
Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics, no. 43
Brotherly/Sisterly Relations in Literature and the Arts
Alif
Edited by Walid El Hamamsy
448 Pages, 6.50 x 9.00 in
- Paperback
- 9781649033246
- September 2023
- Region: Worldwide
LE90.00
£75.00
$89.95
Where To Buy:
A rich exploration of sibling bonds in literature and the arts
This issue of Alif explores representations of brotherhood/sisterhood in literature and the arts. What does it mean to be part of a brotherly/sisterly bond? And what do such bonds entail, positively or otherwise? These questions have been extensively posed and revisited in a variety of traditions old and new. Sibling relations, here defined, can also transcend kinship and blood relations to include shared causes and values, such as political solidarity and gender equality.
Contributors:
Shereen Abouelnaga, Cairo University, Egypt
Abdelrahman Abuabed, independent scholar, Doha, Qatar
Karam AbuSehly, Beni-Suef University, Egypt
Saad Al-Bazei, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Mariam Elashmawy, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
Safaa Fathy, poet, essayist, and filmmaker, France
Anna Głowacka, independent scholar, Austria
Hala K. Gomaa, independent scholar, Cairo, Egypt
Noha Hanafy, The British University in Egypt, Cairo, Egypt
Magda Hasabelnaby, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt
Amina Mansour, photographer, creative conceptualizer, and copywriter, Cairo, Egypt
Dalia Said Mostafa, The University of Manchester, UK
Manal Al-Natour, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, USA
Andrea Maria Negri, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Germany
Yomna Saber, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar
Muhammed F. Salem, independent scholar, Cairo, Egypt
Mary Youssef, Binghamton University, New York State, USA
English and French Section
Andrea Maria Negri: Lovers as Siblings in al-Manfalūṭī’s Adaptations
Mariam Elashmawy: “The Sons of the Pasha are Fallāḥin”: The Taymūriyya Brothers in Interwar Egypt
Mary Youssef: Together from Womb to Tomb: Sisters, Brothers, and the Nation in Mahfouz and Kanafani
Yomna Saber: The Mimetic Desires of Warring Siblings in Fuʾād al-Takarlī’s Novels
Muhammed F. Salem: Loving My Brother-in-Law: Sister Rivalry in the Work of Lehmann and Foenkinos
Noha Hanafy: Contesting Narratives: Sibling Relations as Political Allegory in Lā tukhbir al-ḥiṣan
Safaa Fathy: M pour un frère : Témoignane
Anna Głowacka: Sisters at Crossroads: On Sister Relations in Restoration Literature in German (Translated by Karam AbuSehly)
Arabic Section:
Magda Hasabelnaby: Sisterhood of Resistance and Creativity: Latifa al-Zayyat and Radwa Ashour
Shereen Abouelnaga: Sisterhood in the Afro-American Context: From White Uniformity to Black Intersectionality
Saad Al-Bazei: Fraternal Hegemony in Four Novels from the Arabian Peninsula
Abdelrahman Abuabed: Brother-Sister Psychic Duality in Folktales: Jungian Individuation via Voice and Intuition
Dalia Said Moustafa: Brotherly/Sisterly and Friendship Ties among Palestinian Children in Mai Masri’s Films
Hala K. Gomaa: Female Friendship Novels: Sisterhood in Third-Wave Feminism
Manal Al-Natour: Brotherly Ties and Their Implications in Syrian Prison Literature
Amina Mansour: “Cairo Captions”: A Photo-Testimony on Human Fraternity
Walid El Hamamsy is assistant professor of cultural studies at Cairo University. His academic interests focus on popular culture, comparative literature, translation, and gender. He is co-translator into Arabic of Thomas Jefferson’s Revolutionary Democracy (2011) and co-editor of Popular Culture in the Middle East and North Africa: A Postcolonial Outlook (2013).