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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20240509T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20240522T180000
DTSTAMP:20260411T120816
CREATED:20240503T092954Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240520T032007Z
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SUMMARY:U.S. Book Tour: "Stories from the Center of the World" with editor Jordan Elgrably and contributing writers
DESCRIPTION:RSVP form below. \n🗓️ WHAT: Book launch of new Middle East fiction anthology  \n🗣️ WHO: Editor Jordan Elgrably and various writers read from Stories from the Center of the World: New Middle East Fiction  \n📍 WHERE: San Francisco\, Berkeley\, Sacramento\, Los Angeles\, Las Vegas\, Chicago\, Washington DC\, New York City. Each city has its own event link: \n\nMAY 9 (In-person & online) San Francisco\, City Lights\, with Sarah AlKahly-Mills\, 7 pm: https://citylights.com/events/jordan-elgrably/\nMAY 10 (In-person) Berkeley\, Books Inc with Sarah AlKahly-Mills\, 6 pm: https://www.booksinc.net/event/jordan-elgrably-books-inc-berkeley\nMAY 11 (In-person) Sacramento\, Capital Books\, 5 pm: https://capitalbooksonk.com/jordan-elgrably\nMAY 16 (In-person) Los Angeles\, Beyond Baroque with Reza Sixo Safai\, 8 pm: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/la-launch-stories-from-the-center-of-the-world-new-middle east-fiction-tickets-880484200947?aff=oddtdtcreator \nMAY 17 (In-person) Las Vegas with Ahmed Naji\, The Writers Block\, 7 pm: https://www.thewritersblock.org/events/upcoming-events\nMAY 20 (In-person) Chicago at Northwestern University Sahar Mustafah\, 4 pm: https://planitpurple.northwestern.edu/event/615352 & https://www.facebook.com/events/1656522558491274/ \nMAY 21 (In-person & online) Washington DC\, Busboys and Poets\, with Natasha Tynes\, 6 pm: https://www.busboysandpoets.com/events/th-evt-38480538/\nMAY 22 (In-person) NYC at the NYPL Tompkins Square\, 6 pm with Omar El Akkad: https://arteeast.org/news-events/stories-from-the-center-of-the-world-readings-from-jordan-elgrably-and-omar-el-akkad/\n\n\n[wpforms id=”33041″ title=”true” description=”true”] \nDonations are welcome to support The Markaz Review. \n\n  \nShort stories from 25 emerging and established writers of Middle Eastern and North  African origins\, a unique collection of voices and viewpoints that illuminate life in the  global Arab/Muslim world. \n“Provocative and subtle\, nuanced and surprising . . . these stories demonstrate how this  complicated and rich region might best be approached— through the power of literature…” —Viet Thanh Nguyen\, author of The Committed   \nStories from the Center of the World gathers new writing from the greater Middle East or SWANA — a vast region that stretches from Southwest Asia\,  through the Middle East and Turkey\, and across Northern Africa. The 25 authors included  here come from a wide range of cultures and countries\, including Palestine\, Syria\,  Pakistan\, Iran\, Lebanon\, Egypt\, and Morocco\, to name a few.  \nIn “Asha and Haaji\,” Hanif Kureishi takes up the cause of outsiders who become  uprooted when war or disaster strikes and they flee for safe haven. In Nektaria Anastasiadou’s  “The Location of the Soul According to Benyamin Alhadeff\,” two students in Istanbul from  different classes—and religions that have often been at odds with one another—believe they  can overcome all obstacles. MK Harb’s story\, “Counter Strike\,” is about queer love among  Beiruti adolescents\, and Salar Abdoh’s “The Long Walk of the Martyrs” invites us into the  world of former militants\, fighters who fought ISIS or Daesh in Iraq and Syria\, and are having  a hard time readjusting to civilian life. In “Eleazar\,” Karim Kattan tells an unexpected  Palestinian story in which the usual antagonists—Israeli occupation forces—are mostly  absent\, while another malevolent force seems to overtake an unsuspecting family. Omar  El Akkad’s “The Icarist” is a coming-of-age story about the underworld in which illegal immigrants are forced to live\, and what happens when one dares to break away.   \n \nJORDAN ELGRABLY is a Franco-American and Moroccan writer and translator\, whose  stories and creative nonfiction have appeared in numerous     anthologies and reviews\,  including Apulée\, Salmagundi\, and The Paris Review. He is the editor of Stories from the  Center of the World: New Middle East Fiction (City Lights 2024) and co-editor with Malu  Halasa of Sumūd: a New Palestinian Reader (Seven Stories Press 2024). Elgrably founded  and edits The Markaz Review.
URL:https://themarkaz.org/oldmarkaz/tevent/u-s-book-tour-stories-from-the-center-of-the-world-with-editor-jordan-elgrably-and-contributing-writers/
CATEGORIES:Author Events
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ORGANIZER;CN="The Markaz Review":MAILTO:info@themarkaz.org
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20240516T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20240516T200000
DTSTAMP:20260411T120816
CREATED:20240509T173132Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240509T173132Z
UID:33130-1715886000-1715889600@themarkaz.org
SUMMARY:TMR 41 • FORGETTING Roundtable Discussion
DESCRIPTION:RSVP here \nJoin us online on Thursday\, May 16th at 1pm EST/ 7pm CET/ 6pm UK for our May roundtable discussion which invites four contributors to TMR 41\, FORGETTING\, to a conversation around the culture of memory and forgetting in the Arab world. \nAs Mai Al Nakib asserts in her essay\, “Writing is a memory archive\, [providing] a portal to lost time\, to fading traces of existence.” And this archive created and maintained by writers is often preserved against/in contradiction to/in defiance of/in resistance to and in spite of the approved narratives of the State. And so\, four writers from four different Arab countries\, each with its own traumatic and turbulent relationship to memory and forgetfulness—Nabil Salih\, from Iraq\, Mai Al Nakib\, from Kuwait\, Saleem Haddad\, from Palestine via Lebanon\, and Asmaa El Gamal\, from Egypt—sit down with senior editor Lina Mounzer\, from Lebanon\, to talk about those relationships and to discuss how personal memory might act upon the historical record. \nRead this month’s editorial by Malu Halasa and Jordan Elgrably\, “Why FORGETTING?”. \nRSVP here \n_____________________________________________________________________________________________________ \nAbout the speakers: \nLina Mounzer is a Lebanese writer and translator. She has been a regular contributor to the New York Times and her work has appeared in the Paris Review\, Freeman’s\, Washington Post\, and The Baffler\, as well as in the anthologies Tales of Two Planets (Penguin 2020)\, and Best American Essays 2022 (Harper Collins 2022). She is a senior editor at The Markaz Review. \n  \nMai Al-Nakib was born in Kuwait and spent the first six years of her life in London; Edinburgh; and St. Louis\, Missouri. She holds a PhD in English literature from Brown University. She was an Associate Professor of English and comparative literature at Kuwait University\, where she taught for twenty years; she recently left this position to write full-time. Her research focuses on cultural politics in the Middle East\, with a special emphasis on gender\, cosmopolitanism\, and postcolonial issues. Her short story collection\, The Hidden Light of Objects\, was published by Bloomsbury in 2014. It won the Edinburgh International Book Festival’s First Book Award. Her debut novel\, An Unlasting Home—published by Mariner Books in the US and Saqi in the UK—came out in paperback in April 2023. Her short fiction and essays have appeared in various publications\, including Ninth Letter; The First Line; After the Pause; World Literature Today; Rowayat; New Lines Magazine; and the BBC World Service. She divides her time between Kuwait and Greece. \nRead her centerpiece essay in this month’s issue\, “Memory Archive: Between Remembering and Forgetting.” \n  \nSaleem Haddad is a novelist\, screenwriter\, and essayist currently based in Lisbon\, with roots in Amman\, Beirut\, and London. His award-winning debut novel\, Guapa\, was published in 2016. \nRead his book review of “My Brother\, My Land: A Story from Palestine” in our May issue. \n  \nAsmaa Elgamal is a writer and scholar from Alexandria\, Egypt. She earned her PhD in International Development and Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology\, where her research explored the colonial and military histories of spatial planning in the Middle East and North Africa. Her writing has appeared in New Lines Magazine\, Contingent Magazine\, and Insider. She was also longlisted for the 2021 DISQUIET International Literary Prize for Non-Fiction. \nRead her essay\, “The Elephant in the Box” in this month’s issue. \n  \nNabil Salih is a writer and photographer from Baghdad who holds an MA in Arab Studies from Georgetown and is pursuing a second MA in Human Rights and the Arts at Bard College. His writings appear in Jadaliyya\, Allegra Lab\, Al Jazeera English and LeftEast among others\, and have been translated to Italian\, Spanish\, French and other languages. \nRead his essay\, “Regarding the Photographs of Others—An Iraqi Journey Toward Remembering” in our latest issue. \n  \nRSVP here
URL:https://themarkaz.org/oldmarkaz/tevent/tmr-41-forgetting-roundtable-discussion/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Roundtable
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