Our Current Issue

Tawfiq al-Hakim: Foretelling the Youth Revolution

By 
Nada Ramadan Elnahla
 
In the translator’s introduction, Radwan explains the importance of the timing of this publication, shedding light on this pioneering figure who predominantly contributed to Arabic literature through his novels, short stories, and plays. 
 
The Revolt of the Young: Essays by Tawfiq al-Hakim
Translated by Mona Radwan
Syracuse UP, 2015, 145 pp.
 
In 1984, Tawfiq al-Hakim (1898-1987) – a major literary and intellectual figure in Egypt and the Arab world who contributed to the development of Arabic literature – wrote “Thawrat al-Shabab” (“The Revolt of the Young”).

Vol. 19, No. 69

ESSAYS AND FEATURES: “When a Corpse Becomes an Icon for Syria’s Agony and Abandonment!” by Elie Chalala; “Rescuing Christianity in Syria!” by Salam Kawakibi; “Europe’s New Refugee Problem Requires Explanation Beyond War!” by Bobby Gulshan; “Ibtihal Salem: Author, Social Critic, and Mentor” by Caroline Seymour-Jorn; “Faten Hamama (1931-2015): The Loss of an Arab Icon” by Nada Ramadan Elnahla.

Women of the Revolutions: The New Faces of Arab Feminism

By 
Angele Ellis
 
“Nada’s Revolution” follows the tale of the 27-year Nada Ahmed, an Alexandrian woman looking to make decisions about marriage and career in the years after the revolutionary wave of the Arab Spring. In “Feminism Inshallah: A History of Arab Feminism,” Feriel Ben Mahmoud, the film’s director, traces the beginnings of feminism to male feminists such as the Egyptian Qasim Amin (1863-1908), whose nationalist aspirations for Egypt fueled his assertion that the Quran supported women’s rights — essential to throwing off the yoke of colonialism and joining the modern world.
 
Feminism Inshallah: A History of Arab Feminism
Directed by Feriel Ben Mahmoud
Women Make Movies, 2014
 
Nada’s Revolution
Directed by Claudia Lisboa
Women Make Movies, 2014
 
Two recent documentaries directed

Pages

Subscribe to Al Jadid RSS