Francofeminism: a Postcolonial History
Mariem Gellouz and Sélima Kebaïli deconstruct Francophonie in the context of postcolonial Tunisian, Arab and African feminism.
Mariem Gellouz and Sélima Kebaïli deconstruct Francophonie in the context of postcolonial Tunisian, Arab and African feminism.
Travel the world, meet people, see great places, without ever leaving the comfort of your screen…welcome to the pandemic!
Farah Abdessamad reviews Silence is a Sense, the new novel from Layla AlAmmar.
Is the cost of water really higher than the cost of petrol? Are we destined to run out of water if we don't find a way forward? 4 films, 6 charitable organizations you should know.
Danielle Haque on the slow violence of water scarcity and other environmental and social justice trauma as described in Arab/Arab American literature.
Farah Abdessamad remembers the Dead Sea and the myth of Bahamut.
Francisco Letelier on the lingering memories of Dune as a metaphor for a struggling planet.
Osama Esber interviews an Iraqi environmental writer on his book Guardians of the Water and the future of water in the region.
Iason Athanasiadis on the cities of the Mediterranean and Levant and the exceptionalism that has diminished our shared cosmopolitan future.
Let us never forget that the sea remembers our presence and our trespasses—art from Riva Nayaju.
The marine goddess La Pincoya is a reminder of the polluted waters left behind in the previously pristine waters of Chiloe and Patagonia in Chile by the salmon farming industry.
Jordan Elgrably explores whether the drought in Syria fueled the country's civil war and what climate change means for our global future.
The MAGA movement is not a cause but a consequence of GOP policies, and its instantaneous vanishing with Trump's political demise is unlikely.
Rana Asfour reviews a documentary by Nezar Andary on the Syrian auteur filmmaker, Muhammad Malas.
Columnist Iason Athanasiadis remembers 2020 not so much for the pandemic or the chaos of Trump but what humankind has wrought on nature.