Gezi Park Uprisings in Turkey

Hi friends!

The recent uprisings in Gezi Park have peeked people’s interest in Turkey and the various uprisings across the Middle East, particularly those of the 2011 Arab Spring. Our colleague, John Eilts at Stanford University wrote an informative post on sources on and about Gezi. And our friend Rifat Bali of Libra Books has listed the following websites and resources:

http://taksimdayanisma.org/?lang=en

http://www.geziparki.org/english/

https://www.facebook.com/geziparkidirenisi

http://www.geziparkiguncesi.com/#

http://delilimvar.tumblr.com/

http://revoltinturkey.tumblr.com/

http://www.karakok.org/

http://resisttaksim.blogspot.com/?zx=3f097ebe37b5a5dc

http://occupygezipics.tumblr.com/

http://occupygezimap.com/

http://occupygezi.blogspot.com/

However, most interesting (to me!) is today’s al-Jazeera photo essay “In Pictures: The Taksim Square Book Club” which depicts numerous people reading in the park. And a couple of weeks ago the Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet,  had an article on “Publishing houses to unite in Gezi Park to distribute major resistance material: Books.”

For those curious to read more about reading habits and the evolution of reading in Ottoman Turkey and the early Republic take a look at:

Şahbaz, Namık Kemal. 2009. Türkiye’de ilkokuma ve yazma öğretiminin tarihsel gelişimi. Ankara: MEB.

Fortna, Benjamin C. 2011. Learning to read in the late Ottoman Empire and the early Turkish republic. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan.

Calligraphy Friday

Hi friends! Arabic calligraphy is one of the finest arts of Islamic culture. The illustrious Dr. Annemarie Schimmel noted calligraphy to be “an art which can be called without exaggeration the ‘quintessential’ art of Islam” (Schimmel in Highlights of Persian art. Richard Ettinghausen; Ehsan Yar-Shater, eds. 1979).

McGill is fortunate to have several hundred calligraphy specimens, including 200 in Arabic alone. This particular calligraphy piece is a Ḥadīth. Unfortunately the calligrapher did not autograph the work but we may guess that this is a later calligraphy piece, perhaps 18th-19th century. An interpretation of this particular Ḥadīth was recently commented on in al-ahram (Egypt).

The ISL, itself holds a number of pertinent resources in Arabic, English and other languages on Ḥadīth. One may find these through searching WorldCat using “su: hadith” (su stands for subject as in subject heading) to guide your search.

Enjoy!

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Dr. Khalid Medani: “Between Grievances and State Violence Sudan’s Youth Movement and Islamist Activism Beyond the “Arab Spring””

Hi friends! This has proven a great week for IIS members: Congratulations to Dr. Khalid Medani on his latest publication in MERIP (Summer 2013). The article is entitled “Between Grievances and State Violence Sudan’s Youth Movement and Islamist Activism Beyond the “Arab Spring”