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Woman as nation - Culture - Al-Ahram Weekly
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INTERVIEW: On the centenary of Master Mohamed Hassanein Heikal s birth: Mrs Heikal speaks to Al-Ahram - Society - Egypt
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Barra and Zaman: How The Mummy reveals a nostalgia for Egypt s lost past
Youssef Rakha s latest book re-examines Shadi Abdel Salam s 1969 classic The Mummy from a timely and personal perspective
Set in 1881, The Mummy follows the discovery of a hoard of dozens of mummies, including their burial treasures known as the Royal Cache in Luxor (Alamy) By Published date: 13 February 2021 08:24 UTC | Last update: 1 month 3 weeks ago
The first thing I tell writer Youssef Rakha when he picks up the phone, him in Cairo, me in Beirut, is: I wish yours was the kind of reading I had been assigned while I was studying media and culture 15 years ago. We talk about how academia can ruin your love for the very subject you had been drawn to - and I thank him for managing to achieve the opposite with his essay.
The Arab world after the ‘Spring of 2011’
To label political upheaval of early 2011 as the “Arab Spring” turned out to be the wrong metaphor for the Arab world
The writer is a former caretaker finance minister and served as vice-president at the World Bank
In 2021, the youth in the Middle East will be observing the tenth anniversary of what came to be called the “Arab Spring of 2011”. That was when tens of thousands of young people gathered in public squares of the region demanding to play a role in the way they were governed. The immediate inspiration behind the expression of their discontent was the self-immolation of Muhammad Bouazizi who, haunted by the officialdom of Tunis, the capital of Tunisia, set himself on fire. “How do you expect me to make a living? he shouted before dousing himself with petrol in front of the governor’s office. His protest was aimed at official corruption. Local officials had confiscated his fruit cart because he did not have the lic
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