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African Journal of New Poetry No. 5
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 228

African Journal of New Poetry No. 5

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2008
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  • Publisher: Lulu.com

None

Tales of a Severed Head
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 172

Tales of a Severed Head

A brilliant retelling of the classic Arab tale of Scheherazade, set in the present day

Poems for the Millennium, Volume Four
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 792

Poems for the Millennium, Volume Four

"Global anthology of twentieth-century poetry"--Back cover.

Calligraphies: Poems
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 118

Calligraphies: Poems

A formally brilliant and powerful volume from “one of the most extraordinary innovative poets writing today” (Carol Muske-Dukes, Los Angeles Times). Moving from Paris to Beirut and back, Calligraphies is a tribute to exiles and refugees, the known and unknown, dead and living, from the American poet Marie Ponsot to the Syrian pasionaria Fadwa Suleiman. Award-winning poet Marilyn Hacker finds resistance, wit, potential, and gleaming connection in everyday moments—a lunch of “standing near the fridge with / labneh, two verbs, and a spoon”—as a counterweight to the precarity of existence. With signature passion and agility, Hacker draws from French, Arabic, and English to probe the ...

Lamalif: A Critical Anthology of Societal Debates in Morocco during the “Years of Lead” (1966–1988)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 248

Lamalif: A Critical Anthology of Societal Debates in Morocco during the “Years of Lead” (1966–1988)

The LAMALIF anthology presents a wide variety of articles from LAMALIF, Morocco’s longest-serving Francophone journal. Active between 1966 and 1988, LAMALIF covered the most critical periods of Moroccan history and engaged in crucial debates about democratization, feminism, culture, education, Third World relations, and decolonization. However, LAMALIF was not just a journal; it was a real school, where Morocco’s, North Africa’s, and the developing world’s emerging and established writers, artists, and thinkers found a space to disseminate their ideas and address readerships across different cultures and geographical areas in French. This anthology is the first comprehensive translat...

Poems for the Millennium, Volume Four
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 793

Poems for the Millennium, Volume Four

In this fourth volume of the landmark Poems for the Millennium series, Pierre Joris and Habib Tengour present a comprehensive anthology of the written and oral literatures of the Maghreb, the region of North Africa that spans the modern nation states of Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, and Mauritania, and including a section on the influential Arabo-Berber and Jewish literary culture of Al-Andalus, which flourished in Spain between the ninth and fifteenth centuries. Beginning with the earliest pictograms and rock drawings and ending with the work of the current generation of post-independence and diasporic writers, this volume takes in a range of cultures and voices, including Berber, Phoen...

Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 392

Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012-08-20
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  • Publisher: PM Press

On March 5th, 2007, a car bomb was exploded on al-Mutanabbi Street in Baghdad. More than thirty people were killed and more than one hundred were wounded. This locale is the historic center of Baghdad bookselling, a winding street filled with bookstores and outdoor book stalls. Named after the famed 10th century classical Arab poet al-Mutanabbi, it has been the heart and soul of the Baghdad literary and intellectual community. This anthology begins with a historical introduction to al-Mutanabbi Street and includes the writing of Iraqis as well as a wide swath of international poets and writers who were outraged by this attack. This book seeks to show where al-Mutanabbi Street starts in all o...

Franco-Maghrebi Artists of the 2000s
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 199

Franco-Maghrebi Artists of the 2000s

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2018-11-26
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  • Publisher: BRILL

In Franco-Maghrebi Artists of the 2000s: Transnational Narratives and Identities Ramona Mielusel offers an account of the way how young artists (writers, filmmakers, actors, singers, photographers, contemporary migrant artists) of Maghrebi origin residing in France during the last twenty years (2000-2016) contest French “national identity” in their work. Mielusel's interest lies in analyzing the impact that these “minor” artists and their chosen genres have on mainstream cultural productions. She argues that constant displacement and changes in political, social and cultural contexts have significantly transformed the dynamics that govern the relationship between the center (Metropolitan France) and the periphery (its Others). Most importantly, she seeks to position their work in the field of transnationalism, which has dominated postcolonial studies and cultural studies in the past decade.

Introduction aux littératures francophones
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 284

Introduction aux littératures francophones

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2004
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  • Publisher: PUM

Les trois principaux chapitres visent à souligner les convergences et les divergences entre les littératures africaine, caribéenne (littéraire antillaise + Haïti) et maghrébine. D'un chapitre à l'autre, l'organisation est conservée : présentation des précurseurs - son histoire générale de la région à partir des principaux genres (sauf favoriser le roman au détriment des autres genres comme on le constate souvent dans d'autres ouvrages). Hors cadre, les littératures québécoises (p. 51-57), francophones de Belgique et de Suisse, font l'objet d'une brève présentation dans le panorama introductif consacré à toutes les littératures francophones, p. 9-61. [SDM].

Poetic Justice
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 492

Poetic Justice

Poetic Justice is the first anthology of contemporary Moroccan poetry in English. The work is primarily composed of poets who began writing after Moroccan independence in 1956 and includes work written in Moroccan Arabic (darija), classical Arabic, French, and Tamazight. Why Poetic Justice? Moroccan poetry (and especially zajal, oral poetry now written in Moroccan Arabic) is often published in newspapers and journals and is thus a vibrant form of social commentary; what’s more, there is a law, a justice, in the aesthetic act that speaks back to the law of the land. Poetic Justice because literature has the power to shape the cultural and moral imagination in profound and just ways. Reading this oeuvre from independence until the new millennium and beyond, it is clear that what poet Driss Mesnaoui calls the “letters of time” have long been in the hands of Moroccan poets, as they write their ethics, their aesthetics, as well as their gendered and political lives into poetic being.