Título: Letters From Beirut
Autores: Marks, Laura U.; Simon Fraser University
Fecha: 2011-04-21
Publicador: Cultural Studies Review
Fuente:
Tipo: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Peer-reviewed Article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Tema: Cultural Studies; History
Lebanon; Hizballah; letters; Lebanese–Israeli conflict; 2006
Descripción: In summer 2006 I returned to Lebanon for a third time. I had lived in Beirut for almost a year in 2002–2003, during which time I fell in love with the city, as so many people do—the generosity, resilience and joie de vivre of so many Lebanese people, the lively artistic scene, the intensity with which so many historical and international forces cross this small country. I built strong friendships then. I returned in 2004, and again in June 2006, this time to study Arabic at the American University of Beirut. On 14 July, in response to Hizballah’s action of taking two Israeli soldiers hostage and shooting across the Lebanese–Israeli border, Israel began an intense bombardment of Lebanese infrastructure, starting with the airport, as well as places where Hizballah supporters lived. A privileged outsider waiting to be evacuated, I was also helpless, afraid, and furious at the pro-Israeli tone of the international media. So I wrote daily letters to family, friends, and a growing email list of interested people. This is an edited version.
Idioma: Inglés

Artículos similares:

Heroes, Mates and Family: How Tragedy Teaches Us About Being Australian por Gillman, Sarah; University of South Australia
Poems: 'Weights' and 'Measures' por Dicinoski, Michelle; University of Queensland
Sound Ecologies por Duffy, Michelle; Monash University
Presence of the Gift por Game, Ann; University of New South Wales,Metcalfe, Andrew; University of New South Wales
Windows Wound Down por Brown, Pam; Sydney
10 
The Clearing: Heidegger’s Lichtung and The Big Scrub por Garbutt, Rob; Southern Cross University