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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lamia Ziadé , Emma RamadanPublisher: Pluto Press Imprint: Pluto Press ISBN: 9780745348124ISBN 10: 0745348122 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 20 May 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Language: French Table of ContentsPrologue: August 4, 2020 1: The Sirens of the Port of Beirut 2: The Heroes 3: “A steamer enters the haze of the port of Beirut” 4: The Enchantment of Objects 5: The Saint George Hospital 6: Lady Cochrane 7: The Third Basin 8: My Sister’s Friends 9: Guilt 10: Sacy and Noun 11: The Criminals 12: Report on the Port, 1956 13: My Father’s Stubbornness 14: A Peaceful and Gentle People 15: My Sister on the Telephone 16: Who? 17: Beirut, Nest of Spies 18: The Port, Like the Country 19: Thawra, Birth of a Nation 20: October 17th 21: A Turn for the WorseReviews'A very moving tribute... the Franco-Lebanese illustrator and writer has been developing a very personal literary genre for several years, made up of very colourful texts and drawings, reproductions of photos taken from private archives or press articles... Here, she erects a mausoleum to the victims of the disaster, and over the pages, the simple succession of their faces and their names creates intense emotion' -- Les Inrockuptibles 'Lamia Ziad tells here in the first person the contemporary history of her native country, its violence, the very year of her birth in 1968, which is also that of the first stone laid for the port silos, for which she has had a passion since childhood... Through this emblematic place that she makes her own, her port of Beirut, she writes a Lebanese autobiography of words and images that will speak to every reader' -- Le Point (April 2021) 'Magical... Lamia Ziad works as an alchemist. My Port of Beirut tells the story of the explosion as she experienced it: from afar but in the heart. She draws the faces of the victims, collects the stories, reproduces the graffiti against the corrupt leaders, and explains these destroyed buildings which to us are only buildings for us but for her are symbols, memories, her life... A book of love, mourning and anger.' -- Elle 'Lamia Ziad tells not only her personal trauma but also the story of the familiar and common violence that crossed her country (and all her life since her birth in 1968) and to which the explosion of the 2,750 tons of nitrate from ammonium from hangar 12 gives an overwhelming sense of endless curse... She mixes narrative and drawings, entangling her biography in the collective destiny to honour here, first and foremost, the memory of victims she did not know.' -- Livres Hebdo (30 March 2021) 'Brutal, touching... ' -- Politis Author InformationLamia Ziadé is a Lebanese author, illustrator and visual artist. Born in Beirut in 1968 and raised during the Lebanese Civil War, she moved to Paris at 18 to study graphic arts. She then worked as a designer for Jean-Paul Gaultier, exhibited her art in numerous galleries internationally, and went on to publish several illustrated books, including My Port of Beirut, Ma très grande mélancolie arabe which won the Prix France-Liban, Ô nuit, ô mes yeux and Bye bye Babylone. Emma Ramadan is an educator and literary translator from French. She is the recipient of the PEN Translation Prize, the Albertine Prize, two NEA Fellowships, and a Fulbright. Her translations include A Country for Dying by Abdellah Taïa, Zabor, or the Psalms by Kamel Daoud, Panics by Barbara Molinard, and The Easy Life by Marguerite Duras. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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