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The Imagination Interviews

14 January, 2021 • Jordan Elgrably

Drought and the War in Syria

Jordan Elgrably explores whether the drought in Syria fueled the country's civil war and what climate change means for our global future.

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14 January, 2021 • I. Rida Mahmood

On American Democracy and Empire, a Corrective

The MAGA movement is not a cause but a consequence of GOP policies, and its instantaneous vanishing with Trump's political demise is unlikely.

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10 January, 2021 • Rana Asfour

Muhammad Malas, Syria’s Auteur, is the subject of a Film Biography

Rana Asfour reviews a documentary by Nezar Andary on the Syrian auteur filmmaker, Muhammad Malas.

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10 January, 2021 • Iason Athanasiadis

Remember 2020 Not for Covid-19 or Trump Chaos, But Climate Change

Columnist Iason Athanasiadis remembers 2020 not so much for the pandemic or the chaos of Trump but what humankind has wrought on nature.

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30 December, 2020 • Layla AlAmmar

The Howling of the Dog: Adania Shibli’s “Minor Detail”

Layla AlAmmar takes us into the heart of Adania Shibli's literary thriller, where Palestinian lives are but a "minor detail."

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27 December, 2020 • TMR

Cairo 1941: Excerpt from “A Land Like You”

“Gamal was convinced that Egypt, mother of the world, would spawn a new era—when Arabs, the wretched of the earth, would finally regain their place among the nations.”

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27 December, 2020 • Maece Seirafi

Calligraphies of the Desert

Maece Seirafi suggests, Calligraphies of the Desert "reveals an indigenous comfort with the desert as reflected in Arab proverbs heard in everyday conversations."

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20 December, 2020 • Selim Temo

Academics, Signatories, and Putschists

Kurdish poet and scholar Selîm Temo, takes us inside the continuing Academics for Peace struggle through his personal story.

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14 December, 2020 • Shahla Ujayli

Shahla Ujayli’s “Summer With the Enemy”

War-torn Syria isn’t just about headlines. In this new novel from Shahla Ujayli, the country comes alive as seen through the eyes of three women from Raqqa.

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14 December, 2020 • Shahla Ujayli

Shahla Ujayli’s “Summer With the Enemy”

War-torn Syria isn't just about headlines. In this new novel from Shahla Ujayli, the country comes alive as seen through the eyes of three women from Raqqa.

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14 December, 2020 • Kaouther Adimi

Algiers, Algeria in the novel “Our Riches”

Kaouther Adimi's historical novel departs from a famous Algerian bookstore with a connection to Albert Camus and opens a window onto Algerian independence, French colonialism and the literary voices coming out of the Maghreb.

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14 December, 2020 • Masoud Behnoud

History of Tehran: What Lies Beneath

One of Iran's most venerable journalists and editors gives us an insider's history of one of the world's great if lesser-known cities.

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14 December, 2020 • Elias Khoury

Children of the Ghetto, My Name Is Adam

With Children of the Ghetto, My Name is Adam, a lyrical story about Palestine's 1948 exodus, Elias Khoury continues his exploration of the 20th century tragedy.

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14 December, 2020 • Hassan Blasim

Hassan Blasim’s “God 99”

God 99 blurs the boundaries between fiction and autobiography, reportage and the novel. It blends the fantastic with the everyday to explore themes of exile, humanity, art and philosophy.

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14 December, 2020 • Eman Quotah

You Drive Me Crazy, from “Bride of the Sea”

In this debut novel Eman Quotah practically delivers an epic as she writes about a Saudi family, torn between Arab and American identities and culture clashes.

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The Markaz Review is a literary arts publication and cultural institution that curates content and programs on the greater Middle East and our communities in diaspora. The Markaz signifies “the center” in Arabic, as well as Persian, Turkish, Hebrew and Urdu.

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