/ Research
Middle East Studies Association
Nevine El Nossery (University of Wisconsin-Madison) and Shereen Abouelnnaga (Cairo University)
The current socio-political situation in Egypt raises fundamental questions about the state of the arts and the future of literature and culture in the country. While the first years after the 2011 Egyptian Revolution witnessed the emergence and flourishing of new literary and artistic expressions (auto-fictional blogs, music festivals, protest songs, slam poetry, documentaries, photographs, TV talk shows, graphic novels and comics), today, culture and cultural production are facing an unprecedented enforced silence. And where that silence is pierced through, a striking sense of disillusionment and uncertainty marks the sensibilities of significant aesthetic creativity. This special volume examines the complex paradoxical predicament of a seemingly irrepressible expressive context under the thralls of an imposed gloomy hush. It also addresses how individuals and institutions navigate the inflicted muteness through different strategies. For artists, writers, and intellectuals, the revolution is an unfinished ongoing project that still fuels their art and praxis.
Submissions are invited on topics that include but are not limited to:
Please send your essays electronically to Nevine El Nossery (elnossery@clutterwisc.edu) and Shereen Abouelnaga (shereen66@cluttergmail.com) by August 1st, 2019, using the subject heading “JALA Egypt Special Issue.” (those who have questions can contact the guest editors).
Please consult JALA’s advice to authors on preparing a manuscript here:
https://tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?journalCode=rala20&page=instructions
All submissions will undergo a double-blind peer-review process.
Articles must not have been published previously, or in review process elsewhere.
See original call for submissions