Includes bibliographical references and index. Includes index.
Contents:
Chapter 1. Introduction -- Part I Visualizing the Revolution -- Chapter 2. Bahia Shehab: The (In)visible Cairo Street Artist -- Chapter 3. Identity and Memory in Hela Ammar's Photo-Embroidery -- Part II Performing the Revolution -- Chapter 4. When Women's Bodies Speak in Public -- Chapter 5. Comics Against Taboos in Morocco -- Part III Writing The Revolution -- Chapter 6. Kaouther Adimi's Palimpsest of Revolutionary Histories -- Chapter 7. Revolutionary Art in Nomadic Spaces -- Chapter 8. Conclusion.
Summary:
This book examines the ways in which women in the contemporary Middle East and North Africa have re-imagined revolutionary discourses through creativity and collective action as a means of resistance. Encompassing a stunning array of forms and genres, such as graffiti, street performance, photography, phototexts, novels, and comics, the book draws from a vast spectrum of artistic production in revolutionary periods between 2011 and 2022 in Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco, and Algeria. El Nossery sheds light on womens postrevolutionary artistic output by engaging an interdisciplinary approach: the book is divided into three sections which foreground the unique relationship between textual, visual, and performative modes as they intertwine with art and politics. Arab Womens Revolutionary Art thereby aims to demonstrate how art, as always oriented towards an open future, can preserve the revolutionary spirit that was sparked in 2011 by documenting what happened and determining which stories would be told. The revolution, therefore, continues. Nevine El Nossery is Associate Professor in the Department of French and Italian at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her expertise extends to Francophone and postcolonial studies, womens writing, art and politics. She is the author of Egypt in Focus: Creativity in Adversarial Contexts (co-edited volume, 2021); The Unspeakable: Representations of Trauma in Francophone Literature and Art (co-edited volume, 2013); Frictions et devenirs dans les ecritures migrantes au feminin (co-edited volume, 2012); and Temoignages fictionnels au feminin. Une reecriture des blancs de la guerre civile algerienne (2012).
Series:
Communication, culture, and gender in the Middle East and North Africa
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.