The Roundup: News and Analysis in Publishing/Academia from the Arab World

The Roundup: News and Analysis in Publishing/Academia from the Arab World

The Roundup: News and Analysis in Publishing/Academia from the Arab World

By : Tadween Editors

[The following is roundup of the latest news and analysis from the publishing world that relates to pedagogy and knowledge production. It was originally published on Tadween Publishing`s blog. For more updates, follow Tadween Publishing on Facebook and Twitter.]

News and stories with a focus on the publishing industry, education, and technology from across the Arab world.

Gaza’s Academics Face Censorship in Classroom
By Asmaa Al-Ghoul (Al-Monitor)

"Previously, the Israeli security department used to monitor academic freedoms, while today the Palestinian security apparatus [has taken on this role]," Dr. Atef Abu Seif, an academic in Gaza, told Al-Monitor. According to the article, academic freedom in Gaza is in danger of being encroached upon by politics and the Hamas-led government, as some academics and university professors have been restricted of saying certain words in classrooms over fear of being too provocative. It is not only professors who are being restricted, however, as students are also being monitored. Former student Muhannad Abdul Bari told Al-Monitor that he was called into his university’s security department and told that his activities were being monitored after comments he made in a classroom discussion about “the Islamic state.”

The Arab World’s Tangled Linguistic Landscape
Ursula Lindsey (Al-Fanar)

Language is an integral part of education, but how language is interwoven with education in the Arab world is becoming complicated. Classical Arabic, fusha, is being disregarded as the main platform for learning, and is being replaced by local Arabic dialects or sometimes English. Ursula Lindsey writes that more and more students are becoming less familiar with classical Arabic and their ability to write and comprehend the language is in a downward spiral. This partially has to do with the way it is taught and the poor quality of education systems across the Arab world. In addition, with more students attending foreign language schools or being taught in English, there is also fear that the classic Arabic language is in danger of being jeopardized amongst Arab youth.

Feast of the written word in UAE
By Cheryl Robertson (Gulf News)

The Abu Dhabi International Book Fair hosts its twenty-third gathering of authors, poets, and musicians to celebrate culture, literature, and traditions of the GCC countries. More than 500,000 titles from the Gulf region will be on display, and the exhibition expects a significant growth in attendance and will accommodate exhibitors from over fifty countries that will feature a range of thirty different languages. ADIBF director Jumaa Al Qubaisi told Gulf News that the event is becoming one of the fastest growing publishing events in the region. The exhibit will feature panel discussions, readings, talks, and performances by authors and literary pioneers from the Middle East and beyond.

Professor advocates higher profile for Arab science
By John Henzell (The National)

Iraqi-born British academic Jim Al-Khalili, author of the book Pathfinders: The Golden Age of Arabic Science, will speak at the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair with the aim of reminding audiences and the world of the Arab world’s history and its pioneers in scientific research and knowledge production. “It always saddens me when I am reminded that so many in the Arab world, and the wider Islamic world, are ignorant of the scientific achievements of their ancestors a millennium ago,” Al-Khalili told The National. Al-Khalili claims that Abu Dhabi may become the new mantel for the Arab publishing world, due to its growing significance as an international center, replacing what Cairo and Beirut used to be.

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NEWTON in Focus: Egypt

This week we highlight various NEWTON texts relevant to the study of Egypt. The authors of these texts write from a wide range of perspectives and approach questions with which Egypt has grappled, not only in the wake of Tahrir, but throughout its modern existence. We encourage you to integrate these texts into your curricula in the coming semesters.

If you wish to recommend a book or peer-reviewed article for a feature in NEWTON—whether on Egypt or on any other topics relevant to the region—please email us at reviews@jadaliyya.com. To stay up to date with ongoing discussions by scholars and instructors in the field, sign up for Jadaliyya’s Pedagogy Section

Gilbert Achcar, “Eichmann in Cairo: The Eichmann Affair in Nasser`s Egypt.”

Nezar AlSayyad, Cairo: Histories of a City

Jason Brownlee, Democracy Prevention: The Politics of the US-Egyptian Alliance

Ziad Fahmy, Ordinary Egyptians: Creating the Modern Nation through Popular Culture

James L. Gelvin, The Modern Middle East: A History, Third Edition

Paolo Gerbaudo, Tweets and the Streets: Social Media and Contemporary Activism

Pascale Ghazaleh, editor, Held in Trust: Waqf in the Islamic World

Bassam Haddad, Rosie Bsheer, and Ziad Abu-Rish, editors, The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings: End of an Old Order?

Mervat F. Hatem, Literature, Gender, and Nation-Building in Nineteenth-Century Egypt: The Life and Works of `A’sha Taymur

Nelly Hanna, Artisan Entrepreneurs in Cairo and Early Modern Capitalism (1600 1800)

Linda Herrera, “Youth and Citizenship in the Digital Age: A View from Egypt.”

Linda Herrera and Asef Bayat, editors, Being Young and Muslim: New Cultural Politics in the Global South and North

Wilson Chacko Jacob, Working Out Egypt: Effendi Masculinity and Subject Formation in Colonial Modernity, 1870–1940

Karima Khalil, editor, Messages from Tahrir

Marwan M. Kraidy, “The Revolutionary Body Politic: Preliminary Thoughts on a Neglected Medium in the Arab Uprisings”

Alan Mikhail, Nature and Empire in Ottoman Egypt: An Environmental History

Roger Owen, The Rise and Fall of Arab Presidents for Life

Paul Sedra, From Mission to Modernity: Evangelicals, Reformers and Education in Nineteenth Century Egypt

Mohammad Salama and Rachel Friedman, “Locating the Secular in Sayyid Qutb"

Jeannie Sowers, Environmental Politics in Egypt: Activists, Experts, and the State

Joshua Stacher, Adaptable Autocrats: Regime Power in Egypt and Syria