Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Nicht aus der Schweiz? Besuchen Sie lehmanns.de
After the Nobel Prize 1989-1994  - Naguib Mahfouz

After the Nobel Prize 1989-1994

The Non Fiction Writing of Naguib Mahfouz

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
440 Seiten
2020
Gingko Library (Verlag)
9781909942134 (ISBN)
CHF 66,90 inkl. MwSt
In these essays Mahfouz comments on Egyptian politics, the role of Parliament and the institutional changes that took place in Egypt after Honsi Mubarak became President in 1981.
Naguib Mahfouz, the Arab world’s only Nobel literature laureate, is best known internationally for his short stories and novels, including The Cairo Trilogy. But in Egypt he was equally familiar to newspaper readers for the column he wrote for many years in the leading daily Al-Ahram, in which he reflected on issues of the day from domestic and international events, politics, and economics to historic anniversaries, inspirational personalities, and questions of cultural freedom. This volume brings together the 285 articles he wrote between January 1989 and the near-fatal knife attack in October 1994.

 

In carefully crafted short texts, his social conscience is revealed as he highlights political shortcomings, economic injustice, and corruption in Egypt and the wider Arab world. His philosophical sensitivity comes to the fore as he contemplates the meaning of a historic events, contributions of an influential people, and what is required to lead a good life. The collapse of the Soviet Union, the Oslo peace accords, the spread of terrorism, the Cairo earthquake, the passing of Louis Awad, Yusuf Idris, Yahya Hakki, the third term of Hosni Mubarak, climate change, and more come under Naguib Mahfouz’s fine scrutiny. For any fan of Mahfouz’s fiction, this collection opens a window on a different side of his intellect, and it offers insights from one of the region’s greatest modern minds.

 

Naguib Mahfouz (1911–2006) was the most important Arabic writer of his generation. He is the author of over thirty novels, including The Cairo Trilogy, Thief and the Dog, Miramar, and Children of the Alley. He is the winner of the 1988 Nobel Prize for Literature. R. Neil Hewison was born and educated in England, and he spent three years with Voluntary Service Overseas teaching English in Fayoum, Egypt, followed by four years teaching English at an International House school in Cairo. He joined the American University in Cairo Press in 1986, where he served as associate director for editorial programs from 2004 until his retirement in 2017. He is the author of The Fayoum: History and Guide and the translator of two Arabic novels, City of Love and Ashes by Yusuf Idris and Wedding Night by Yusuf Abu Rayya. He lives in Fayoum and Cairo.  

Introduction by Rasheed El-Enany xv



 



Substandard Food in an Age of Discipline 1



Defamation of the Country 3



Indifference and Education 5



The Forbidden Opposition 6



Behaviour Appropriate for Our Lives 8



The Democracy of Labour 9



The Debt Fund 10



Lessons from Deceased Leaders 11



How Should We Deal with Deviation? 13



The People of the Cave Wake Up 14



A Small Nation in a World of Giants 16



The Task of the Centre 17



Withdrawal Celebrations 18



After the Withdrawal 20



The Army of War and Peace 21



On the Issue of Change 22



On the Egypt of Tomorrow Conference 23



When Will Change Begin? 24



Political Activity as the Harbinger of Good 25



The Return of Administrative Control 27



Opposition Newspapers 28



The Bitter Truth 29



Towards a New Five-Year Plan 30



An Ongoing Period of Trial… and a New Dawn 31



The July Revolution 33



Ramadan – Should It Be Serious or Fun? 35



Who Are We? 36



Ten People Who Have Not Received any Good News 37



The Youth Also Have a Literary Problem 38



The Role of Culture in Our Rebirth 40



The Egyptian Path and the Age of Productivity 42



The Egyptian Way… and National Mobilisation? 43



The Arab Way 45



How Can We Confront Life? 47



The Value of an Individual and Civilisation 49



Democracy and the Ethics of Leadership 50



Indifference… and Performance 51



Indifference… and the Army 52



Social Justice 53



The Real Criminal 54



Your Voting Slip 55



The Giza Drain Told Me… 56



The Other Side of the Moon 58



Signs of a New Age 60



Good Tidings 61



Studies of the National Councils 62



Welcoming the New Masses 63



Making Donations to Pay Off Our Debts 65



What a Neutral Ministry Cannot Do 67



When Will We Learn the Value of Time? 68



A Relative, Not an Absolute, Majority 70



What Does Israel Mean? 71



The Message of the Conference 73



A Return to the Discussion of Debts 75



A Stand on Corruption 77



The Lesson of Oil 79



In What State Has the Festival Returned? 80



On the Opposition 82



Wielding Some Legal Clout 84



About a Higher Aim 85



The Desired Wisdom 86



The Minister and the Opposition 88



The Privilege Disease 89



Signs of the Value of the Individual 90



5 June 92



A New Year of Development 94



Our Scientific Expertise and Development 95



The July Revolution 97



We Are Not Unaware of Our Faults… But! 99



More Cars 100



The Unreasonable War 101



Conflict and Civilisation 102



The Benchmark of Civilisation 103



The Ministry of Wealth 104



Looking for the Missing Money 105



Censorship 106



A New Censorship Law 107



Thought and Freedom 109



6 October 110



The Police in the Service of Democracy 111



Television and the Cinema 112



The Etiquette and Conventions of Catastrophes 113



On the Emergency Law 114



What Does Experience Tell Us? 116



Arab Considerations 117



The Minister of Culture said… 118



The Hope That Remains 120



A Golden Age of Culture 122



The Crisis of Literature 123



The State Media and Culture 124



Martyrs of the Pen 125



The Crisis of Thought 126



Between the Cause and the Aim 127



A Campaign Guide for the Citizen 129



In Defence of the Five-Year Plan and the General Public 131



For an Honest Battle 132



Catastrophes and Us! 133



Towering Intellects 136



A Multi-Party System 138



The Trust of the People 139



On the Generation Argument 140



A Serious Campaign in a Serious Period 141



The Cause of Art 142



A Renewal of Interest 145



The Election Campaign and the Revolution 146



The Parliament We Are Waiting For 147



A New Age 148



A Word to Our Youth 150



A Word to the Wafd Party 152



A Small Nation Among Giants 154



The Party Platforms and Our Youth 156



Look in Anger at Reality 157



Between Culture and Development 158



In Defence of Higher Values 161



The July Revolution 163



The Return of the Giants 165



Those without a Sense of Belonging 166



Democratic Demands 167



The State Radio, Television and Culture 168



23 August 171



The First Aim 173



The Minister of the Interior Begins the Battle 174



We Have the Power 175



The Media and the New Class 177



6 October 179



6 October 181



Our Lives 182



A Good Start 184



Support for a Society of Freedom and Justice 185



What a Political Party Means 186



Decisive Years 187



‘13 November’ 188



The National Democratic Party and Culture 190



The Ministry and the Festival 192



The Majority Party 193



Party and Development 194



Back to the Electoral Law 196



Culture between Criticism and Anger 197



Mass Suicide 199



The High Dam and the Necessary Conference 200



The Nile and the Law 201



The Day of the Police 202



A Book Display in Every Home 204



Execution and Life Imprisonment 205



The Case of Dr Ahmed 207



The Master of the Cause 208



Civilisation and the Holes in the Road 209



An Era of Rationalism 211



Art and Censorship 213



Crime between Punishment and Cure 219



The Third Way 221



A Frenzied Crime 223



A Return to Language 225



Blossoms on the Path of Patience 229



Our Real Wealth 230



The Long-Lasting Case 231



A Day of Wisdom 234



The Peace Track 236



A Wonderful Movement 238



Independence in Jungle Life 239



The Spectator’s Confusion 241



The Missing Constitution 242



A Revolution and a Lesson 245



Rationalising Rationalisation 246



An Abstruse Problem 247



The Battle of Freedom and Civilisation 249



Literature and Politics 250



The Opposition between Tradition and Renewal 253



Between Awakening and Deviation 255



23 August 256



The Necessity of Culture 257



The Unretouched Picture 258



A Cure for All Eras 259



The Role of the State 260



A Five-Year Plan Which Never Stops 261



Can the Reward for Murder Be Anything Other Than Death? 262



Towards a New Citizen 264



Parliament and the Media 265



Between Two Eras 267



The Coming Years of Hard Work 268



Confrontation without Hesitation 269



A Discussion about the Future 270



No Love from One Party 272



Between Reality and Dream 274



Arab Nationalism between Reality and Dream 276



Towards a New Arab Unity 278



The Truth about Suleiman Khater 279



Democracy between the Opposition and the Government 281



The Opposition’s Message 283



The Direction of Democracy 284



Crisis… Strengthen and Be Gone! 285



A Violent Battle 287



The Five Commandments 289



Stability, Development and Humankind 291



A Soap Opera of Suffering, Sabotage and Arson 293



Who Engineered the Events of 25 February? 295



Ever in the Service of the People 297



Directness between the Government and the Opposition 298



Facing the Facts 300



Development and Social Peace 302



May Day 304



Religious Education 306



The Most Beautiful of Times 308



On the Question of Ethics 309



5 June 311



Values Fit for All Times and Places 312



On the Question of Change 314



Why Subsidies… and Why Education? 316



Towards an Ethical Plan 317



The Present between Anger and Perfection 319



The Occasion of the 23 July 1952 Revolution 321



We Are Not a Nation without an Aim 323



The Role of the People 325



Towards the Other Shore 327



Democracy Is Wonderful Despite Its Errors 328



In Commemoration of the 1919 Revolution 330



Good Government 332



Our True Wealth 333



The National Democratic Party and Our Youth 335



Opinion, Experience and Consultation 337



One Crisis Should Suffice! 339



6 October 341



A Day of the People 343



The Responsibility of the Majority 344



The State and Culture 346



Medicine for More than One Disease 348



Africa and Internationalism 349



A New Government 351



Welcome to Parliament 353



The Opposition 355



Exam Month 357



What We Should Remember 358



A Conversation in English 360



Science in Language Schools 361



On the Electoral Law 362



Towards a New Ethics and New Traditions 364



A New World 365



The Islamic Conference 367



Another Path to Glory 369



It Is People Who Make Civilisation 371



A New Era 373



Electoral Fraud 375



The Festival 377



The Constitutionality of the New Parliament 379



A Word to the Confused 381



What Will Tomorrow Tell Us? 383



The Hidden Disease 385



The New Parliament 386



Public Holiday and Remembrance 388



The Human Resources Conference 390



The People and the Battle 391



The Flood and the Ark 393



The Dark Side of the Moon 395



Hidden Evil 396



Democracy and the Battle 398



The Greatest Problem 399



Disease Spreads to the Core 400



Towards a New Future 401



Terrorism and Stability 402



A Wise and Just Decision 403



A New Five-Year Plan 404



The Revolution of 23 July 406



Between Suicide and Famine 408



The Meaning of Stability 409



The Sun Will Rise Again 410



In Commemoration of the 1919 Revolution – Again 411



Unifying the Two Sectors 413



Cultural Hopes 415



Terrorism 416



Yes 418



6 October and the Best of Memories 420



And Nothing Is Being Said about Culture 421



Axioms of the Revolution 422



MPs’ Opinions and Their Wishes 423



The Desired Awareness 424



Anticipated Hopes 426



Author, Thinker, Fighter 428



Democracy Is a National Programme 430



The Fight 431



The Modern Age 432



Unity Is Our Cornerstone 433



The Rule of Law 435



A War on Two Fronts 436



The Era of Truth and Reality 437



Society and the Youth 438



A New Year 439



Thoughts on the Smuggled Billions 441



The Blood of the Revolutionaries 442



On Productivity 444



The Age of Science and Scientists 446



The Map of Our Youth 447



The Concerns of Today and Tomorrow 449



Political Reform 451



War 452



Identity and Aim 453



Culture and the State 454



Towards National Solidarity 456



The Long-Awaited Mahdi 457



The Confessional 459



Political AI DS 460



The Road to Peace 462



On Religious Education 463



The Key to Reform 464



Praying for Rain 466



Between the Ebb and Flow 467



A Naïve Question 468



Religion in the Modern Age 469



Between the Sacred and the Profane 470



Between Extinction and Survival 472



Egypt’s Role 473



The Man of the Hour 474



The Revolution of 23 July – Again 475



A Call to Life 476



Remembering the Dead 477



The Trust Borne by People 478



Behaviour in Hard Times 480



Forgotten Honours 481



How Do We Face the Enemy? 482



Between Confrontation and Flight 483



The Explosion 484



Dream and Reality 485



The Day of Victory and Peace 486



A Word Amid All the Hubbub 488



Respectable but Criminal 490



Climbing Out of the Animal’s Jaws 491



Culture and Life 492

Erscheinungsdatum
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Literatur Essays / Feuilleton
ISBN-13 9781909942134 / 9781909942134
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich
die dunkle Geschichte der reichsten deutschen Unternehmerdynastien

von David de Jong

Buch | Softcover (2024)
Kiepenheuer & Witsch (Verlag)
CHF 22,40