This is not a border Reportage & reflection from the Palestine Festival of Literature

Book - 2017

"Writers from Alice Walker to Michael Ondaatje to Claire Messud share their thoughts on one of the most vital gatherings of writers and readers in the world. The Palestine Festival of Literature was established in 2008 by authors Ahdaf Soueif, Brigid Keenan, Victoria Brittain and Omar Robert Hamilton. Bringing writers to Palestine from all corners of the globe, it aimed to break the cultural siege imposed by the Israeli military occupation, to strengthen artistic links with the rest of the world, and to reaffirm, in the words of Edward Said, "the power of culture over the culture of power." Celebrating the tenth anniversary of PalFest, This Is Not a Border is a collection of essays, poems, and sketches from some of the world&...#039;s most distinguished artists, responding to their experiences at this unique festival. Both heartbreaking and hopeful, their gathered work is a testament to the power of literature to promote solidarity and hope in the most desperate of situations."--

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Poetry
Published
New York : Bloomsbury USA 2017.
Language
English
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
x, 340 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781632868848
  • Map
  • Introduction
  • Welcome
  • Where Does Palestine Begin?
  • The Gaza Suite: Gaza
  • Jerusalem
  • Draw Your Own Conclusions
  • Three Encounters on the West Bank
  • Through the Looking-Glass
  • Sleeping in Gaza
  • Once Upon a Jerusalem
  • Permission to Enter
  • Privatising Allenby
  • Allenby Border Crossing
  • Qalandia
  • After Ten Years
  • Diary
  • India and Israel: An Ideological Convergence
  • In the Company of Writers
  • The Gaza Suite: Jabaliya
  • Letters from Gaza
  • Gaza, from Cairo
  • Gaza, from the Diaspora - Part One
  • Darkening the Dramaturgy
  • This Poem Will Not End Apartheid
  • An Image
  • Poetry and Protest
  • Cold Violence
  • The City of David
  • The Writer's Job
  • From the Diaspora - Part Two
  • Equality, Supremacy and Security
  • A Gift for PalFest
  • Silence is a Language
  • Drawing PalFest
  • Diary
  • Until It Isn't
  • Sight
  • The End of Apartheid
  • What We Witnessed
  • Stories from the Armenian Quarter
  • A Scramble of Authors
  • Bethlehem
  • Crucifixion
  • Pakistan/Palestine
  • Hebron
  • The Stranglehold
  • The Sound of a Festival
  • South Africa and Israel: A Familiar Geography
  • The Gaza Suite: Rafah
  • Shujaiyya Dust
  • Gaza
  • A Decade of Writers' Walks
  • Let Your Lives Speak
  • A Bus Stop in London
  • The Scattering
  • How to Survive Exile
  • What We Talk about When We Talk about Palestine
  • The Gaza Suite: Tel El Hawa
  • Exrr Strategy
  • The Gaza Suite: Zeitoun
  • The End of Art is Peace
  • Author Biographies
  • Credits
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Commemorating 10 extraordinary years of PalFest, the Palestine Festival of Literature, mother-son cofounders Soueif (Cairo: Memoir of a City Transformed, 2014) and Hamilton (The City Always Wins, 2017) gathered 47 literary luminaries to create this essential testimony, including Suad Amiry, J. M. Coetzee, Teju Cole, Claire Messud, Pankaj Mishra, and Alice Walker. Instead of using Tel Aviv's modern airport, PalFestivalians try to travel in the same manner as its Palestinian audience, arriving in Jordan and enduring border crossings that take hours instead of minutes, invasive searches and detainment, and dangerous roads. One of the most indelible experiences inspired the title; as Soueif explains in the introduction, the majority of the barriers the wall and their checkpoints . . . are not in fact borders; they do not separate Palestine' from Israel'; mostly they cut through occupied Palestinian land, separating communities from each other. As PalFestivalians visit seven cities in five days with their cultural roadshow, Hamilton describes harrowing details; for example, a sliced-open onion lessens tear gas effects. Throughout this gathering of essays, poetry, reportage, and confessions, certain words apartheid, erasure, pain, powerlessness, complicity, waiting, wasting, humiliation, absurdity repeatedly resonate. But what linger longest are hope, expectation, and the demand for peace.--Hong, Terry Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Two co-founders of the Palestine Festival of Literature (PalFest), mother and son, collect an array of emotional pieces from this international gathering of writers begun in 2008.Editors Soueif (Cairo: Memoir of a City Transformed, 2014, etc.) and Hamilton (The City Always Wins, 2017, etc.) begin and end the collectionshe with an introduction and an essay; he with the longest piece, which encapsulates the conference since 2008. There are some poems, as well, including Suheir Hammad's affecting "The Gaza Suite," whose sections are distributed throughout. The collection includes plenty of notable writers familiar to Western readers: the late Henning Mankell, Geoff Dyer, Alice Walker, and Chinua Achebe, whose offerings range from tributes to the PalFest itself to accounts of their own experiences attending. There is also a touching account of Richard Ford's nearly breaking down while reading a Seamus Heaney poem. Most of the writers, though, are from the region, and their messagesoft repeatedare clear: Israel is, in their view, basically running an open-air prison; countless innocent civilians, including many children, have died; Israel is in the process of erasing the evidence of many generations of inhabitants. These, of course, are not messages that will attract Israel's many supporters, but others in the Westwho, as some of the authors here point out, know little about the conflictwill no doubt be alarmed at the vast array of grim detail and example. Although the writers concur that Israel is doing something awful, there are few allusions to a violent response. Instead, the writers express the belief that words will be the things with feathers that will eventually bring attentionand peace. Other notable contributors include J.M. Coetzee, Raja Shehadeh, Michael Ondaatje, Claire Messud, Teju Cole, Pankaj Mishra, and Kamila Shamsie. A chorus of lyrical voices singing hopefully about a most contentious, divisive, and violent situation. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.