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COVER
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LETTER
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ARTIST PROJECT
I heard a Rumor, 2006
Shumon Basar and Markus
Miessen
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PREVIEWS
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MUSEUM
Kabul Zoo as museum
Daniel
Metcalfe
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HOTEL
Afghans in India and one hotel's curious history
Kai Friese
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ARTIST PROFILE
Introducing Cassius Al Madhloum
Tirdad
Zolghadr
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WORK IN PROGRESS
Iranian pop phenomenon Javad Yassari caught on
film
Houman
Mortazavi
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WORK IN PROGRESS
Mahmoud Khaled's
alias logs in to explore controversial
terrain
Bassam
El-Baroni
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WORK IN PROGRESS
In between the public, the work, and the artist:
Bojan Sarcevic
David Rych
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INFRASTRUCTURE
Institutional self-censorship and religious
sensitivity
Nav Haq
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ART MARKET
Frieze, Christie's, and the Dubai Effect
Antonia
Carver
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CURATORIAL SPACE
The case for independence
Sigismond De
Vajay
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INTERVIEW
Hans Ulrich Obrist, Anton Vidokle, and Tirdad
Zolghadr at the opening of
unitednationsplaza
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RUMOR
ARTIST PROJECT
A Disclosure: An artist, the editors and a newsroom
graphic designer
Fake memoirs and truth as style
George Pendle
Narges and
the case of Iranian docudrama
Sohrab
Mohebbi
London's nocturnal blues
Sukhdev
Sandhu
Maurizio Cattelan
meets Roman
Ondák
Tall-tales in Tehran
Anton Karster
ARTIST PROJECT
What Noah Knew
The Yes Men
Archetypal
intellectuals, devastated revolutionaries, kitsch
mythologies, and a writer who dared to look at
herself
Hassan Khan
Sex and stereotype on
the sub-continent
Naeem
Mohaiemen
The phenomenon of collective hypnosis
Yasser Abd El
Latif
Soda as
Politick
Curtis Brown
How the art world prospers by never explaining
itself
Mary Blair
Taylor
Networks of images, lives, and deaths
Chris
Csikszentmihályi
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FILM
On Tahmineh Milani's Cease Fire
Vahid F Parsa
A journey into Beirut's dark side
Tony Chakar
Film Festival Diary
Saeed Taji Farouky and
Jim Quilty
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ARCHITECTURE
Debating the Future of Martyrs' Square
Makram elKadi and Bouki
Babalou-Noukaki
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MUSIC
Music pioneer Halim El-Dabh
Sam Shalabi
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REVIEWS
Book Review
Below the Poverty Line: A Novel
Fatin Abbas
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PHRASE BOOK
Egyptian Arabic
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COOKING
Michael
Rakowitz
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AFTERTHOUGHT
The Open Secret
Tamer
El-Leithy
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The Disenchanted
Archetypal intellectuals, devastated revolutionaries,
kitsch mythologies, and a writer who dared to look at
herself
By Hassan Khan

It is the mid-90s, and I'm sitting in a bar, drinking a
cold Stella beer. I am somewhere on the Sinai coast. Next
to me, an older man is sitting sipping his whiskey-neat. He
looks like someone who works with money, not abstractly,
with the arrogance of a banker or a stockbroker, but more
directly. Maybe he's a contractor? As it turns out, he's
laying the electricity grid of the whole of the Sinai
Peninsula. We talk. The name of Arwa Saleh is mentioned (no
idea how or why), and the man suddenly breaks out into a
heated rant on the pretentious corruption of artists and
left-wing intellectuals-their uselessness, their danger to
society, the ways they can damage other people. He reveals
that he is (to my utter surprise) Arwa's brother-brother of
the Arwa Saleh who threw herself off a Cairo balcony less
than a month ago. His diatribe is suddenly
contextualized.
To speak of a suicide-especially the suicide of a poet,
artist, or writer-is to touch the glamour of dramatic
gestures, the abandon of the unspeakable. A glamour that
sustains itself precisely by glossing over the immense pain
and despair leading to such an absolute act. To speak of
suicide is, in a sense, to banish it beyond conversation.
But maybe it's apt and even productive to treat Arwa
Saleh's suicide as a metaphor that arises out of her one
published text, the fascinating rumination on a generation
and its convictions, El mobtaseroun (The Premature). The
leaders of the generation under the microscope, the
so-called 70s student movement, are now mostly at the helms
of (largely co-opted) liberal-minded NGOs, who survive off
of handouts from international agencies with different
agendas. That is, if they don't kill themselves, as Arwa
did.
LATERAL IMPACT
El mobtaseroun might not be especially brilliant as
philosophy or radical as a revolutionary manifesto, but it
is absolutely necessary. It has an urgency that gains in
significance through the wide-reaching impact this
generation has had, albeit unconsciously and in opposition
to its stated aims, on contemporary Egyptian society. It
points out how language-or, more accurately, discourse, a
system of using language within historical context, is a
main operator, the arbiter between self-defeat and the
possibility of action. Saleh's concern is not for style or
dogma but rather the burning need both to critique and to
validate an experience whose echoes still resonate within
the cultural life and politics of this city.
Saleh's introduction to the book is fascinating, an
incisive analytical introduction written five years after
the primary text itself. She states that upon reading the
final proof, she was shocked to discover herself alienated
from earlier political positions and even more from the
very impetus to profess a political position that takes
concern and empathy over the plight of a nation as a basic
starting point. This is a documentation of the change in
consciousness not only of a person but also of a whole
society. Saleh was honest enough to decide to come to terms
with what had changed within her own understanding of the
self in relation to a public discourse-even while
disavowing it. By relying on the age-old literary trick of
disclaiming responsibility for the text we're about to
read, she places the whole experience within the
parentheses of history.
And it is truly devastating to hear Saleh state "that all
utopias in the world can overcome the joy of human
warmth."
ARCHETYPES AND LINGUISTIC TROPES
Different chapters introduce us to different archetypes of
intellectuals. In The Intellectual as a Pessimist, we
tackle the illusions that helped sustain the very workings
of the movement and were simultaneously its downfall.
Statements that became truths-producing history is easy and
simple, society is to be condemned, and thus we possess a
natural moral high ground. Statements that led to
alienation, nihilism, and hence corruption and personal
class aspiration. Saleh's text demonstrates how the
intellectual who gains in stature (in the eyes of the very
bourgeoisie he so feverishly detests) by performing the
role of the alienated critic, becomes the beloved of the
object of his condemnation and is slowly but surely seduced
into its orbit.
These are the memoirs of a complicated, obsessive, and
disenchanted love relationship with Marxism. The
disenchanted lover is not necessarily one who has lost
faith so much as one who needs to come to terms with the
driving motives behind that love-to uncover the bourgeois
roots of all romantic gestures and most interestingly to
analyze how those gestures played a part in the nascent
birth of the Egyptian republic. The illusion that the 70s
generation harbored, of being the dialectical antithesis to
the fascist nationalism of the Nasser years, is uncovered
as a construct of that very nationalism (which helps
explain the later move of Marxists into the Islamic camp en
masse). Nostalgia is explained as a movement that yearns
for the context that produced it. The prematurity Saleh
refers to in her title is the consciousness of a generation
that was unable to forge its understanding outside the
system that produced it-the very bourgeois need for
validation-and was therefore unable to become a truly
popular movement.
Language is clearly at play, as a source of power for the
different actors on the stage of political involvement, and
even more importantly as the means by which the zeitgeist
comes to understand itself, discovering its own will and
action.
HEGALIANISM AND THE CORRUPTION OF THE INTELLECTUAL
In discussing history, Saleh manages to sidestep the
dangers latent in the Hegelianism of Marxist thought, that
insistence on anthropomorphizing history and giving it a
human face that suits their goals. She calls for a more
dispassionate and modest approach that recognizes the power
of a force that is not always reducible or comprehendible,
where imagined rights and wrongs do not take their place
automatically in some worked-out progressive diagram of
human happiness and fulfillment. In her discussion of
revolutionary kitsch-its totalitarian/authoritarian
romantic sentimentality-Saleh insists on analyzing how
kitsch functions across ideology, rather than through
it-based on metaphors and linguistic tropes rather than
concepts or ideas only. The profound possibility that
ideology itself is unable to function without the layer of
kitsch is touched upon. This is devastating stuff, for
revolutionaries are, by Saleh's description,
self-interested romantics in love with ideas. The
introduction of a superstition-a whisper around the corner,
a way of speaking to yourself and imagining an audience
that witnesses your every move on a stage-becomes the
driving force behind one's sacrifices. The stage of history
itself is where we operate. Saleh states, paraphrasing
Kundera, that "kitsch is a mask that hides death behind
it"-an especially potent statement in hindsight. For within
the empire of mutual gestures, political movements, utopias
and hopes, the hysteria of demands, the narcissism of
demonstrations, the drama of refusal, resides a deep
illusion harbored by class. A bourgeoisie, enthralled by
its own power to assert ideas and change the course of
millennia.
It is therefore disheartening to see street movements such
as Kefaya (although watching crowds chant "No, no, to Hosni
Mubarak!" from my balcony last summer was like an
amphetamine rush) adopt a similar discourse where an
ethical and moral high ground is presumed. To see that the
subtle understanding of political power as a form of
linguistic play, an understanding of who and what we are in
relation to the operations of power, is still lacking.
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