Culture

Rabih Abou-Khalil (photo: Levinson Concerts) Rabih Abou-Khalil and his new album ''Hungry People''

Hunger, Not Just for Food

After devoting himself to femininity with "Songs for Sad Women" and to Atlantic melancholy with "Em Português", it was probably inevitable that his new work would finally mirror current events in the MENA region. Oud master Rabih Abou-Khalil explains to Stefan Franzen how he combines a plastic chicken, fish & chips and a bankers' banquet into a musical feast with political-surreal features More »


Jobbour Douaihy (photo: Giangiacomo Feltrinelli Editore) Jabbour Douaihy's Novel ''June Rain''

Forgetting by State Decree

Jabbour Douaihy's new novel revolves around the trauma of Lebanon's civil war. The story deals with the power of recollection, the effects of history, and how one must constantly affirm one's own past anew. Andreas Pflitsch has read "June Rain" for Qantara.de More »


Youssef Ziedan (photo: Susanne Schande) Interview with Youssef Ziedan

Revolution Means Breaking with Authority

Youssef Ziedan is a bestselling Egyptian author, philosopher and scholar of history. He is also director of the Manuscript Division of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, the New Library of Alexandria. In this interview with Susanne Schanda, he says that being revolutionary is also about asking questions of authority More »


Fazil Say (photo: picture-alliance/Sven Simon) Turkish Pianist and Composer Fazil Say

Up in Court for Insulting Islam

Last week, the court case against the celebrated Turkish pianist and composer Fazil Say began in Istanbul. Say faces charges of spreading anti-Islamic comments via Twitter. Supporters and critics alike say that the case highlights Turkey's shortcomings in terms of freedom of expression. Thomas Seibert has the details More »


Saud bin Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, the foreign minister of Saudi Arabia (photo: Reuters) Saudi Prize for Translations

Big Words, Big Prize-Money

In Berlin, Saudi emissaries have presented the world's largest prize for translation. But the show and the obsequious ritual that go with the prize seem to be more important than anything else: one previous winner has only received a fraction of the prize-money he was promised. According to Werner Bloch, it was a bizarre event More »


Street next to the wall of Tehran's Evin prison (photo: dpa) Amir Hassan Cheheltan's ''Tehran, Skyless City''

Reflecting the Dark Side of Iran's Capital

In "Tehran, Skyless City", Amir Hassan Cheheltan describes the journey through life of an underdog who arrives in Tehran as an uprooted, orphaned inmate of a home and with a high degree of criminal energy, rises through the ranks to become the director of a torture prison. A review by Volker Kaminski More »


Film poster of 'The Golden Collars' Iranian Propaganda Cinema

Reversed Symbolism

The Iranian regime has supported the making of a big budget propaganda film, "The Golden Collars". In it, the 2009 Iranian uprising against the regime is presented as a malicious plot initiated by foreign spies and manipulated by the West in order to destabilize the country. Stefan Buchen on a crude piece of propaganda More »


British Indian novelist and essayist Salman Rushdie on Italian State RAI TV (photo: AP) Salman Rushdie's Autobiography ''Joseph Anton''

Offense Is Inevitable

Salman Rushdie received death threats from Iran after his critical book, "The Satanic Verses" and lived for 13 years in hiding. His new autobiography, which he presented in Berlin, recalls everyday life during that time. By Heiner Kiesel More »


The Algerian writer Amin Zaoui (right) discussing with an attendee of the Algiers Book Fair (photo: Marina Sabra) 17th International Book Fair in Algiers

A Missed Opportunity

The 50th anniversary of Algerian independence this year gave the Algiers International Book Fair 2012 an excellent opportunity to finally shed its negative image. Martina Sabra explains why this failed to happen More »


Roof over the Visconti Courtyard at the Louvre Museum in Paris, France (photo: courtesy Louvre) Louvre Unveils Islamic Art Wing

Where Cultures Intertwine

The Louvre has just opened a new wing devoted to Islamic art and thereby once again highlighted its status as a museum of world art. The successful project has gone ahead under the auspices of three French presidents and rises above fanaticism. By Joseph Hanimann More »