-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Upcoming with Mizna!
Date:   Tue, 09 Oct 2007 15:40:23 -0700
From:   Mizna <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Mizna presents:

1. Elmaz Abinader - Friday, October 12.
2. Marcel Khalife - Friday, October 19.
3. Walid Raad - Thursday, October 25.
4. Sinan Antoon - Friday, November 3.
5. Ibtisam Barakat - Friday, December 2.


1. Elmaz Abinader - Friday, October 12. Loft Literary Center. 7 pm. MENTOR 
SERIES READING
ELMAZ ABINADER with RACHAEL HANEL & CHRISSY KOLAYA. Loft Literary Center. Open 
Book, 1011 Washington Avenue South, Minneapolis

Elmaz Abinader makes no secret of her concerns as a writer and an activist. Much of her focus comes from growing up Arab American, from coming from a part of the country that lacks diversity and from developing political and moral values consistent with ideas of compassion, equity and respect for the earth. Elmaz's books, Children of the Roojme, a Family's Journey from Lebanon, and In the Country of my Dreams...., as well as her play, Country of Origin illustrate personal lives of Arabs and Arab Americans negotiating hostile terrain, cultural polarities, and geographic and social displacement. Her other works, 32 Muhameds, Ramadan Moon, The Torture Quartet and Messages from the Siege provide an articulation of the effect of political actions on personal lives both here and in the Middle East. Copresented with the Loft.

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2. Marcel Khalife - Friday, October 19. Cedar Cultural Center. 416 Cedar Ave S, Minneapolis. 8 pm. To buy tickets, go here: http://www.thecedar.org/tix.html
Lebanon 's composer/musician Marcel Khalifé is a master and innovator of the 
oud and a pioneer of contemporary Arab song. Renowned throughout the Middle 
East for over three decades, he has sustained a following akin to pop artists. 
In 2005, he was named UNESCO Artist for Peace. Performing on oud and vocals, he 
will be accompanied by the Al Mayadine Ensemble in a program featuring works 
from his new recording Taqasim, as well as selections from his older repertoire.

In his association with great contemporary Arab poets, particularly Palestinian 
poet par excellence, Mahmoud Darwish, he seeks to renew the character of the 
Arabic song, to break its stereotypes, and to advance the culture of the 
society that surrounds it. On his journey, Marcel Khalifé invents and creates 
original music, a novel world of sounds, freed of all established rules. This 
language elevates him to the level of an ambassador of his own culture and to 
the vanguard of Near Eastern music innovators. Co-presented with the Cedar 
Cultural Center.

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3.  Walid Raad - Thursday, October 25;
Walker Arts Center. 1750 Hennepin, Minneapolis MN 55403. 7 pm. Free.

Join artist Walid Raad for a performative lecture on his writing and visual 
art, which grapples with the representation of traumatic events of collective 
historical dimensions and the ways that film, video, and photography function 
as documents of physical and psychological violence. His recent work includes 
The Atlas Group (1989?2004), a project composed of audio, visual, and literary 
elements dealing with the contemporary history of Lebanon , particularly the 
Lebanese wars from 1975 to 1991. Raad teaches at Cooper Union in New York , and 
his pieces have been shown at documenta 11 in Kassel , Germany , the Venice 
Biennale, and the Whitney Biennial, among many others. Co-presented with Walker 
Arts Center.


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4. Sinan Antoon - Friday, November 2 Playwright's Center. 2301 E Franklin Ave, Minneapolis, MN 55406. 7-10 pm Publication reading of his book I'jaam: An Iraqi Rhapsody.
About I'Jaam: An Iraqi Rhapsody

An inventory of the General Security headquarters in central Baghdad reveals an 
obscure manuscript. Written by a young man in detention, the prose moves from 
prison life, to adolescent memories, to frightening hallucinations, and what 
emerges is a portrait of life in Saddam's Iraq . In the tradition of Kafka's 
The Trial, or Orwell's 1984, I'jaam offers an insight into life under an 
oppressive political regime and how that oppression works. This is a stunning 
debut by a major young Iraqi writer-in-exile.

Praise for I'Jaam: An Iraqi Rhapsody

"He evokes a Baghdad heavy with Orwellian overtones . . . often he strikes the right 
chord, to haunting effect." ? The Village Voice

" . . . a fictional memoir ? of a student/poet in solitary detention for having 
ridiculed Saddam Hussein. . . . The student's dreams, memories and fantasies are eerily 
beautiful ? he enters a reality far preferable to the one he has lived in for most of his 
life." ? Los Angeles Times

About Sinan Antoon

Sinan Antoon's teaching and research interests lie in pre-modern Arabo-Islamic culture, 
and contemporary Arab culture and politics. His dissertation, "The Poetics of the 
Obscene," is the first study of the 10th-century Arab poet Ibn al-Hajjaj. In 2002, 
he was awarded a Mellon Grant to support his research in the Middle East .

His Gallatin course (at NYU) offerings include The Body in the Arabic 
Tradition, Arabic Poetry, The Qur'an, and a freshman seminar on Exile.

Antoon's poems and essays (in Arabic and English) have appeared in The Nation, 
Middle East Report, al-Ahram Weekly, Banipal and the Journal of Palestine 
Studies, among others. He has also published a collection of poems, Mawshur 
Muballal bil-Huroob (A Prism; Wet with Wars), and a novel, I`jaam (with City 
Lights this year.) His poetry was anthologized in Iraqi Poetry Today.

He has also contributed numerous translations of Arabic poetry into English, and his 
co-translation of Mahmud Darwish's poetry was nominated for the PEN Prize for translation 
in 2004. Antoon returned to his native Baghdad in 2003 as a member of InCounter 
Productions to film a documentary, "About Baghdad," about the lives of Iraqis 
in a post-Saddam occupied Iraq , which he co-produced and co-directed. He is a senior 
editor for Arab Studies Journal, a member of Pen America , a contributing editor to 
Banipal, and a member of the editorial committee of Middle East Report.

Sinan was just interviewed on PRI's "The World" and "Democracy Now". I'jaam: An Iraqi 
Rhapsody has received excellent reviews in The Village Voice, The Los Angeles Times and elsewhere.  In recent 
years, he was interviewed on NPR's "All Things Considered."

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5. Ibtisam Barakat. Friday, December 7;
Loft Literary Center. Open Book, 1011 Washington Avenue South, Minneapolis, 
7-10 pm.  Publication reception of her book, Tasting the Sky: A Palestinian 
Childhood.


About Tasting the Sky. A Palestinian Childhood

In a spare, eloquent memoir, Barakat recalls life under military occupation. In 
1981 the author, then in high school, boarded a bus bound for Ramallah. The bus 
was detained by Israeli soldiers at a checkpoint on the West Bank , and she was 
taken to a detention center before being released. The episode triggers 
sometimes heart-wrenching memories of herself as a young child, at the start of 
the 1967 Six Days' War, as Israeli soldiers conducted raids, their planes 
bombed her home, and she fled with her family across the border to Jordan . She 
also recalls living under occupation and the thrill of being able to attend the 
United Nations school for refugees. The political upheaval is always in the 
background, but for young Barakat, much of the drama was in incidents that took 
place in everyday life. What makes the memoir so compelling is the immediacy of 
the child's viewpoint, which depicts both conflict and daily life without 
exploitation or sentimentality.

About Ibtisam Barakat

Ibtisam S. Barakat is a Palestinian-American writer, poet and educator. Her work centers on healing the hurts of 
racism, sexism, and the oppression of young people. Ibtisam was a delegate to the United Nation's conference on the 
elimination of racism, which was held in Durban , South Africa , August 2001. She leads Write Your Life seminars and 
speaks frequently on using personal narrative and literature to repair social relationships, and toward the collective 
authoring of a world fully welcoming to everyone. Recently, Ibtisam was interviewed at NPR's Talk of The Nation, and 
sponsored by the Harvard-based Arab Educational Forum, she led writing workshops for young people and educators in 
Morocco . Selected Publications: "The Second Day" in Shattered, Ed. Jennifer Armstrong (2002); "Marked 
for Destruction", in Why Do They Hate Me: Young Lives Caught in War & Conflict, Ed. L. Holliday (1999); 
"Beating a Bully", in 25 Read-Aloud Stories For Teaching Powerful Writing (2001); "The

 Home
Within", reprint, in The Flag of Childhood, Ed. Naomi Shihab-Nye (2002). 
Co-presented with the Loft Literary Center and Dunn Bros. Coffee.


Mizna is a forum for Arab American art.  Visit our website at 
http://www.mizna.org


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