Modernism, Feminism and Science Fiction: Words as Silence, Language as Rhymes by Marwa Arsanios

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1 janvier 2016

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info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1515/asia-2016-0030

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Nadine Atallah, « Modernism, Feminism and Science Fiction: Words as Silence, Language as Rhymes by Marwa Arsanios », HAL-SHS : études de genres, ID : 10.1515/asia-2016-0030


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Words as Silence, Language as Rhymes is an artist book published in 2012 by Lebanese contemporary artist Marwa Arsanios, included in her Al-Hilal project (2011-ongoing). This project is based on an examination of the Egyptian cultural magazine Al-Hilal, and more particularly of two issues dating back to Nasser's presidency. These praised Nasser's ideology of Arab socialism and nationalism by highlighting technological and scientific innovations , social progress and women's emancipation. More than half a century later, after the failure of Nasser's policy and ideology, Words as Silence, Language as Rhymes analyses the rhetoric of modernism and its promises in the magazine. It takes a particular interest in the expression of Egypt's dream of space conquest, and in the representation of women, and more particularly of female Algerian freedom fighters. By re-engaging and manipulating Al-Hilal's textual and visual language, Arsanios plays with a multi-plicity of temporal layers and uses the prospective potentialities of science fiction to re-imagine the modernist ideals and assert the importance of a utopian thought for the present. This article invokes Svetlana Boym's concepts of off-modernism and nostalgia to consider Words as Silence, Language as Rhymes as a feminist historiographical critique of modernism as conveyed by Al-Hilal.

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