May Goes On: (Re)-Introducing May Ziadeh

MUSINGS of a YOUNG WOMAN, by May Ziadeh, translated and edited by a collective of women and published by Arablit Books, will be available October 2026. You can pre-order now to support the project.

The English translation of Sawanih Fatat (Musings of a Young Woman) by May Ziadeh arrives as the second title in ArabLit’s ERASED, NOT FORGOTTEN series, following Out of Time: The Collected Short Stories of Samira Azzam (tr. Ranya Abdelrahman). If Azzam emerged as a literary voice in the wake of the 1948 Nakba, then Ziadeh’s prose reaches further back into the early tremors of the Arab Nahda, to ask a question that still feels dangerously current: what does it mean for a woman to write herself into existence?

Neither memoir nor manifesto, Sawanih is a genre-defying book that combines essays, reflections, poems, even a microplay. It speaks in a voice that is at once singular and collective: “We young women who write,” insisting on women’s right to think and question, to be read as more than an auxiliary to the human species.

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More on May:

May Goes On: (Re)-Introducing May Ziadeh

May Goes On: (Re)-Introducing May Ziadeh

On May 1st—yes, May in May—the English translation of Sawanih Fatat (Musings of a Young Woman) by May Ziadeh arrives ...
An Apology to May Ziadeh

An Apology to May Ziadeh

A letter from ArabLit editor Ibtihal Rida Mahmood to May Ziadeh (1886-1941) ...
May Ziadeh's 'The Memory of Baalbek’s Temple'

May Ziadeh’s ‘The Memory of Baalbek’s Temple’

May Ziadeh stands before the ruins of Baalbek in 1911 and reflects on the nature of impermanence and the colonial ...
Reflections on 'The Memory of Baalbek’s Temple'

Reflections on ‘The Memory of Baalbek’s Temple’

Dana Al Shahbari introduces May Ziadeh's "The Memory of Baalbek’s Temple," noting that when Ziadeh (1886-1941) boarded a steam train ...