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Algeria: Echoes of a million martyrs

On my second day in Algiers, my friend, Laeed Zaghlami, a Professor of Information and Communication at the University Of Algiers in Algeria took me on a sightseeing of the quaint and picturesque Algerian capital. From my Sofitel Hotel abode on Rue Hassiba Ben Bouali, Professor Zaghlami nosed his car into the Boulevard Hasselbard passed

Naguib Mahfouz, the Narrator and the Artist

We are not exaggerating when we emphasize the exceptional role that the great novelist Naguib Mahfouz played and influenced in contemporary Arab culture; a role that transcended the boundaries of literary narration to the spaces of the arts that touched them. If cinema is the most important and most famous of these arts, then I am writing on

Enclosed Land Between Hans Jauss and Wolfgang Iser (Part Two)

We review here: Headings Title of the work - A work that is devoid of dedication and introduction, as it plunges directly into it due to its significance after all these years. The title "Enclosed Land" is mentioned in the eleventh story, a term taken from a Chinese general who lived between the 5th and 6th centuries BC. It

Egypt was, and so was history.. Isn’t it deserving?!

Egypt’s land was never uninhabited. When humans knew the life of caves and deserts in the Old Stone Age, they lived on the land of Egypt. As the rains decreased and drought prevailed, they descended to the Nile Valley, finding a place and another source for their basic human needs. Air alone couldn't sustain life. They understood

Egypt was, and so was history.. Isn’t it deserving?!

Egypt’s land was never uninhabited. When humans knew the life of caves and deserts in the Old Stone Age, they lived on the land of Egypt. As the rains decreased and drought prevailed, they descended to the Nile Valley, finding a place and another source for their basic human needs. Air alone couldn't sustain life. They understood