Jordanian Women Race-Car Drivers Work the Track
Reem Halasa profiles a handful of Arab women in Jordan who love to drive fast, compete and claim victory.
Reem Halasa profiles a handful of Arab women in Jordan who love to drive fast, compete and claim victory.
Arab writer Nashwa Nasreldin reflects on her work experiences at home and abroad, and on the meaning of everything.
Emerging from Covid, a prominent Iranian photographer documents the working-class as the country reels under sanctions.
If I hadn’t seen you, I might have forgotten all the wrongs of this world that belong to me.
Clive Bell reviews the latest graphic novel from Mana Neyestani on the hardships of being a Kurdish porter.
Malu Halasa interviews the Iranian graphic novelist who like Marjane Satrapi has made France his home as a political refugee.
Janine AlHadidi reviews the gritty mystery thriller set in east Amman that has Jordanians talking.
For eight years, a blind Palestinian school principal has resisted persistent Israeli efforts to drive his family out of Jerusalem.
Katie Logan reviews a familiar coming-of-age story elevated by deep thinking about the nature of history, empire and narrative.
Writer-photographer Ara Oshagan mediates on the borders between North and South Korea and the blockaded enclave of Artsakh.
Seta Kabranian-Melkonian, author and widow of the late Monte “Avo” Melkonian, commander of the Artsakh War for Independence, recounts the tale.
Mireille Rebeiz remembers her Tante Rose and the lore of Armenian culture-history in Lebanon, where forgetting is endemic.
Mischa Geracoulis presents an eclectic list of 10 books that delve into the Armenian experience, including memoir, fiction and history.
Malu Halasa talks to the director of a new documentary exposing the cruelty of Iran's Islamic regime.
Art historian William Carruthers explores the modern city of Luxor and the ancient site of Thebes along the Nile.