Syllabus/achievement requirements

Suggested readings

The following is a recommended reading list – exact selection of primary sources and reference literature depends on students' selection of topic for the semester assingment essay.

Primary sources

Extracts from de following blogs:

?awādīt

Tanātīf Mā?at

??yzah ?atgawwiz

al-Kanabah al-?amrā

Kubrī Imbāba

Mā badā lī

Nā?il al-?ū?ī

Wa-?anā mā-lī

Hāka?ā ?anā

Wassi? ?ayālak

Yawmiyyāt imra?ah mi?liyyah

Yawmiyyāt ?ānis

Reference Literature

  • Detailed teaching plan says which texts should be prepared for which session.
  • Additional readings may be specified according to students’ choice of topic for the term paper

al-?Abd, Mu?ammad [et al.] (eds.) (2011). “Al-mudawwinūn yata?adda?ūn: ?ahādāt min qalb mu?tama? al-tadwīn al-mi?rī wa-l-?arabī” [The bloggers speak: Testimonies from the heart of the Egyptian and Arabic blogging society]. Fu?ūl: Ma?allat al-Naqd al-?Adabī [Fu?ūl: The Journal of Literary Criticism] 79, 234-262.

Daoudi, Anissa (2011). “Globalization, Computer-Mediated Communications and the Rise of e-Arabic”. Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication, 4, 146–163.

El-Mougy, Sahar (2011). “The Voice of the Egyptian Expatriates in Egypt: A Reading of "Imbaba Bridge" Blog as Resistance Literature”. In S. A. Kamel and H. Gindi (eds.), The Marginalized (Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Comparative Literature). Cairo: The Department of English Language and Literature, Cairo University, 159-181.

El-Sadda, Hoda (2010). “Arab Women Bloggers: The Emergence of Literary Counter publics”. Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication, 3, 312-332.

Etling, Bruce / John, Kelly / Faris, Rob / Palfrey, John (2009). “Mapping the Arab Blogosphere: Politics, Culture and Dissent”. Berkman Center Research Publication, 6. Available at: <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ publications/2009/Mapping_the_Arabic_Blogosphere>.

Fitzpatrick, Kathleen (2007). “The Pleasure of the Blog: The Early Novel, the Serial and the Narrative”. In T. Burg, J. Shmidt (eds.), Blogtalks Reloaded, Wien: Books on Demand. Available at: <http://machines.pomona.edu/dossier/ files/2009/10/fitzpatrick-blogtalk.pdf>.

Himmer, Steve (2004). “The Labyrinth Unbound: Weblogs as Literature”. In L. Gurak, S. Antonijevic, L. Johnson, C. Ratliff, and J. Reyman (eds.), Into the Blogosphere, Minnesota: University of Minnesota. Retrieved on October 7, 2011, from <http://blog.lib.umn.edu/blogosphere>.

Hofheinz, Albrecht (2011). “Nextopia: Revolution 2.0”. International Journal of Communication, 5, 1417-1434. Retrieved 13 October, 2013, from <http://ijoc.org/ index.php/ijoc/article/view/1186/629>.

Hofheinz, Albrecht (2005). “The Internet in the Arab World: Playground for Political Liberalization”. International Politics and Society, 3, 78-96. Retrieved October 13, 2013, from <http://www.fes.de/IPG/IPG3_2005/07HOFHEINZ.PDF>.

?Ibādah, Mu??afà (2008). “Mudawwanāt: Kitābah ?adīdah ?aw i?ti?ā? i?timā?ī?” [Blogs: a new (form of) writing or a social uprising?]. Al-Ahrām al-?Arabī, 11, 22 March, 574, 48–52.

Jones, Elizabeth H. (2009). “Autofiction: A Brief History of a Neologism”. In R. Bradford (ed.), Life Writing, Basingstoke UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 174- 184.

Klinenberg, Eric, and Benzecry, Claudio (2005). “Cultural Production in a Digital Age”. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 597, 6-18.

Lynch, Mark (2007a). “Blogging the New Arab Public”. Arab Media and Society 1. Retrieved December 3, 2010, from <http://www.arabmediasociety.com/ ?article=10>.

Miller, Carolyn, and Shepherd, Dawn (2004). “Blogging as a Social Action: A Genre Analysis of the Weblog”. In L. Gurak, S. Antonijevic, L. Johnson, C. Ratliff, and J. Reyman (eds.), Into the Blogosphere, Minnesota: University of Minnesota. Retrieved October 7, 2011, from <http://blog.lib.umn.edu/blogosphere>.

Otterman, Sharon (2007). “Publicizing the Private: Egyptian Women Bloggers Speak Out.” Arab Media & Society 1. Retrieved November 30, 2011, from <http://www.arabmediasociety.com/topics/index.php?t_article=28>.

Peeters, Heidi (2007). “The Networked Self: Autofiction on MySpace”. Image [&] Narrative [e-journal], 19. Retrieved May 20, 2011, from <http://www. imageandnarrative.be/autofiction/peeters.htm>.

Pepe, Teresa (2012) , “Improper Narratives: Egyptian personal blogs and the Arabic notion of ?adab”, in LEA Lingue e Letterature d’Oriente e d’Occidente, vol. 1, pp. 547-562. http://www.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-lea/issue/view/894

Pepe, Teresa (2011) , “From the Blogosphere to the Bookshop: Publishing Literary Blogs in Egypt”, in “Between Everyday Life and Political Revolution: The Social Web in the Middle East”, Oriente Moderno, Nuova Serie, Anno XCI, 1, pp. 75-89.

Ramsay, Gail (2012). “What kind of Arabic and why? Language in Egyptian blogs”. Orientalia Suecana LXI Suppl., 49-88.

Rifaat, Yasmine (2008). “Blogging the Body: The Case of Egypt”. Surfacing, 1 (1), 50-70. Retrieved October 20, 2013, from <http://www.aucegypt.edu/GAPP/ IGWS/GradCent/Documents/BloggingTheBody.pdf>.

Rooke, Tetz (2013). “Autobiography in Arabic Literature. (b) Since 1900”. In G. Kr?mer, D. Matringe, J. Nawas, E. Rowson (eds.), Encyclopedia of Islam, 3rd edition, Brill Online, 2013. Retrieved September 9, 2013, from <http:// referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-3/autobiography-in-arabic-literature-b-since-1900-COM_23469>.

Rooke, Tetz (1998): The Arabic Autobiography of Childhood. In R. Ostle, E. de Moor and S. Wild (ed.) Writing the Self, London, Saqi Books.

Salāmah, ?Abīr (2008). “?A?yāf al-riwāyah al-raqmiyyah” [Spectrum of the Digital Novel]. Middle East Online. Retrieved July 8, 2012, from <http://www.middle-east-online.com/?id=58573>.

Serfaty, Viviane (2004). The Mirror and the Veil: An Overview of American Online Diaries and Blogs. Amsterdam, New York, Rodopi. Pp.

Sorapure, Madeleine (2003). “Screening Moments, Scrolling Lives: Diary Writing on the Web”. Biography, 26 (1), 1-23.

Turkle, Sherry (1995). Life on The Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet. New York: Simon & Schuster Trade. Pp.

Walker, Jill (2005). “Blog”. In D. Herman (ed.), The Routledge Encyclopedia of Narrative Theory, New York: Routledge, 45. Retrieved 3 December, 2011, from: <http://huminf.uib.no/~jill/archives/blog_theorising/final_version_of_weblog_definition.html>.

 

Choose one book from the followings:

Novels/Memoirs:

- Rajā? ?Abdallāh al-?āni?, Banāt al-Riyā?. Beirut & London: Saqi, 2005 [and later editions]

Girls of Riyadh / Rajaa Alsanea ; translated by Rajaa Alsanea and Marilyn Booth. New York : Penguin Press, 2007.

Jentene fra Riyadh / Rajaa Alsanea ; oversatt av Anne Aabakken. Oslo : Versal, 2007.

- ?Ibrahīm ?Abd al-Ma?īd, Fī Kulli ?usbu? yawm gum?ah, al-Qahirah, Dār al-mi?riyyah al-lubnāniyyah, 2009.

- Wael Ghonim, Revolution 2.0, New York,  Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2012 

- Bassām, Ri?āb (2008). ?Aruzz bil-laban li-?a??ayn [Rice Pudding For Two]. Cairo: Dār al-?urūq.

- ?Abd al-??l, ?ādah (2008).??yzah ?atgawwiz [I want to get married]. Cairo: Dār al-?urūq.

Monographs:

- Walker, Jill (2008). Blogging. Cambridge: Polity.

- Lejeuene, Philippe (2000), Cher Ecran, Paris: Seuil.

- Wheeler, Deborah (2006). The Internet in the Middle East: Global Expectations and Local Imaginations in Kuwait. Albany: State University of New York Press

- Gonzalez-Quijano, Yves (2012). Arabités numériques: Le printemps du Web arabe. Paris: Actes Sud.

- Nā?ī, ?A?mad (2010). Min al-būst ilà al-Twīt [From posts to tweet]. Cairo: ANHR press.

- Faris, David (2013). Dissent and Revolution in a Digital Age: Social Media, Blogging and Activism in Egypt, London, I:B: Tauris.

Published Aug. 27, 2014 9:50 AM - Last modified Sep. 4, 2014 5:32 PM