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Banipal’s Take on Modern Tunisian Literature Disappoints

There are gems, of course, in Banipal39.

Unfortunately, several of this issue’s gems I’d already read: selections from Adonis’s new collection, an excerpt from Habib Selmi’s new novel (translated by Maia Tabet), an excerpt from Kamel Riahi’s The Gorilla (translated by Peter Clark, and also appearing in dual Arabic/English in Emerging Arab Voices).

Other things I found interesting but frustrating: I was enjoying Fadhil al-Azzawi’s novel excerpt and Mekkawi Said’s short story, but I did not want to continue reading them online. (With poetry, yes, I’m happy to read more of a collection online. But I don’t want a story to end mid-way and be told: Go find a computer.)

The issue tries to do a great deal: It introduces readers to a broad range of contemporary Tunisian literature: from IPAF-shortlisted Habib Selmi to Beirut39 laureaute Kamel Riahi to young author Rachida el-Charni to novelist and short-story writer Hassan Ben Othman to poets Moncef Mezghanni and Saghir Oulad Ahmed. It also tries to cover the modern classics of Tunisian lit, with very brief, encyclopedia-like entries about the lives and works of Abu al-Qassim al-Shabi, Mahmoud Messadi, Ezzadine Madani, Samir Ayadi, many others.

Although there is good information here, it makes for a somewhat dizzying and unsatisfying experience, as we switch back and forth between information and art. Perhaps the problem is not that it is less than, for instance, Banipal 37: Iraqi Lit (although I was partial to that one), but in what it seems to promise.

Some of the highlights:

Perhaps that seems like a lot for a magazine—six bullet-pointed highlights! After all, many small magazines feature only one or two stories or poems of merit. But when the entirety of Tunisian literature seems promised,  (and Samuel Shimon tells us, in the introduction, that Tunisian lit is one of his particular passions), I would’ve liked more coherence, more structure, more essay and less dutiful explanation.

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