The 13th FMA starts tomorrow. Check out the program!

Conceived and produced by Alchimies, Créations et Cultures, the Arab World Festival of Montreal (Festival du Monde Arabe de Montréal or FMA) is a thematic event dedicated to the meeting of and dialogue between Arabic and Western cultures. Through its four sections – Performing Arts, Culture Forum, Cinema, and La Medina – the FMA presents modern bodies of work, concerning the heritage as much as the day-to-day lives of people through original productions in dance, music, theatre, multidisciplinary and arts.

Representing a myriad of tendencies and artistic orientations that allow reflection and experimentation, the FMA welcomes artists from all cultural horizons, local and international broadcasters and producers in order to build a space dedicated to cultural exchange and “breeding” as well as to provide festival-goers with a wide range of first-rate activities.

Objectives

– Establishing an artistic space dedicated to encouraging dialogue between cultural identities stemming from different horizons, by means of creating, producing and broadcasting innovative artistic projects.

– Offering Québec’s artists of all backgrounds, the opportunity to exchange their experiences and ideas with other cultures and to enrich their knowledge with new approaches and know-how techniques.

– Supporting and producing artistic initiatives based on the cultural diversity experience in Montreal.

Vision

The word “alchemy” refers to an absolute necessity for all artistic enterprises: the need to re-shape the world through reflection and creation. It also refers to a latent irrationality that allows transforming, merging and recreating different elements.

To develop an artistic scene, an audience or a “collective meaning”, the barriers that define disciplines, styles, traditions and rituals must dissolve, so that the exchange which demands losing sovereignty, can be born. A new work of art becomes able to both awaken and bewilder the public, through abandoning the contentment and comfort of preconceived ideas…

Themes

The artistic management of Alchimies, Créations et Cultures holds various activities, productions, and researches under the umbrella of one different theme each year. The program of the festival consists of reflection exercises that are the foundation of any artistic path, and it suggests new concepts, projects, and opportunities of meetings. Each theme is a voyage of memory and imagination towards a profound universe inscribed in each step, movement, word and meaning. Artists local and international, media crew, all adopt the festival as their own, and attempt to create a harmonious melody of dualities: the self/the Other, and the past/the present.

Alchimies, Créations et Cultures invites choreographers, composers, playwrights, filmmakers, poets and intellectuals to explore and open new doors to create new forms, colors, melodies and words, and to change conformities and mend differences. The selected or exclusively produced productions thus become an embodiment of the theme, pushing it forward to become a space of cultural exchange where the echoes of the other resound intensely in the depth of the self.

Kraus-Meyerhof Offprints now online!

The Rare Books and Special Collections Library at the American University in Cairo is pleased to announce the launch of the Kraus-Meyerhof Offprints digital collection.

The Kraus-Meyerhof Offprints digital collection includes indexes to journal articles, books chapters, and portions of larger works. Generally printed at the same time as the book or journal, offprints are printed for the author’s use. The indexes from the Kraus-Meyerhof Offprints offer a comprehensive look at the articles and book chapters in the collection. Topics covered include Arabic literature, Islamic philosophy, Arab medicine, and Muslim scholarship.

The offprints were originally collected by Paul Kraus, an Arabist born in Prauge in 1904. Kraus was educated in Europe and spent several years in Cairo and the Middle East before his death in 1944. The collected offprints feature scholarship authored by German opthamologist, author, medical historian Max Meyerhof. Dr. Max, as he was referred to by patients, was born in 1874 and died in 1945 in Cairo where he helped establish medical care in Egypt.

The collection is available in the Rare Books and Special Collections Digital Library.

Screening at the ISL next Wednesday (Oct. 24th)

Keep the date everyone!

Next Wednesday, Professors Pouneh Shabani-Jadidi and Setrag Manoukian will present the film entitled “Where is my friend’s home?” by Abbas Kiarostami (1987). They will also moderate the discussion after the screening.

When: Wednesday October 24th, 2012, from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Where: Octagon room, Islamic Studies Library

Open to everyone, free entrance

AskZad trial

McGill Library is currently trialling AskZad, the largest Arabic digital library that offers an extensive referential, cultural and academic database.
It includes more than 24,000 e-books, more than 7,000 dissertations from elite universities across the Middle East, more than 9,000 peer reviewed articles, Academic Journals Index of more than 650 Journals, as well as news Index of more than 1200 Newspapers, Magazines and News Websites.

Check it out and give us feedback!

Middle East and Islamic Studies Library Orientation

The ISL is offering a Middle East and Islamic Studies Library Orientation session next  Monday (Sept. 10), 11 am-1 pm in room RM-23 (Redpath). From Library facilities and services to specific resources and how to find them, you’ll learn all there is to know about the Library to start your academic career on the right foot. Feel free to drop by!