Aida Šehović on the 30th Anniversary of the Srebrenica Genocide
Bosnian-American artist Šehović marks the Srebrenica Genocide with an installation of cups filled with coffee — unsweetened and undrunk.
Bosnian-American artist Šehović marks the Srebrenica Genocide with an installation of cups filled with coffee — unsweetened and undrunk.
When one poet declines to participate on the international stage in Edinburgh, supporters of Palestinian human rights are in a quandary.
في قصة قصيرة للكاتبة الفلسطينية سميرة عزام، تفرض التكنولوجيا الحديثة على الناس عبئًا لا قبل لهم به.
متحيرًا بين الوصال والانتقام، ينتظر شهاب موعدًا غراميًا بعد ثلاثين سنة من آخر لقاء، من بدت له قديمًا أنها حب العمر، تبدو الآن مصدرًا للتوتر والتفكير العميق.
Matt Broomfield’s new book explores the history of the Rojava revolution in Syrian Kurdistan as a model for global liberation movements.
Aaron Bushnell, the U.S. serviceman who self-immolated to protest the genocide in Gaza, has become a modern Palestinian martyr.
Gurnah’s new novel, “Theft,” is a post-colonial exploration of Tanzania, immigration, and the relationship between Africa and the west.
في رحلة العودة من الزمالك إلى مصر الجديدة، يختبر الشاب خنزرته الجميلة في أقوى صورها، متشتتًا بين الاستماع إلى سائق التاكسي البكَّاء وبين موعده الذي انتهي نهاية محبطة.
Mouline and Leila recount their prison years in Morocco in the 1970s and ’80s during the “Years of Lead” — a period characterized by heavy state repression.
A doctor writes on the grand multipara, “the great giver of multiple births” — women who have given birth five or more times.
Wasta and nepotism are at the heart of this short story by Yemen’s most prolific writer, theatre critic, and journalist.
A poet and sage voice in international literature, Pramila Venkateswaran straddles two worlds, bringing together South Asia and America.