Tadween Roundup: News and Analysis in Publishing and Academia from the Arab World
News and stories with a focus on the publishing industry, education, and technology from across the Arab world.
News and stories with a focus on the publishing industry, education, and technology from across the Arab world.
Tadween recently interviewed David Hirsch, librarian for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of California, Los Angles, about the Tahrir Documents, a project which collected and translated material from the protests at Tahrir Square in Cairo. This interview is part of Tadween’s new campaign to highlight the role of universities in knowledge production and preservation.
News and stories with a focus on the publishing industry, education, and technology from across the Arab world.
News and stories with a focus on the publishing industry, education, and technology from across the Arab world.
By Elliott Colla
Mona Prince, Revolution is My Name. Cairo: n.p., 2012.
Reading, ’Riting, Revolution
Reading Egyptian literature this week might seem odd. What does literature—even literature about revolution—have to tell us about this particular moment? After all, revolutions are not stories. They are not poems. Revolutions are not texts nor are they primarily textual in nature. Revolutions are events. They are projects and processes, made and sustained by people insisting on living lives of dignity.
By Ursula Lindsey
CAIRO–In an oft-cited reference, the UN-sponsored Arab Human Development Report painted a bleak picture in 2003 of the Arab cultural and academic landscape here. It described translation in Arab countries as “chaotic and static” and noted that “the aggregate total of translated books [into Arabic] from the Al-Ma’moon era to the present day amounts to 10,000 books – equivalent to what Spain translates in a single year.”
News and stories with a focus on the publishing industry, education, and technology from across the Arab world.
News and stories with a focus on the publishing industry, education, and technology from across the Arab world.