Reading al-Qa’id’s ‘War in the Land of Egypt’ on October 6
From Al Masry Al Youm: Yusuf al-Qa’id’s acclaimed novel, War in the Land of Egypt, was set during the brief October 1973 war and published in Lebanon in 1978, just […]
From Al Masry Al Youm: Yusuf al-Qa’id’s acclaimed novel, War in the Land of Egypt, was set during the brief October 1973 war and published in Lebanon in 1978, just […]
It’s Nobel Day, which means that, around the world, curiosity-seekers such as myself will be glued to their computers at 1 p.m. CET. With “Arab Spring” chatter in the air, […]
Pierre Joris is a poet, translator, and author of the blog Nomadics, which is where I first encountered him. He teaches poetry & poetics at SUNY-Albany. He has recently published Paul Celan: […]
A day later, I got a note from Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies’ Anna Mudd about the Kickstarter campaign for Muktatafaht (a Middle East Comics Anthology).
Banipal 41 (Celebrating Adonis) has disappeared into the background on the magazine’s website just as speculation about the Parisian-Syrian poet has reached its highest froth in years: Could this really […]
I read on Qadita this morning that the Palestinian autodidact and poet Taha Muhammad Ali has died. He will be buried later today. Ali was born in the Palestinian village […]
Ladbrokes is just one handicapper for the big Swedish prize, which is set to be announced some Thursday this month. The Unibet* is another.
When Egyptian poet, essayist and aphorist Yahia Lababidi began working with “the brief arts” 20 years ago, he said, they seemed to be an artistic form from a previous era. Only a few practitioners worked seriously with aphorisms.
But these days, perhaps because of new social media and perhaps because of a renewed hunger for wisdom, the aphorism is undergoing a revival.
It’s nearly October, the time for burning rice chaff, eating candy, and speculating about the various Nobel prizes. Literature Prize Adonis. Up until January 28, I believed Adonis had a […]