Mezzaterra

Fragments from the Common Ground

Ahdaf Soueif author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:1st Nov '04

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Mezzaterra cover

By the author of the bestselling The Map of Love, which has sold over 200,000 copies in the UK to date and was shortlisted for the 1999 Booker Prize Contains both bang-up-to-date essays on contemporary issues in the Middle East and Iraq and classic essays on literature and modern culture For fans of Edward Said, John Pilger and David Grossman

Collected essays and journalism from one of our foremost writers: from cultural commentary to the war in Iraq"Globalisation is happening. It is driven by economics, ideology and communications. But does this have to entail the annexation of chunks of the world by the Great Power of any given moment? Surely that is the path to constant conflict, to grief and misery. There is another way: to inhabit and broaden the common ground. This is the ground where everybody is welcome, the ground we need to defend and to expand. It is in Mezzaterra that every responsible person on this planet now needs to pitch their tent. This is the ground from which this book is calling." Ahdaf Soueif is one of the finest commentators of our time. Her clear-eyed reporting is syndicated throughout the world, and these essays, written between 1981 and the present, are collected here for the first time. They are the direct result of Soueif's own circumstances of being, as she puts it, "like hundreds of thousands of others: people with an Arab or a Muslim background doing daily double-takes when faced with their reflection in a western mirror". From visiting Palestine and entering the Noble Sanctuary for the first time, to interpretations of women who choose to wear the veil, and to post-September 11th commentary, these selected essays are always perceptive, fearless, intelligent and necessary.

'Soueif is a political analyst and commentator of the best kind' London Review of Books

ISBN: 9780747577256

Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 21mm

Weight: unknown

352 pages