institutions dispersed across 12 countries (Indonesia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Tunisia, Algeria, Iraq, Turkey, Jordan, Philippines, Pakistan, and Morocco).

Published 2026-05-04
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