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Arab
Cultural Notebooks
Arabic-Language Journals
MASHARIF
is a magazine published in Haifa and Jerusalem, founded and
edited until May 1996 by the late novelist Emile Habibi; currently,
it is edited by Siham Daoud. The May issue (1997), which coincided
with the first anniversary of the death of its founder, contained
substantial coverage of this event. The cover story, entitled
"A Year Since Departure," includes the text of a
will by Habibi and a dialogue he had with an Israeli writer
Youram Kaniuk. Friends and Arab intellectuals remembered him
through articles and poems: the "Unfinished Symphony,"
by Mohamad Banis; "The Tragedy of a Literature and People
in the Life, Literature, Thought of an Exceptional Personality,"
by Karim Mureweh; "From Life to Literature and From Literature
to Politics," by Mohamad Dakroub; "The Pessomoptimist
is a Superb Political Novel in Form and Content" by Ali
Al Rai. The late Egyptian author Latifa al-Zayyat was interviewed
in Masharif No. 12. The interview was conducted by Layla Naymeh;
in addition to the interview, the issue published a biographical
sketch, and an excerpt by al-Zayyat, "The Beautiful Quarrel."
In issue No. 6, Palestinian scholar and author Ihssan Abbas
recalls his memories of Haifa, the city where the magazine
is published. Masharif's No. 4, features "Prose Poem
and the New Arabic Poetics," by Hatim al-Sakr. Amoz Oz's
"The Traveller and the Serpent" also appears, translated
from the Hebrew by Jamil Ghonayem.
AL ADAB is a monthly Lebanese magazine, edited
by the Lebanese intellectual Suheil Idriss and managed by
his son, Samah Idriss, a writer and author. Experimentalism
in the the Arabic novel is the main focus of Volume 44, Nos
5, 6 (May 1997). The topics include "Experiemntalism
and the Collapse of Established Rules" by Mohammad al-Qadi;
"The Labyrinth of Language and the Mirror of the Novel"
by Sabri Hafez, and Mohammad Mu'tasim writes on "The
Department of the Text and the Woman Novel." Volume 44,
No. 7-8 (1997) continues its coverage of the Arabic novel,
where Faysal Darraj writes on "Legacy and Satirizing
the Museums of Nightmares;" Nazik al-A'raji on "Al
Walaha [Cigarette Lighter, a title of a novel by the Syrian
Hana Minah]: The Mask of the Other and the Mask of the Self;"
Mohammad Abou Izzat on "Three Faces From Baghdad: The
Autobiographical and the Fictious;" Nour al-Din Muhiqiq
on "The Echoes of Autobiography: The Presence of the
Prose Poem in the Novel." Volume 43, No. 12 (1996) is
dedicated to contemporary Saudi literature. The issue is rich
with poems, short stories, and reviews. Volume 43, no. 5-6
features Adonis'rebuttal to Al Adab and its editor Suheil
Idriss as well as a counter rebuttal by Idriss. Adonis figures
also in other contributions. The rebuttal and counter rebuttal
appears to have been resulted from the expulsion of Adonis
from the Arab Writers Union on the grounds that he met with
Israeli intellectuals and to have called for normalization
of relations with Israel, a charge he denies. Many noted Arab
intellectuals opposed the expulsion of Adonis, including the
late playwright Sadallah Wannous and the novelist Hanna Minah.
Mauritanian literature is featured in Al Adab's double-issue
Nos. 3-4 (1995). The editors wanted to introduce the Arabic-language
reader to new trends in this literature, rather unfamiliar
to large segments of Arab readers. Al Adab hosted a number
of Mauritania n authors and critics of different perspectives
and generations.
AL-BAHREIN AL-THAQFIYYA is a Bahrein based
Journal that covers general literary and art themes. Edited
by Abdallah Al Rahman Al Yatim. No. 1 (Spring 1997) features
a study of early Islamic architecture in Bahrein by Khalid
al Sindi and an introduction to fine arts of the Arabian Peninsula
and the Gulf by Ahmad Bakr. The Books section includes a review
of Arab Thought and Its Opposites by Mohamad Jabber Al Ansari
. The 1996 October issue interviews the French director Jean
Luje Ghodar (translated text). Issue No. 12 (1997) includes
a study of the organization of the Islamic city in Al Husba
[religious] books by Salim Al Susi, and a panel on "Culture
and Consumption."
AL THAQAFIYYA is a London-based monthly magazine
published by the Saudi Cultural Bureau, directed by the Saudi
Cultural Attache in Britain, Abdallah Mohamad al-Nasser. The
April (1997) issue features an interview with the Iraqi poet
Abed al-Wahab al-Bayati in which he warns against the prose
poem. The issue also includes a report on Arab immigrants
in Western European cities; Syrian poet Yasin Rifa'ieh recalls
his memories with Nizar Qabanni, another Syrian poet. Issue
No. 16 offers a variety of articles including Ghazi al-Qusaybi,
the Saudi Ambassador in Britain, "Literature and Politics;"
a feature on "The World Arab Encyclopedia;" and
Yasin Rifa'ieh's memories of the Syrian novelist Ghada al-Samaan;
and an article on "Feasts in Islam" by Mamduh al-Tantawi.
The issue covers a lecture by Britain's Prince Charles on
the spirituality of Islam and how it could salvage the West
from materialist culture.
NAZWA is an Oman-based quarterly which combines
diverse intellectual and literary contributions. In its Spring
issue, some of its diverse contributions included "The
Poetic Bond," by Seif Al Rahbi, and "The New Arabic
Poem," by Fakhri Saleh and an interview with Egyptian
critic Ahmad Abed Al Muti Hijjazi.
Al BAHEETHAT: Baheethat means woman researchers
in Arabic. But the reader need not rush to the conclusion
that Baheethat is a feminist publication dedicated exclusively
to women researchers and writers. The list of the contributors
to this annual publication is equally divided between women
and men. The magazine attempts, with great success, to transcend
gender on the topics. Published by the Lebanese Researchers
Group, Baheethat is the group's most important publication.
Although published in Lebanon, contributors come from more
than one Arab country. Every year the pages of Baheethat is
devoted to one central theme. The latest issue, Volume 3 (1997),
is devoted to "Research in Humanities in the Arab World."
The major theme is explored in four categories: (1) sample
studies on the status of research; contributors in this area
include, Mouna Fayad, Huda Qasatli, Wajeeh Kawtharani, Radwan
al-Sayyid, Rashid al- Daif, Dalal al-Bezri (the list of contributors
here and in other categories is selective); (2) research and
methods, with contributions from Wadah Sharara, Najla' Hamdan,
Burhan Ghalyoun, Hussayn Qubaysi; (3) contributing to "ideas
and opinions" are Jean Makdisi, Nada Mughyzil Nasr, and
Talal Atrissi; (4) a panel on books includes poet Abbas Baydoun,
Biyan Nuwayhid. This panel discussed the difficulties encountered
in relating to political and academic authorities, absence
of research institutions and declining academic standards.
AL MAJALA AL-ARABIYYA: Issue No. 226 (1996)
features an important study by Sheikh Hamad Al Jasir of the
Dutch Orientalist K. Snoke Horforneh's "Pages of Mecca's
History in the Nineteenth Century;" another study focuses
on alienation in Arabic poetry by Nasser al-Dakhil. The Nobel
Laureate Naguib Mahfouz is interviewed in the September (1996)
issue. Mahfouz talks about the role of public opinion, satellite
stations, science fiction, among many other topics. The same
issue offers a Kuwaiti novelist's rebuttal to Egyptian writer
Anis Mansour who argues that "woman is a secondary creature."
AL ARABI is published in Kuwait and edited
by Mohammad Al-Rumayhi. In an editorial published in the February
1997 issue, Al-Rumayhi revisits the conditions that led to
the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. The invasion, al-Rumayhi claims,
was the result of a darkened thought that expanded in different
forms into areas of Arab reason during the last decades, producing
a despotism represented best in the oppressive regime of Saddam
Hussein. The editor of Al Arabi raises an important question
in the July 1997 issue: what explains Muslim underdevelopment
and others' development. Other articles focus on objectification
and post-modernism by Abed al-Wahab al-Masiri; unknown stages
of the progress of the Syrian woman by Salma al-Quzbari; the
personality of the late novelist Mohamad Husayn Haykal examined
by Sameh Karim; the weakness of the story's art by Jabber
Asfour. The magazine's Panel Department discusses the emotions
of Arab nationalists and the rationality of the realists.
In this issue (December 1996), the noted Leftist Egyptian
intellectual Mohamad Amin al-Alem writes on philosophy that
requestions itself. The issue has a special section on the
late Egyptian journalist Ahmad Baha'Eddine, focusing on aspects
of his life, excerpts from his writing and contributions from
writers who knew him. In the Book section, Egyptian critic
Farida al-Nakash reviews the novel The Memory of the Body.
In the August 1996 issue, the reader is introduced to the
oil fires as depicted in the paintings of an American artist.
QANTARA is a French quarterly published in
Paris by the Arab World Institute. Setting its attention on
French readership, the publication's main concern remains
with Arab culture. The Spring 1997 issue is devoted to Palestine
and the question of identity. Addressing this issue is Salim
Tamari who explores the Palestinians living in the West Bank
and Gaza; as well as Rashid Khalidi on "The Formation
of Palestinain Identity, the Decisive Years, 1917-1923."
On another topic, Elias Khoury discusses the late Ghassan
Kanafani. Issue No. 19 sets a new direction away from an "orientalist"
and "academic" to a more competitive nature, something
attributed to the Lebanese scholar Francois Zabal, as reported
by the London-based Al Wasat weekly. The issue includes contributions
by Hassan Hamza on the Arab lexicographer Ibn Mansour (1232-1311)
and Boutrous Bustani (1819-1882), great Lebanese literary
figure, translator and lexicographer. Arab surrealism is discussed
by Abed al-Qader Jababi, language in Arabic cinema by the
Tunisian film critic Khamis al-Khayati.
UYUN is a bi-annually cultural magazine that
was launched in 1995, edited by the Iraqi poet Khalid al-Maali,
and published by Al Jamal Publishing House in Germany. The
first issue included an article by the German philosopher
Jurgen Habermas on his teacher the philosopher Theodore Adorno,
translated and commented on by Hussein al-Mawazi; Fadil al-Azzawi
explores various aspects of the 1960s in Iraq.
ALAMAAT is a quarterly published in Maknass-Morrocco.
Body and sign language is featured in Issue No. 4. Other topics
include "Theater and Islam" by Hassan Bahrawi who
reviews a 1941 book which "claims an established proof
of acting prohibition" in Islam.
AL IJTIHAD is a Beirut-based quarterly magazine
edited by Al-Fadel Shalaq and Radwan al-Sayyid. Issue No.
36 (Summer 1997) is dedicated to the topic of "Arab Economic
History: Modern Times." Shams Eddine al-Kaylani writes
on "Islam and Europe in the Sixteenth Century: War and
Trade;" Taghrid Beydoun on "Islamic Reformist Thought
in the Economy: The Example of Mohammad Abduh." Christinan-Islamic
relations is discussed in a special section of Issue No. 30
(1996): the journal's editors address Islamic-Christian relations;
"Islamic Thought and Religious Liberties" by Radwan
Al-Sayyid. Other contributions are "Ibn Rushd Between
Farah Antoun and Mohammad Abduh" by Michel Jiha; "Coptic
Church Between Conservatism and Modernization" by Milad
Hanna. In the Book Section, Turki al-Rabiou reviews Albert
Mansour's Destinty of Arab Christians and their Choice; Ahmad
Turmus reviews William Suleiman's Kalada's Christianity &
Islam in Egypt.
NUSUS is a London-based quarterly; its first
issue appeared in February 1995. The publication is the product
of a collective effort. Its editorial board consists of known
writers and critics like Fatima al-Muhsin, Abed al-Karim Kassad,
Zuhayer al-Jaza'iri. The first issue includes contributions
by Faleh Abed al-Jabbar on "Sociology of Bedouinism,"
and "Leader Worship" analyzed by Zuhair al-Jaza'iri.
DIRASAAT ARABIYYA is a monthly magazine published
in Beirut by Dar al-Talia. Vol. 33, Nos. 9 and 10 (1997) features
Aziz al-Azmah on "The Limits of Islamic Reformist Thought;
Mohmmad al-Masbahi, "The Other Face of Ibn Rushd's Modernism;"
Abed al-Hadi Abed al-Ruhman, "Between the Historical
and the Epistemological Break." In the January-February
1997 issue, Lebanon's reconstruction occasions special importance
but not at the expense of other topics. Mohammad Wakidi on
"The Constradictions of Development;" Fathi al-Maskini,
"Ibn Rushd and the General Usage of Reason;" Husni
Ayash, "Modernism and Post-Modernism and the Consequences
of these Ideas on Society, Family and School." Its double
issue Nos. 3-4 (1995) features "The State of Psychological
Medicine in the Arab World" by Mohammad Ahmad al-Nabulsi;
"How Did the Arabs Chronicle Their Scientific PastCOutcome
and Evaluation" by Salim Yafout; "Dividing Inheritance
and Social Reality: an Anthropological Study of Community
in Northern Jordan" by Mohammad Suleiman Shanak; "An
Enlightened Historical Reading of Ibn Khaldun's Muqadamah
[The Introduction]" by Salim Hamish; "Jean-Paul
Sartre and the Arab-Israeli Conflict" by Nour al-Din
al-Lamoushi.
ABAAD is published by the "Lebanese
Center for Research Studies in Beirut. The quarterly publication
is concerned with Lebanese and Arab intellectual questions.
Issue No. 6 (1997) explores class differences in Lebanon and
critically examines the social and economic policies of the
Lebanese government in the 1990s. The issue is introduced
by Paul Salem, General Director of the Lebanese Center For
Research Studies, who writes on "The Dimensions of Poverty
and Social and Economic Policies in Lebanon." The contributions
include Antoine Haddad on "Class Disparities: Measurement
and Social and Political Effects;" Butrus Labaki, "An
Economic Policy That Reconciles Between Requirements of Growth
and Social Justice;" Ghassan Dibeh, "The Social
and Developmental Dimension of Expenditure Policy;" Kamal
Hamdan, "The Policy of Wages and Revenues and Its Impact
in Determining Class Distinctions;" Fawaz Trabulsi, "The
Class Composition of the State After War;" Adib Nehmeh,
"The Policy of Social Security and its Impact on Wealth
Redistribution in Lebanon." Other articles include Adil
Daher on "The Arabs Facing the Cultural Aspects of Age."
Ghada al-Saman, the Syrian noted novelist, is interviewed
in the issue. Issue No. 2 (1995) has a special section on
the Lebanese economy and the reconstruction of the country.
The Panel Department of the publication has a special discussion
of Edward Said's Culture and Imperialism," with participation
by Ahmad Beydoun, George Deeb, and Ghalib Abou-Muslih. In
the third issue (1995), the nationalist movements in the Arab
world assume central focus. Lebanese historian Massoud Daher
writes on "The Modern Arab State and the Nationalist
Question;" Abed al-Ilah Balqaziz on "The Nationalist
Movement and the Challenge of Global Developments;" Ali
Daher on "The Image of the Other in Pan-Arab Movements;"
Ghassan Salameh on "Arab Nationalism: Death or Renewal?"
and Burhan Ghalyoun on "The End of the Nationalist State
Phase."
AL MUSTAKBAL AL ARABI is published by the
Center for Arab Unity Studies in Beirut. The Algerian crisis
is featured in issue No. 191 (1995). Among the topics discussed
are "Sociology of the Current Crisis in Algeria,"
"Arabization and Social Contradictions in Algeria,"
"National State and Civil Society in Algeria: An Attempt
at Reading the 1988 Uprising" and "Economic Dependency
and its Impact in Practical Decision-Making: A Study of the
Algerian Case."
SHAQA'IQ is published in Beirut and edited
by Sara Bint Abed al-Muhsin Ban Jalawi al-Saud. In issue No.
2 (1996), Munzir al-Badri writes on "The Personality
of the Moslem Woman. The issue includes a feature on Kurdish
women, compiled by by Mohammad Khayer Yusuf. The name of the
magazine, according to its editor, is borrowed from a Prophetic
hadith "Women are full sisters of men."
AL MANTALAQ is an intellectual magazine published
in Lebanon. The main focus of issue No. 111 (Spring 1995)
is "man in contemporary thought." Mohammad Hassan
al-Amin writes on "Man's Liberty Between al-Koran and
Contemporary Thought." The Panel Department of the publication
centers on the issue of "Toward Contemporary Understanding
of Ijtihad." Participating in the panel are Sheikh Mohammad
Shamseddine, Mohammad Hussein Fadlalallah, and Hassan Jabber.
AL NAHJ is a Damascus-based intellectual
and political journal published by the Center for Research
and Socialist Studies in the Arab world. In issue No. 3 (Spring
1995), the editors debate the American Naom Chomsky under
the title, "Chomsky Politically." Other articles
include "Contemporary Islamic Movements and the Question
of Dependency" by Khudr Zakariyya.
EL-JADEED JOURNAL OF BOOKS & LIBRARIES
is published by the Amman-based Dar Al Shuruq Lil Tawzieh
wa al-Nashr, edited by Fathi Al-Biss. Issue No. 12 features
a special section on the noted novelist Abed Al-Monhem Munif,
consisting of an interview conducted by Nima Khaled, and five
essays by different authors, including the American Roger
Allen. All contributions deal with the Saudi-born and the
Syrian-based Al Munif as well as with the rich and prolific
literature he produced. In previous issues, El-Jadeed featured
similar sections on noted literary figures like Ihssan Abbas,
Zaki Najib Mahmoud, Edward Said, Abed Al Wahab Al Bayati,
Fadwa and Ibrahim Toukan, Hanna Minah, Jabra Ibrahim Jabra,
and others. This quarterly has a rich Books section, consisting
of a synopsis of new Arabic titles and feature reviews. This
issue features reviews of Benjamin Natenyahu "s Place
Under the Sun, Tharwat Akasha's Culture and Politics. Also,
the issue includes a study of the Literature of Arab Jews,
focusing, among others, on Joyce Mansour and Albert Mimeh.
AL FAYSAL is a monthly cultural magazine
published in Saudi Arabia. Issue No. 239 has a special section
on translation, accompanied by a supplement-book on the same
topic. The section offers comprehensive discussion of translation,
accounting for a distinction between two concepts, "translation"
and "Arabization" as well as the scientific and
intellectual principles used in translation. The Supplement
on translation covers the translation in Islamic culture and
its impact on literature and sciences. Included are (1) "The
Islamic State and the Translation of the Sciences," by
Hassan Zazah; (2) translation from the Arabic on the disciplines
of letters and humanities by Al Taher Ahmad Maki; (3) translation
from Arabic in the scientific field and its impact on Western
culture by Mohammad Ismail al-Sini.
AL QAHIRA is a magazine edited by the Egyptian
noted critic Ghali Shukri. This magazine has recently undergone
changes that caused a three-months delay of the current issue
(Summer 1997). In that issue, Mohammad Awadah writes on "Democracy
in Egypt" and Sayid Yasin on "The Place of the Arab
Nation from the Third Wave." Included also is an interview
with the novelist Abed al-Monhem Munif and an article by Jacques
Daridda, translated from the French by Ahmad Othman.
AL HIKMA is a Lebanese magazine. In the April
1997 issue, scores of intellectuals pay tribute to Kamal Yusif
al-Hajj, a late Lebanese philosophy professor. The issue offers
diverse topics but all centering on the Kamal Yusuf al-Hajj
as a person and intellectual. Ghassan al-Khalid writes on
al-Hajj "In the Memory of Lebanon and Arabism;"
Simon Awad on "The Lebanese Personality in the Thought
of Kamal al-Hajj;" Father Joseph Qazi, "Sectarianism
in the Thought of Kamal al-Hajj;" Nassif Qazi,"Philosophy
and Concepts for Kamal al-Hajj;" Antoine Mukarzil, "Kamal
al-Hajj and Lebanese Philosophy."
AL HADATHA is a cultural quarterly concerned
with issues of popular tradition and modernism, edited by
Farhan Salih. In issue Nos. 11-12 (1995), Khaldun al-Nakib
writes on "History and Societal Culture;" Abdallah
al-Alayeli on "The Future of Arabic Language;" Toufic
al-Basha on protecting artistic and literary copyrights; and
Ahmad al-Amin on the theater of Ziad al-Rahbanni. The double
issue Nos. 7-8 (Spring 1995) features an interesting study
of "Popular Traditions in Lebanese Funerals" by
Yusu Muwanis. Another study is by Farouk Saad, "The Problem
of Compiling and Recording Arab Popular Tradition."
AL-THAQAFA AL-ARABIYYA is a quarterly magazine
published by "The Arab Cultural Association" in
Beirut. The first issue (Summer 1997) features many articles
that cover diverse topics, including "The State of Arab
Culture and its Future" by George Corm; and "The
Renewal of Arab Political Thought" by Paul Salem.
Al-Karmil had ceased publication in 1993,
but this highly esteemed cultural journal has made a comeback.
Its chief editor remains the noted Palestinian poet Mahmoud
Darwish; while it was published in Cyprus before 1993, the
journal is currently published in Ramallah, Palestine. However,
the level of intellectual production continues to be impressive
in its scope. This is one of the only journals where one can
find translations of writers like Dereck Walcott and many
other writers in French and English. At the same time, however
each issue includes a diversity of contributions. Issue no.
51 (Spring 1997, 335 pages) has a special section on Post
Modernism, including translations of Fredrick Jameson, Samir
Amin and Ihab Hassan. This issue features the last play written
the recently deceased Syrian playwright, Saadallah Wanous.
Saadi Yusif, the Iraqi poet, writes about Australian novelist
and poet David Maalouf and includes some of his translations.
The Moroccan writer, Abdallah Balqaziz, writes an essay about
Intellectual Terrorism. Each issue of al-Karmil includes a
translations from the Hebrew about Israeli society. Issue
no. 50 (Winter 1997, 299 pages) includes a dazzling array
of articles, translations, and book reviews: Subhi Haddidi
writes an article about Franz Fanon; Faisal Darraj, "Palestinian
Cultural Identity;" Kadhim Jihad, "From Identity
to DifféranceCThe Politics of Derrida;" Nasr Hamed
Abu Zeid, "A Literary Reading of the QuranCPast and Present
Problems." This issue also includes poetry from Salim
Barakat and the recent Nobel Prize winner, Wislawa Szymborska.
The Palestinian writer Fadwa Tuqan was interviewed by Liana
Badr and Israeli poet A. B. Yehushawa.
AL MADA is a Damascus based magazine, edited
by Fakhri Karim, who also edits al-Nahj magazine. The first
issue came out in 1993, promising to offer an extensive analysis
of Arab culture. Saadi Youssef, who was then the editor, asserted
in an editorial comment that al-Mada will strive to offer
democracy to Arab cultureCa kind of democracy that has never
existed since "Napoleon arrived with his canons and printers."
Dar al-Mada is also an up and coming publishing house. Recently,
Adonis, chose to publish his collected poems with Dar al-Mada.
Each issue since the first always begins with two full page
black and white photographs. The two main photographers, Qatiba
al-Janabi and Mahmud Diab produce photographs that tell stories.
The major theme explored in issue No. 15 (1997) is the strong
historical presence in the Arab novel, particularly the Syrian.
The issue begins with a poignant and melancholy photograph
of Sabra and Shatilla. The materials for this theme is prepared
by Suzanne Zaza. It includes contributions by Shawqi Badr
Yusuf, "The Experiemental Novel of Edward Al Kharat;"
Amin Salih, "Women and Pornography;" Zabia Khamis,
"Sound and Meaning: The Body and Soul in the Memory of
Past Arab Criticism;" and Suad Jarus writes on the famous
Syrian artist Fatih al-Mudarass. Michael Ondaajte's English
Patient is excerpeted in the same issue. The book review section
is quite helpful as it includes many books from different
publishing houses. Issue No. 14 (1996) included a section
on the relationship between modernity and poetry. The poetry
and short story section includes many seasoned and fresh writers
such as Saadi Youssef and Mamduh Adwan's poetry and Taghrid
Ghadban and Osama Isber's short stories. Besides book reviews,
al-Mada includes a critical geographical essays, articles
on European and Arab cinema, reports from different regions,
in addition to reviews of fine art in each issue.
AL TARIK Features Saadallah Wannous, Samir Amin, Mohammad
Amin Al Alim, and Others
AL TARIK is an intellectual Lebanese bi-monthly
journal, edited by Mohammad Dakroub. In the wake of his death
few months ago, issue No. 3 (1997) features a lengthy unpublished
interview with the Syrian playwright Saadallah Wannous, conducted
three years ago by the Syrian writer Mary Elias. The same
issue devotes a special section to "The Woman's Journey
into the Lebanese Theater," edited by Watfa Hamadeh,
with participations by Nidal al-Ashkar, Siham Nasser, Latifa
Multaka, Hannan al-Hajj Ali, and Randa Asmar. Al Tarik issue
No. 2 (March-April, 1997 ) celebrates Egyptian Intellectual
Mahmoud Amin al-Alim. The issue abounds with articles celebrating
the Egyptian intellectual as an individual and author. Among
the issue's contributors are Mohammad Sayid Ahmad, Rifaat
al- Said, Maher al-Shariff, and Mohamad Dakroub, who introduces
the section on al-Alim. Hussein Mureweh, noted Lebanese intellectual,
is remembered by As'ad Diab, Lebanese University President.
It is the tenth year anniversary of the assassination. The
issue remembers Sheikh Abdallah al-Alayeli as the most important
contemporary Arab lexicographer. The question of Enlightnment
between religious reform and political Islam is discussed
in some length in issue No. 1 (January-February, 1997). Joining
this discussion is a group of writers and intellectuals with
strong credentials on the subject. Syrian theorist Tayeb Tazini
writes "Between Modern Religious Reform and EnlightnmentCScope
and Problematics;" Yusuf Salameh, "Religious Reform
and the Return to Arab Philosophization;" Maher al-Shariff,
"Between Religious Reform and Political Islam."
Under the sub-theme of "Islamic Reformism and Secularism,"
Mohammad Jamal Barout writes on "The Possibilities of
Islamic Secularism;" Wajeeh Kawtharani, "Arab Enlightnment
Projects Between Yesterday and Today;" Karim Mureweh,
"From the Proposal of Religious State to Separating Religion
from State." In the literary criticism department, Rafif
Rida Sidawi wr ites on "The Changes in the Concept of
Gender and Its Meanings in Some Arab Novels." The Syrian
novelist Hana Minah is the major topic of issue No. 6 (November-December,
1996). Suheil Idriss writes on "Hana Minah and the Novel;"
Karim Mureweh, "Hana Minah the Activist Nvelist;"
Yumna al-Id, "The Novelist Autobiography and the Dual
Function." Mohamad Dakroub, Al-Tarik's editor, remembers
the literary legacy of the late Latifa al-Zayyat and Baland
al-Haydari in issue No. 5 (September-October, 1996). The role
of Lebanese intellectuals during and after the civil war,
a reading of the poetry of Baland al-Haydari, and a special
section on three Arab Israeli writers are offered in issue
No. 3 (May-July, 1996). Mahmoud Haydar writes on "The
Intellectuals and the Post-War Culture in Lebanon." Among
those remembering Habibi are Faysal Daraj who writes on "Emile
Habibi: The Tragedy of the Divided man;" and Abed al-Monhem
Munif, "Lost by Literature...Was He Won by Politics?"
Samir Amin, the noted Egyptian economist and theorist, is
the main focus of issue No. 2 (March-April, 1996). Fahmieh
Sharaff Eddine reads "Samir Amin's Theoretical System;"
Sana' Abou-Shakra, "Preliminary Questions on Samir Amin's
Propositions;" Kamil Dagher, "The Nation and the
Arab Nation in the Thinking of Samir Amin." Sadallah
Wannous, prior to his death, contributions examined by a host
of writers in issue No. 1 (Janury-February, 1996). In addition
to a lengthy interview wiuth Mary Elias, the issue publishes
contributions by Abed al-Monhem Munif; Yumna al-Id, and Mohammad
Dakroub. To Subscribe, write to Al Tarik, Beirut, P.O. B.P.
9120, Lebanon
ABWAB is published by Dar Al Saqi, a London
and Beirut based publishing house. Issue No. 13 (1997) features
articles by Nadia Sadeq al-Ali, translated from the English,
by Ahmad Nahed, on "Introduction to Post-Modernism;"
Fatima al-Muhsin on the exiled Iraqi novel between home and
diaspora; Mohammad al-Haddad, "Three Studies of Al-Afghani;"
Mouhammad Hafez Yacoub, "Democracy and Civil Society;"
Abed al-Husayn Shabaan, "Tolerance and Arab Elites."
A panel about art and exile, held in Denmark is covered in
issue No. 12 (1997). Participants in the panel included Kanaan
Makieh, Shaheen Mirali, Walid Sitti, and May Ghoussoub. Other
important subjects have made their way into the issue as well:
Frederick Maatouk writes on "Arab Internal Wars;"
Ali al-Sarraff, "The Leftist Slogan as a Source of Mythology
in Arab Politics;" Ellis Goldberg, "Prostitution,
Preaching, and Egyptian Political Entity;" George Tarabishi,
"The Invention of Europe;" Pierre Abi Saab, "Four
Experiements from the Tunisian Avant Guarde Theater."
Issue No. 11 (Winter 1997) features a wide range of topics.
Adding to what may be called the social psychological literature
of the Lebanese Civil War is Izzat Sharara's, "Lebanese
Woman and Her Psychological Health." The issue includes
other contributions: "Authority and Sovereignty and the
Question of Democracy," by Saleh Bashir; "The Question
of Humanist Philosophy in the Islamic Midst," by Mohammad
Arkon. The Lebanese Civil War is evident in two other contributions:
the unity of the Lebanese identity Hassan Qubayysi, and a
diary by a displaced Lebanese female student by the Lebanese
sociologist Waddah Sharara. Ethiopian Jews, disparagingly
referred to as Falasha are examined in Issue No. 9 by Mohammad
Hafez Yaccoub's "Mirror of the Civilization, Image of
the Primitive;" "The Phenomenon of Scientific Explanation
of the Koran" by Abed al-Basset Mardas; "Democracy,
Nationalism and Minorities" by George Tarabishi. In Issue
No. 8, Marlene Nasr writes on the "Stranger in Our Relationship
and Language," a study based on field research of ordinary
Lebanese of all sects, ages, and geographical and social affiliations.
The Iraqi dissident Kanaan Makieh (Formerly Samir Al-Khalil)
writes on "Despotism and the Memory of Cities."
Also, George Tarabishi reviews Emanuel Sifan's "Arab
Political Myths." One interesting article by Saleh Abed
al-Latif is on the life of the author and traveller Izabelle
Irhart who embraced Islam while living disguised as a man;
she died in Algeria. An intimate and friendly portrait of
Adonis is offered by Hashem Shafiq. In issue No. 4 (1995),
Kanaan Makieh writes on "Ta'sis al Tasamuh ala al Turath
[Being Tolerant on Heritage];" Aziz al-Azmah on "Irrationality
in Modern and Contemporary Thought." The issue includes
a review by George Tarabishi of Mohammad Arkon's Islam, Europe,
the West: Rihanaat al Mana wa iradaat al haymana [The Stakes
of the Meaning and the Will to Domination]." To Subscribe,
please write to Al Saqi Books,26 Westbourne Grove, London
W2 5R H
These notes on Arabic-language journals constitute a major
part of a longer section which appeared in Al Jadid, Vol.
4, no. 20 (Summer 1997)
Copyright © 1997 by Al Jadid
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