Palestine Is Literature: Elias Khoury & Ilan Pappé in Conversation
Elias Khoury and Ilan Pappe discuss a mutual line of racism and victimization that runs through the Nakba and the Holocaust.
Elias Khoury and Ilan Pappe discuss a mutual line of racism and victimization that runs through the Nakba and the Holocaust.
Forgotten offers a profound meditation on the Palestinian landscape, on loss, neglect and the ravages of time.
After many years of being tormented, a man finally seeks revenge against past aggressors who have long since vanished. Or have they?
What happens when a human-robot relationship forms? In near-future Dubai, an accident in a skyscraper holds the key to this question.
Two women on the mend in the hospital, one a wife and mother, the other pining for a lover, both dream of a better life.
A tale set in the near-future exploring the world of banned books, repressed imaginations, dreams, and desires.
In Paranda, everyday activities like reading symbolize protest and resistance in homes, alleyways, and gatherings.
Victor Hugo’s way still guides those building bridges across languages, faiths, and histories in a time of fear.
Palestinian Refaat Al-Areer was not just an academic. He was a living metaphor for Gaza’s steadfastness, writes his student Taqwa Al-Wawi.
The “francophone” term limits books to the “Francophonie” section in French bookstores, and forces authors to focus on identity.
Nasser Rabah and other poets of Gaza are still writing — still sending their poems to us, because Palestine is literature.
We’re not quite at “Fahrenheit 451” where books in pyres are burned in public, but our freedom to read faces significant threats.