Gregory Pardlo presents Two Poems
Pulitzer Prize winning poet Gregory Pardlo presents two poems from his collection "Spectral Evidence."
Pulitzer Prize winning poet Gregory Pardlo presents two poems from his collection "Spectral Evidence."
An entire family is preoccupied with its history and questions of national identity, confounded by France’s rejection of the pieds-noirs.
Eman Quotah reviews a new anthology of love poems by Arab poets writing in English in the diaspora and in country.
Exile retold through embroidered Palestinian stories, by documentary photographer and visual storyteller Rasha Al Jundi.
Academic and novelist Layla AlAmmar interrogates her life's creative and scholarly achievements against the teachings of Edward Said.
Caught between Beirut and a town in the Californian desert, Buthayna searches for the meaning amid life’s absurdities.
Anis Shivani finds that Siddhartha Deb's "outright denial of human agency sets him apart from even the most dire modernists."
Deborah Kapchan's introspection on belonging and faith on attending the first officially recognized Jewish wedding in the United Arab Emirates.
Erik Lindner is a Dutch poet whose "Words are the Worst" was shortlisted for the Derek Walcott Prize for Poetry.
Nora Ounnas Leroy reviews the Palestine collection in MO.CO's "Museums in Exile" exhibition, in Montpellier through Feb. 5, 2023.
Jordan Elgrably reads a book about white fear and racism and finds that colorism isn't our only problem.
Laila Halaby on the new novel from Lebanon's multilingual feminist poet and powerhouse.
Artist Atia Shafee hopes that her paintings will "resonate, trigger, and challenge, drawing the observer into the experience," imparting a universal appreciation for art.
Writer and film executive Bavand Karim meditates on Iranian American identity and an alternative vision for self-realization in the context of the ethno-futurist movement.
Artist and writer Micaela Amateau Amato uses art and words to create unique ways of transmogrifying the world.