World Literary Awards

← Back to awarded works
My Great Arab Melancholy

James Tait Black Memorial Prizes

My Great Arab Melancholy

Lamia Ziadé

Lebanese writer and illustrator Lamia Ziadé layers personal memory with extensive research to trace the history and losses of the Middle East from the twentieth century to the present. The result feels like an archive of memory in which prose and image work together.

Middle Eastmemoryhistoryillustrationloss

Work Information

Prose and images redraw modern Middle Eastern history through personal memory.

Moving from South Lebanon to Beirut, Jerusalem, Cairo, and Baghdad, the book rereads the ruptures caused by colonialism and war through personal memory and vivid illustrations. It is presented as a layered volume that is at once biography, history, and art book.

Book Information

Publisher
Pluto Pr
Published
2024-01-20
Pages
403 pages
Language
英語
Size
17.53 x 3.81 x 23.62 cm
ISBN-13
9780745348155
ISBN-10
0745348157
Price
5202 JPY
Category
洋書/Politics & Social Sciences/Politics & Government/International & World Politics/Asian

Winner of the Prix littéraire France-Liban 'A stunningly stylish, breathtakingly evocative tribute in words and art to the cosmopolitan Levant that exists in defiance of war and empire. I treasure my copy' -- Molly Crabapple, artist and co-author of Brothers of the Gun: A Memoir of the Syrian War My Great Arab Melancholy is a beautiful, elegiac and award-winning book from Lebanese writer and illustrator Lamia Ziadé. Blending the author’s years of research, personal memoir, and more than 300 illustrations, this compelling history of the modern Arab world explores the major thinkers, struggles, and turning points that have shaped the Middle East as we know it today. Ziadé begins in South Lebanon, “land of martyrs, ruins, and passion”, before taking the reader on a journey through Beirut, Jerusalem, Cairo, and Baghdad. The book moves from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present day, tracing the Arab world’s tragedies and the derailing of dreams and possibilities caused in large part by Western imperialism and the conquest of Palestine. Within these pages there are the blasts of explosions, blood, and tears; cemeteries, wreaths, and ribbons; martyrs and paradise. Ziadé unearths the buried memory of resistance fighters and their lost ideals. In haunting prose and unforgettable images she celebrates the progressive, bold, revolutionary moments and figures of the Arab world’s recent past. Lamia 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 , Ô nuit, ô mes yeux and Bye Bye Babylon: Beirut 1975-1979.

Lamia 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.

Related Literary Awards