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The Arabic edition of "How to disappear" by Haytham El-Wardany
Following a thread, from string figures though algorithms.
The Arabic edition of "How to remember your dreams" by Amr Ezzat
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“Do you really want to remember your dreams? I often wish to forget mine, probably because I sometimes remember them to the point that I get angry with people for what they did in them, or grow sad again over what happened as though it reoccured last night, or feel the bittersweet joy of having, for a moment, what enchanted me. Sometimes I think I have in fact replied to work emails or finally sent my clothes to the cleaners. Or I remember in detail the circumstances of my death, again and again, whereas perhaps the only benefit to death, whether we go to heaven or hell or nonexistence, is that we are no longer preoccupied with it. Until then, what I sometimes want when I go to bed and rem...
You get to your hotel room after a long journey. You drop your bag, turn out the lights, and lie down. A few hours later you wake up in total darkness. For a good minute you have no sense of who you are-though once you turn on the television, or more likely, log on to the Internet, then information floods your mind. You may ask: How do I know what's really happening? This book offers a simple route through the morass of information. It will outline the things you need to know to answer the question: "What's really happening?" What's more, the techniques revealed here can be adapted for many circumstances you will encounter in life.
An adaptation of Cevdet Erek's artist book SSS - Shore Scene Soundtrack, Theme and Variations for Carpet, this publication takes up the issue of mimicking nature and demonstrates how to produce the sound of the sea using two hands and a synthetic carpet.
Iman Mersal intricately weaves a new narrative of motherhood, moving between interior and exterior scapes, diaries, readings, and photographic representations of motherhood to question old and current representations of motherhood and the related space of unconditional love, guilt, personal goals and traditional expectations. What is hidden in narratives of motherhood in fictional and non-fictional texts as well as in photographs?0 0Iman Mersal is an Egyptian poet and associate professor of Arabic Literature and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Alberta, Canada.--