Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i CMES Modern Middle East Literatures in Translation-serien

Filter
Filter
Sorter etterSorter Serierekkefølge
  • av Mohammad Abdul-Wali
    176,-

    The first full-length work of the distinguished Yemeni writer Mohammad Abdul-Wali to appear in English

  • av Nazli Eray
    228,-

    The Black Rose of Halfeti opens with a letter delivered at midnight in Ankara, Turkey. In this letter, an elderly doctor who has begun to experience the first signs of dementia professes his love and desire for a relationship with the narrator, a woman in middle age beginning to contemplate her own mortality. From there, the novel moves between Mardin, Izmir, and Ankara; the past and the present; and the real and the imagined as the narrator seeks to know the doctor both in his prime and in his struggle to hold senility at bay. In these dreamlike landscapes, the author effortlessly introduces King Darius, the Spanish director Luis Buñuel, the actress Silvia Pinal, and the archetypal dream woman as the narrator's guides in her efforts to understand the human psyche.Nazli Eray has established herself as a master of magical realism, the perfect tool to bring to life this poignant meditation on love, aging, and the role of memory. And, as in her earlier novels, she paints vivid images of the urban landscapes of Turkey, capturing both the present and the past.

  • av Badriah Albeshr
    228,-

  • - Selected Poems of Orit Gidali
    av Orit Gidali
    180,-

    In this English-Hebrew bilingual volume by Israeli poet Orit Gidali, domestic dramas become the stage on which the region¿s political impasses play out in individual lives.

  • - A Tale of a Boyhood in Mecca
    av Hamza Bogary
    176,-

    Describes a bygone way of life that has irreversibly disappeared. This title deals with various aspects of Arabian culture, including education, pilgrimages, styles of clothing, slavery, public executions, the status of women, and religion.

  • av Ahmed Toufiq
    390,-

    Morocco's Minister of Religious Affairs and Endowments explores the abuse of power and its effects in this award-winning novel that opens a fascinating window into Amazigh (Berber) culture.

  • - An Anthology of Israeli War Poetry
     
    215,-

    Explores the significance and value of Hebrew poetry written in response to the wars in which Israel was involved. This title also explores in an introductory essay the issue of whether poetry written with a defined political message and in the context of certain historical events can function adequately on the aesthetic level.

  • av Ibtihal Salem
    215,-

    Offers a forum for studying both everyday life in Egypt and literary experimentation in the Middle East. This book both records and evoke a literary ferment in Egypt. It deals honors traditional folktales, even as it deals with contemporary problems from class and economic perspectives.

  • - And Other Stories
    av Walid Ikhlassi
    176,-

    Attempts to evoke the individual's struggle for dignity and significance in the Syrian city of Aleppo during the French mandate of the forties and fifties. This book parallels the struggle of the nation for self-definition and provides insights into the civil society of Syria.

  • - Between Baghdad and London
    av Haifa Zangana
    228,-

    A novel by a Kurdish-Iraqi writer that gives voice to contemporary Iraqi women's experiences of political repression, violence, exile, and the yearning for peace.

  • av Ataol Behramoglu
    215,-

    An excellent example of the intense emotional quality of Behramoglu's work

  • av Fatna El Bouih
    176,-

    Tells the true story of one woman's struggle to secure political prisoners' rights and defend herself against an unjust imprisonment.This work condemns the lack of laws to protect prisoners' basic human rights.

  • av Leila Abouzeid
    151,-

    New stories about modern Morocco and its people by critically acclaimed author Leila Abouzeid.

  • av Samir Tahhan
    215,-

    Features folktales from old men sitting outside their houses in Aleppo, drinking tea.

  • - An Arab Tale
    av Radwa Ashour
    176,-

    Amina, a baker in sultan's palace, awaits her son's return from a voyage at sea, fearful that the sea has claimed Said. Said begins to make his way home witnessing British colonial oppression along the way. When Said returns and learns the island's slave population is planning a revolt against sultan's tyrannical rule, he and Amina are drawn in.

  • - The Memoir of a Modern Moroccan Woman
    av Leila Abouzeid
    215,-

    Brings to life the interlocking dramas of family ties and political conflict. Against a background of Morocco's struggle for independence from French colonial rule, this book charts the development of personal relationships, between generations as well as between husbands and wives.

  • av Nazli Eray
    176,-

    Presents a translation of Turkish author Nazli Eray's "Orphee". This work is a rewriting of the myth from the perspective of Eurydice, the wife of Orpheus. Set in junta-ruled Turkey of the 1980s, it resonates with references to the film "Last Tango in Paris", and evolves as a mystery story.

  • av Mahmoud Saeed
    346,-

    Masterfully bringing the sights and sounds of Iraq to life, this wise, wry tale by a prominent and prolific Iraqi novelist chronicles an affluent Iraqi family's attempt to maintain a sense of normality during the Iran-Iraq war.

  • av Ibrahim Al-Koni
    228,-

    The concluding volume of Ibrahim al-Koni's Oasis trilogy, begun in New Waw, Saharan Oasis and The Puppet, The Scarecrow completes a tale of greed and corruption that reveals the hollowness of tyrants.

  • - Sex Talk in Beirut and Berlin
    av Rashid al-Daif
    319,-

    In 2003, Lebanese writer Rashid al-Daif spent several weeks in Germany as part of the "West-East Divan" program, a cultural exchange effort meant to improve mutual awareness of German and Middle Eastern cultures. He was paired with German author Joachim Helfer, who then returned the visit to al-Daif in Lebanon. Following their time together, al-Daif published in Arabic a literary reportage of his encounter with Helfer in which he focuses on the German writer's homosexuality. His frank observations have been variously read as trenchant, naïve, or offensive. In response, Helfer provided an equally frank point-by-point riposte to al-Daif's text. Together these writers offer a rare exploration of attitudes toward sex, love, and gender across cultural lines. By stretching the limits of both fiction and essay, they highlight the importance of literary sensitivity in understanding the Other.Rashid al-Daif's "novelized biography" and Joachim Helfer's commentary appear for the first time in English translation in What Makes a Man? Sex Talk in Beirut and Berlin. Also included in this volume are essays by specialists in Arabic and German literature that shed light on the discourse around sex between these two authors from different cultural contexts.

  • av Ibrahim Al-Koni
    228,-

    By the award-winning author of The Puppet, this novel weaves myth and contemporary life into a tale of a desert community whose nomadic way of life is irrevocably changed by an unpredictable turn of events.

  • av Rashid al-Daif
    215,-

  • av Ibrahim Al-Koni
    230,-

    This mythic tale of greed and political corruption by award-winning novelist Ibrahim al-Koni tells a gripping, expertly crafted story of bloody betrayal and revenge inspired by gold lust and an ancient love affair.

  • - Revised Edition
    av Leila Abouzeid
    180,-

    Zahra has just returned to her hometown after being divorced by her husband for being too traditional and unable to keep up with his modern way of life. Having devoted herself to the creation of independent Morocco, she had expected to share the fruits of independence with him, but instead she finds herself cast out into a strange world.

  • av Rashid al-Daif
    176,-

    Deals with the Lebanese civil war of the 1970s in a poetic style. This book focuses on the deranged, destabilized, and, confused state of mind created by living on the scene through a lengthy war. It is filled with details that transcend the narcissism of the main character, while giving clues to the culture of the time.

  • av Ahmad Mahmoud
    411,-

    This coming-of-age story set in southwestern Iran during the nationalization of the oil industry in 1951 is the first English translation of the work of a prominent Iranian novelist who helped set the stage for today's struggle for democracy in Iran.

  • - A Memoir
    av Siham Tergeman
    215,-

    A personal account of a Syrian woman's youth in Damascus in the 1940s.

  • - An Iraqi Woman's Tales of Alienation
    av Daisy Al-Amir
    223,-

Gjør som tusenvis av andre bokelskere

Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev og få rabatter og inspirasjon til din neste leseopplevelse.