POPULARITY
Episode 186: Old Marvels, New Approaches: The Revitalization of Balāgha in Moroccan Literary Studies The science of balāgha is an Arabic scholarly discipline dealing with poetics and rhetoric, one that dates back to at least the 10th century C.E. Scholars of balāgha have long studied how poets convey intellectual and emotional content to listeners by using tools such as vivid imagery, sound play, and stylistic variation. Meanwhile, the relationship between Arabic balāgha and the Greek rhetorical tradition beginning with Aristotle has always been complicated, with some thinkers seeing the Greek emphasis on persuasive oratory as a welcome addition to Arabic-Islamic ideas about the power of language and speech, and others attempting to defend the Arabic language sciences against external influence. In the 19th and 20th centuries, balāgha was often viewed by progressive writers and thinkers as anachronistic. Its study thus tended to be confined to traditional Islamic institutions and seen as relevant only to particular “premodern” Arabic-Islamic texts. But recent decades have seen a renewed dedication to the continued vitality and value of a type of balāgha study called “The New Balāgha” that draws on Greek, Arabic, and hybrid conceptual tools. For those involved in this movement, balāgha comes to name a set of ideas about how people connect through language: how they become open to new ideas, empathetic to the struggles of those around them, and sensitive to the powers of linguistic beauty and subtlety. This scholarly movement has come to be particularly associated with Morocco, and especially with Abdelmalek Essaadi University in Tetouan, where its best-known practitioner and advocate, Dr. Mohamed Mechbal, teaches. Betty Rosen is a final-year PhD candidate in the Department of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures and the Designated Emphasis Program in Critical Theory at the University of California, Berkeley. Originally from Cleveland, OH, she earned her A.B. in Comparative Literature Magna Cum Laude from Harvard College in 2012, as well as completing an MA in Arabic Literature at SOAS (University of London) in 2013. She was also a CASA Fellow at the American University of Cairo during the 2017-18 academic year. Betty specializes in Arabic and Hebrew poetics and theories of language, both medieval and modern. Her dissertation, entitled Language Marvels: Al-Badī‘ In and Beyond Arabic-Islamic Poetics, focuses primarily on the conceptions of al-badī‘—the “marvelous creativity of language”—developed in writings by Muslim and Jewish Arabophone writers in Egypt during the Mamluk Period (13th-15th centuries). The dissertation also asks how certain 19th-century thinkers mobilized Mamluk-era ideas about language, poetics, and creativity to envision alternative forms of Arab “modernity.” Betty's research interests also extend into the 20th and 21st centuries, particularly the ways in which contemporary Arab scholars mobilize and reimagine older ideas about the Arabic linguistic and poetic tradition. In her free time, she plays viola, writes creatively, and works on an ongoing Arabic-to-English fiction translation project. This episode was recorded on June 22, 2023 at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Recorded and edited by: Abdelbaar Mounadi Idrissi, Outreach Director, TALIM
Yemenlilerin çektiği “Gemi, Gemi!” adlı klipte, İsrail-ABD-İngiltere şer ittifakının Kızıldeniz'de madara olmalarıyla epeyce bir dalga geçiliyor. *** Kızıldeniz'de bir nevi “Battı Balık Yan Going!” vaziyetindeki bu gemilere… Medyamızdaki Amerikan muhiplerinin gözleri “tamamen” kapalı! Bu mevzuda, ellerinde okuyucularının zihinlerine atacakları “Tomahawk” ve de “Cruise” füzeleri kalmadığı için… Bu defa “Psikolojik Harekât” hesabına ulaşılamıyor! *** Tek seçenekleri sessizce seyretmek ve göstermemek! Sam Amca ile biraderlerinin yaşadığı berbat durumu perdeliyorlar ki… -Batılıların Kızıldeniz sularında yediği “esaslı dayak” görünmesin! ÖZEL ATIŞ POLİGONU Geçen Kasım ayından bu yana; İsrail, ABD ve İngiltere'ye ait gemiler, 100'den fazla kez vuruldu. *** İngiliz The Telegraph, Husiler'in yani Ensarullah güçlerinin Kızıldeniz'i “Özel Atış Poligonu” haline getirdiği yazdı! Gazete, Yemen'i “ABD'nin bölgedeki başarısızlığının sembolü” diye tanımladı. *** Haydut Devlet ABD'nin neredeyse her hafta Yemen'e yönelik seri bombardımanı Husileri durduramıyor. Yemen, Batı Cephesi'ne fiilen direnen başlıca merkezlerden biri haline geldi. HUSİ'LER İLE HUSUSİ BEY Attıklarını vuran bu Husi'ler, doğrusu “Pek Hususi” Bir Güç! Aman, onları bizdeki Pek Hususi Bey ile karıştırmayınız… CHP'nin başındaki Özgür Hususi Bey, Hamas'ı “Terör Örgütü” diye tanımlıyor; böylece Batı Kulübü devletlerine şirinlik yapıyor. *** Husi'ler ise en başından beri Hamas'ı destekliyor. “İşgalci İsrail, Gazze'ye yönelik savaşı sürdürdüğü sürece Kızıldeniz'de gemilere saldırmaya devam edeceğiz” diyorlar. *** Bu Husi'ler, her bir saldırıda…
Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı,, müfredat çalışmasını tamamladı. Taslak, bakanlığın internet sitesi üzerinden kamuoyu ile paylaşıldı. Bir haftalık sürede görüş ve öneriler alınacak. Müfredatın hedefi, çocukların kendilerini geliştirmelerine fırsat tanımak ve hayallerini geliştirmek. Yeni müfredatla bilgi, dijital, finansal, kültür ve vatandaşlık alanında öğrencilere okuryazarlık becerileri kazandırılması planlanıyor.. Bir haftalık “askı” süresinin sonunda Talim ve Terbiye Kurulu Başkanlığı gelen görüş ve önerileri inceleyerek, müfredata son şeklini verecek. Kayıttayız'da bu hafta Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı'nın yeni müfredatı konuşuldu..
Episode 170: The Many Lives of al-Andalus: A Conversation with Eric Calderwood In this episode, Eric Calderwood, an associate professor of comparative literature at the University of Illinois, joins Jen Rasamimanana, the director of the Tangier Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies, for a discussion of his new book, On Earth or in Poems: The Many Lives of al-Andalus, published by Harvard University Press in May 2023. In the discussion, Calderwood gives an overview of the book's main ideas and structure and describes the inspiration behind the book's title. As Calderwood explains, the question that drives his book is: What does al-Andalus do? That is, how has the memory of al-Andalus (Muslim Iberia) shaped cultural and political debates around the world? In this conversation, Calderwood places particular emphasis on the role that al-Andalus has played in debates about ethnicity, race, gender, and nation in the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe. He asks, for example, why did the Spanish rapper Khaled assert, “Al-Andalus is my race”? Or why did the Palestinian poet Mahmud Darwish call Palestine “the Andalus of the possible”? What, in short, has thinking about al-Andalus made possible for writers, artists, and their audiences in the Mediterranean region and beyond? Pursuing these questions, Calderwood surveys some of the case studies from his book and explains their relevance to scholars and readers in the fields of North African and Mediterranean studies. At the end of the conversation, Calderwood briefly discusses a new research project on the history of multilingual art forms in the Mediterranean region. Eric Calderwood is an Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he also holds faculty appointments in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese, the Department of History, the Center for South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, the Program in Medieval Studies, the Program in Jewish Culture and Society, the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory, the European Union Center, and the Center for African Studies. His first book, Colonial al-Andalus: Spain and the Making of Modern Moroccan Culture, was published by the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press in 2018. It has been translated into Spanish and Arabic and has won several awards, including the 2019 L. Carl Brown AIMS Book Prize in North African Studies. His second book, On Earth or in Poems: The Many Lives of al-Andalus, was published by Harvard University Press in May 2023. He has also published articles in PMLA, Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies, Journal of North African Studies, Journal of Arabic Literature, and International Journal of Middle East Studies. In addition, he has contributed to public-facing venues like Foreign Policy, McSweeney's, The American Scholar, NPR, and the BBC. This episode was recorded on July 14th, 2023 at the Tangier American Legation for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Recorded and edited in Tangier, by: Abdelbaar Mounadi Idrissi, Outreach Director, TALIM. Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Watch the Indie Komiks Podcast interiview of Hal Santiago. Hal Santiago: The Legend Behind Pinoy Houdini, Talim, and The Hands in Komiks Hal Santiago's name is virtually synonymous with iconic komiks novels like “Pinoy Houdini,” “Talim,” and “The Hands.” His exceptional work on “The Hands” earned him the esteemed title of “Best Written and Illustrated […] The post Komiks Veteran Hal Santiago Interview – Indie Komiks Podcast appeared first on MEL CASIPIT, Artist.
Watch the Indie Komiks Podcast interiview of Hal Santiago. Hal Santiago: The Legend Behind Pinoy Houdini, Talim, and The Hands in Komiks Hal Santiago's name is virtually synonymous with iconic komiks novels like “Pinoy Houdini,” “Talim,” and “The Hands.” His exceptional work on “The Hands” earned him the esteemed title of “Best Written and Illustrated […] The post Komiks Veteran Hal Santiago Interview – Indie Komiks Podcast appeared first on MEL CASIPIT, Artist.
Episode 167: Seeing the Words of Poets: Muḥammad Bennīs and the Visual in Moroccan Poetry Frustrated by the fragmented scene of modern Morocco poetry, Moroccan poet and critic Muḥammad Bennīs pens the Bayān al-Kitāba in 1981 (“Manifesto of Writing”). The manifesto, which was published in Al-Thaqafa al-Jadida, a journal Bennīs co-founded in 1974, set forth a new concept of writing steeped in Morocco's visual culture. Throughout the Bayān, Bennīs calls for the renewal of poetry that is tied to a renewal of ways of seeing. This, he asserts, entails a critical attention to the work of both poetry and criticism, a point which the manifesto addresses as a sore subject and a challenge at the time for Moroccan poetry and poetics. He offers his own pathway, one that meanders through the visuals of the page, the Moroccan script, and the poetic image in order to recharge the body of the poem, and of the poet and reader. Through his attention to both the metaphorical and physical body, Bennīs recalls implicitly and explicitly a sedimented Andalusī poetics that had also marked the body's importance and poetry's transformative capacity through its turn to the language of the visual. Lubna Safi is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures and in the Designated Emphasis Program in Critical Theory. She holds an M.A. in Comparative Literature from The Pennsylvania State University, where she completed a thesis on twentieth century Spanish poets and the ways they invoked and mobilized al-Andalus (Muslim Iberia) in order to negotiate Spain's changing national, racial, and literary identities. Her dissertation, “How the Qaṣīda Sees: Vision, Poetic Knowledge, and the Transformative Capacity of Poetry from al-Andalus to the Maghrib,” examines discourses of visuality and visualization in the poetry and poetics of twelfth- and thirteenth-century al-Andalus and twentieth century Morocco. Engaging literary critical, poetic, and optical sources, the project explores how poets and critics discussed processes of visualization in poetry and the affective responses it engendered as well as its role in individual transformation and collective liberation. This episode was recorded on May 23th, 2023 at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Recorded and edited in Tangier, by: Abdelbaar Mounadi Idrissi, Outreach Coordinator, TALIM. Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Mabuting Balita l Setyembre 5, 2023 - Martes ng Ika-22 Linggo sa Karaniwang Panahon #MabutingBalita #DaughtersOfStPaulPhilippines #PaulinesPH Ebanghelyo: Lucas 4:31-37 Bumaba si Hesus sa Capernaum na isang bayan ng Galilea, kung saan niya nakaugaliang magturo tuwing Araw ng Pahinga. At nagulat ang mga tao sa kanyang aral dahil nagtuturo siya nang may kapangyarihan. May isang tao sa sinagoga na inaalihan ng maruming demonyo, na sumigaw nang malakas. “Ah, ano ang pakialam mo sa amin, Hesus na taga-Nazaret? Para ipahamak kami kaya ka dumating. Alam ko kung sino ka, ang Banal ng Diyos!” “Tumahimik ka at lumabas sa kanya!” Pagkatapos ibulagta ng demonyo ang tao sa gitna nila, lumabas ito mula sa kanya nang hindi sinasaktan. Pagtataka ang sumalahat at nag-usap-usap sila: “Ano ito? Nakapag-uutos siya sa maruruming espiritu nang may kapangyarihan at lakas, at lumalabas sila!” Kayat kumalat ang usap-usapan tungkol sa kanya sa lahat ng lugar sa kabayanan. Pagninilay: Sunud-sunod ang mga nagdaang bagyo na nagdulot ng malaking perwisyo sa ating kabuhayan lalo na sa mga magsasaka at mangingisda, at pinsala sa maraming lugar. Dagdag pa rito ang mga sakuna gaya ng bangkang tumaob papunta sa Isla ng Talim sa Rizal na naging sanhi ng pagpanaw ng marami. Kaya't may nagtanong sa akin: “Nakikita pa ba kami ng Diyos? Pinaparusahan ba niya kami? Bakit niya kami hinahayaang maghirap?” Mga kapanalig, ang Panginoong Diyos ay mapagkalingang Ama. Alam Niya kung anuman ang pinagdaraanan natin, at kasama natin siya sa lahat ng pagsubok. Gaya ng narinig natin sa Mabuting Balita sa araw na ito. Ang lalaking inaalihan ng masamang espiritu ang nagtanong: “Ano ang pakialam mo sa amin, Hesus na taga-Nazaret? Naparito ka ba upang puksain kami? Kilala kita. Ikaw ang Banal na mula sa Diyos.” Sinaway siya ni Hesus at pinalabas Niya ang demonyo mula sa lalaki nang hindi siya sinasaktan. Makapangyarihan ang pananalita ni Hesus at hindi niya tayo hahayaang masaktan. Namangha ang mga nakasaksi sa exorcism na ginawa ni Hesus – na nauwi sa pagtatanong at pagkalat ng balitang may bagong manggagamot sa Capernaum. Nangungusap ang Diyos sa lahat ng mga pangyayari sa ating buhay –malungkot man ito o masaya, maingay o tahimik, kagila-gilalas o karaniwan. Kaya lang, madalas hindi natin siya marinig dahil nagpapadala tayo sa takot at pangamba na pinababayaan niya tayo, na wala siyang pakialam sa atin. Kapanalig, buksan mo ang iyong mata upang makita ang mumunting milagro at mga anghel na ipapadala niya. At bago ka matulog mamaya, balikan mo ang mga pangyayari sa araw na ito at magpasalamat sa Kanya. - Sr. Rose Agtarap, fsp l Daughters of St. Paul
Typhoon Talim, the fourth typhoon this year, landed in the coastal area of South China's Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region early Tuesday, the typhoon's second landfall in China after it first landed in Guangdong province on Monday night.今年第4号台风“泰利”于7月18日凌晨登陆中国南部沿海广西壮族自治区,这是继“泰利”17日晚登陆广东省的后第二次登陆。The typhoon landed at 5:45 am on Tuesday in the city of Beihai in Guangxi, and reached the city of Qinzhou at 9 am, according to the regional meteorological bureau. 广西壮族自治区气象局表示,台风于18日凌晨5点45分在广西北海市登陆,并于9时进入钦州市境内。The maximum wind speeds near the center of the typhoon reached 25 meters per second, and it is expected to move toward the northwest at a speed of 15 to 20 km per hour.台风中心附近的最大风速达25米/秒,预计将以每小时15至20公里的速度向西偏北方向移动。Rainstorms are forecast in the cities of Qinzhou, Fangchenggang and Chongzuo, with the gust speeds reaching as high as 33 meters per second in the southern and central parts of the region, the bureau said.气象局表示,预计广西钦州、防城港和崇左市将有暴雨,广西南部和中部地区的阵风速度高达33米/秒。Guangxi raised its emergency response for typhoons and flooding from Level III to Level II earlier on Tuesday, according to flood control and drought relief authorities of the region.广西壮族自治区防汛抗旱指挥于18日早些时候,将台风三级应急响应提升为二级。The meteorological authorities of Guangxi raised its emergency response for major meteorological disaster (typhoon) to Level II on Monday night.自治区气象局于17日晚间提升重大气象灾害(台风)Ⅲ级应急响应为Ⅱ级应急响应。The water resources and meteorological authorities of Guangxi jointly issued an alert for mountain torrents, predicting that cities including Fangchenggang, Chongzuo, Nanning, Wuzhou and Hezhou are likely to be hit by mountain torrents in the period from 8 pm Monday to 8 pm Tuesday.自治区水利厅和自治区气象局联合发布山洪灾害气象预警,预计17日20时至18日20时,防城港、崇左、南宁、梧州、贺州等地可能遭受山洪袭击。The city of Beihai ordered school, production and market suspension from 10 pm Monday, and Fangchenggang required construction sites, shopping centers, entertainment venues, restaurants and farmers' markets to halt operations on Tuesday.北海市于17日22时起,实行停课、停工、停市等,防城港市自18日起,要求建筑工地停工、各商场、娱乐场所、餐馆以及农贸市场停止营业。At 6 am Tuesday, China's national observatory issued a yellow alert for the typhoon, which weakened to the level of severe tropical storm early Tuesday.中央气象台于18日06时发布台风黄色预警,台风已于当日早些时候减弱为强热带风暴级别。In the next 24 hours, heavy rainfall will lash regions including Guangdong, Guangxi, Fujian, Hunan and Guizhou, and gales will also be expected in most of the South China Sea and coastal areas, the National Meteorological Center said in a statement. 中央气象台表示,未来24小时内,广东、广西、福建、湖南和贵州等地区将迎来强降雨,预计南海大部分地区和沿海地区也将迎来大风。China has a four-tier, color-coded weather warning system for typhoons, with red representing the most severe warning, followed by orange, yellow and blue.中国台风预警信号分为四级,采用四种颜色表示,其中红色代表最严重的预警,其次是橙色、黄色和蓝色。Flights were canceled, vessels were called back to ports, high-speed train services were suspended and people in South China were told they should stay home on Monday ahead of Typhoon Talim's landfall.受台风影响,相关地区航班取消,船只召回,高铁停运,华南地区居民于17日台风“泰利”登陆前居家防范。 Strong wind and rain were expected to hit parts of Guangdong, Guangxi and Hainan provinces from 2 pm Monday to 2 pm Tuesday, the National Meteorological Center said on Monday.中央气象台17日表示,17日14时至18日14时,预计广东、广西和海南部分地区将有强风和降雨。The center renewed its orange alert, the second-highest alert level, for Talim on Monday, while the China Meteorological Administration raised its emergency response for typhoons to Level III.17日,中央气象台将台风预警更新为第二高的橙色预警,并将台风应急响应提高至三级。The meteorological center said Talim made landfall in coastal areas of the city of Zhanjiang in Guangdong province at around 10:20 pm on Monday night.中央气象台表示,“泰利”于17日22点20分左右在广东省湛江市沿海地区登陆。At 3:30 pm Sunday, the marine department of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge temporarily closed the sea channels that operate under the bridge to avoid any accidents.为避免发生事故,16日15时30分,港珠澳大桥海事局临时封闭桥梁航道。Markets in Hong Kong were prompted to close on Monday as the city's observatory hoisted a storm signal.17日,鉴于香港天文台发出暴风信号,香港交易所宣布港股全天休市。The city of Zhanjiang is expected to be hardest hit by the typhoon.湛江市或将成为台风灾害的重灾区。All fishing boats have been required to return to shelters, and major bridges and scenic spots have been temporarily closed.渔船被要求全部回港,主要桥梁和景点已暂时关闭。In addition, the city's water conservancy departments are required to be on duty 24 hours to help deal with any emergencies over the next two days.此外,湛江市水利部门将在未来两天24小时值班,以应对紧急情况。Ferry and cruise services along the Pearl River were suspended at noon on Monday in Guangzhou, and China Railway Guangzhou Group decided to suspend passenger train operations among the cities of Jiangmen, Zhanjiang, Maoming and Haikou from Monday to Tuesday.17日中午,广州水上公交和珠江游停运,广铁集团决定将暂停17日全天及18日江门、湛江、茂名和海口等城市的客运列车。In Haikou, capital of Hainan province, authorities ordered all nurseries and training institutions to suspend classes. Students from other schools are on summer vacation.海南省省会海口有关部门下令所有托儿所和培训机构停课。其余学校学生正处于暑假期间。Meilan International Airport in Haikou canceled all outboundplanes on Monday, with all three ports of the city shutting down.海口美兰国际机场于17日取消了所有出港航班,海口三港全部关闭。Hainan's circular high-speed railway and Haikou suburban trains were suspended, and parks, scenic spots, malls and markets were also closed.海南环岛高铁和海口市郊列车全线停运,公园、景点、商场和市场关闭。Wu Qiancheng, director of the command center of the Hainan Maritime Safety Administration, said it will use information methods to strengthen ship monitoring, release warnings in a timely manner and prepare for emergencies.海南海事局指挥中心主任吴乾诚表示,将利用信息化手段加强对船舶的监测,及时发布预警信息,为突发事件做好准备。"We have coordinated and deployed five professional rescue boats and two rescue helicopters, which can respond to maritime emergencies at any time," Wu said.“海南海事局已经协调部署了五艘专业救援船和两架救援直升机,可随时应对海上突发情况,”吴乾诚说。Residents in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, experienced howling winds and periods of intense rainfall as city authorities prepared for work and school closures, but the city's emergency management bureau decided against closures as the center of the storm was moving away from the city.广东省深圳市遭受风雨影响,深圳市已做好停工停课准备,但由于台风中心正在远离该市,应急管理局决定不关闭。"We have prepared for work and school closures, but as the center of the storm moves away from Shenzhen, we have made a scientific judgment and decided not to issue such instructions," Wang Changxiao, director of the disaster prevention department of Shenzhen Emergency Management Bureau, told China Daily.深圳市应急管理局防灾部主任王常效在接受《中国日报》采访时表示:“应急管理部门已经做好停工停课准备,但随着风暴中心逐渐远离深圳,部门做出了科学研判,决定不推行此项措施。”Typhoon英 /taɪˈfuːn/美 /taɪˈfuːn/n. 台风Alert 英 /əˈlɜːt/美 /əˈlɜːrt/n.警报
De acuerdo a los últimos reportes ya fueron rescatadas 3 personas que habían quedado atrapadas El director del IMSS dijo que se alista la contratación de 415 médicos especialistas jubiladosCon vientos de más de 235 kilómetros por hora el tifón Talim tocó tierra por segunda vez en ChinaMás informción en nuestro podcast
Russia has suspended its participation in the Black Sea grain deal (2:36). Senior Chinese diplomat Wang Yi and U.S. climate envoy John Kerry have held discussions on solutions for climate issues (10:28). And Typhoon Talim is bringing intense winds and rain to Guangxi (23:17).
- Đêm qua (17/7), bão Talim đã đổ bộ vào thành phố Trạm Giam, tỉnh Quảng Đông, Trung Quốc. Do được dự báo là cơn bão mạnh đầu tiên trong năm nay, cơ quan khí tượng Trung Quốc đã nâng báo động lũ quét ở miền Nam nước này lên mức cao nhất, tức cảnh báo đỏ nhằm ứng phó với bão Talim. Chủ đề : trung quốc, bão talim --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vov1tintuc/support
The fourth typhoon of the year is expected to bring gales and heavy rainfall to China's southern coastal regions.
Storm Talim has impacted several local airports in Vietnam, leading to changes in flight schedules at various airports.
- Các địa phương Hải Phòng, Quảng Ninh, Cao Bằng, Bắc Kạn, Lạng Sơn đang triển khai các biện pháp phòng chống bão số 1 (TALIM) được dự báo đang di chuyển rất nhanh và hướng thẳng vào Bắc Bộ. Chủ đề : Các địa phương, chủ động phòng chống, bão số 1 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vov1tintuc/support
Episode 165: Narrative Subversions: “Unnatural” Narration and an Ethics of Engagement in the Work of Mahi Binebine In this podcast, Doyle Calhoun presents a work related to his first book project, The Suicide Archive: Reading Resistance in the Wake of French Empire—which concludes with a chapter on suicide bombing, focused on Moroccan writer and artist Mahi Binebine's (b. 1959) novel Les Étoiles de Sidi Moumen (2010)—and a second book project, Narrative Subversions: Strange Voices in Francophone Fiction, which explores unconventional narrative configurations and includes a chapter on narrative techniques in Binebine's work. Doyle Calhoun is currently Assistant Professor of Language and Culture Studies (postcolonial Francophone studies) at Trinity College in Connecticut. He received his Ph.D. in French from Yale University, where he was an affiliate of the Yale Council on African Studies. Prior to Yale, he completed a Masters in linguistics at KU Leuven, in Belgium, where he was also a Fulbright Research Grantee. Calhoun's research and teaching focus on the literatures and cinemas of Africa and the Caribbean, especially Senegalese literature in French and Wolof. Working at the intersection of literary criticism, history, media studies, and decolonial theory, Calhoun shows how aesthetic forms provide alternatives to dominant colonial and postcolonial scripts. Calhoun has published over a dozen articles, in journals such as Research in African Literatures, French Studies, and Nineteenth-Century French Studies, and his work is forthcoming from PMLA. His public-facing writing has appeared in Public Books and the Sydney Review of Books. In 2021, he received the Ralph Cohen Prize from New Literary History for the best essay by an untenured scholar. His first book project, The Suicide Archive: Reading Resistance in the Wake of French Empire, turns the difficult topic of suicidal resistance into one worthy of analysis, attention, and interpretation. Beginning in the eighteenth century and working through the twenty-first century, from the time of slavery to the so-called Arab Spring, The Suicide Archive covers a broad geography that stretches from Guadeloupe and Martinique to Senegal, Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia, and draws on an expansive corpus of literature, film, oral history, and archival materials to plot a long history of suicide as a political language in extremis. This episode was recorded on July 28th, 2022 at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Recorded and edited in Tangier, by: Abdelbaar Mounadi Idrissi, Outreach Coordinator, TALIM. Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
EVERYONE DOES SO MUCH DAMAGE WITH COMMAND THROWS, WTH?!? Capcom has new footage released of a developer match between Lily and Honda, so we finally get to see more of what Honda fights like! And see how Talim... er... Lily fights with the power of the WIND! == TIME STAMPS == 0:00:00 Intro 0:01:42 First Time Watch-Through 0:05:01 Round 1 Analysis 0:14:46 Round 2 Analysis 0:32:40 SIDETRACK: Proximity Guard And Unblockables History 0:38:53 Round 3 Analysis 0:49:47 Closing Thoughts Find the YouTube version of this episode here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3J_9qfrxFw Get the audio version of this episode here: https://soundcloud.com/ultrachentv/lilyvshondafootage Soundcloud - https://soundcloud.com/ultrachentv Itunes - http://UltraChenTV.com/iTunes Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4nOFXvdcuJng3Y14qK3CVF Join the UltraChen Discord! https://discord.gg/VAmkUdp Please consider supporting our Patreon! http://patreon.com/ultrachentv Twitch - http://twitch.tv/ultrachentv Twitter - http://twitter.com/ultrachentv James Chen http://twitter.com/jchensor https://www.twitch.tv/jchensor UltraDavid http://twitter.com/ultradavid https://www.twitch.tv/ultradavid TuboWare http://twitter.com/TuboWare https://www.twitch.tv/tuboware #FGC #Esports #Podcast
About Speaker: Sushama Sharma is the founder member and the Director of Anand Niketan, a school that draws its inspiration from Nai Talim, known as Gandhi's vision of Education and Gandhi's larger vision of equitable, non-violent and sustainable society. Anand Niketan, restarted in 2005, inherits its space, philosophy and spirit from the earlier Nai Talim experiment (1937-1970) and continues to explore their relevance in today's context. The school aims to create democratic environment where holistic development of children can be nurtured such that all three faculties Head, Heart and Hand are developed in a balanced and integrated manner to its fullest potential. #SchoolofThoughts #meetingofminds #educationphilosophy --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/future-school-leaders/message
Born to immigrant parents in poverty, Jonathan and his family quickly learned the value and need for community (something he discovered later on was very hard to come by for folks on the street). Receiving an opportunity to study at the University of Michigan, Jonathan earned a degree in Informatics, specializing in UX design. After producing a documentary on social change ("Talim" on Amazon), Jonathan developed a tool for restaurants to convert surplus food into funding for local food banks called FoodCircles. From there he helped create Samaritan, with the goal to give people without a home the social and financial support needed to leave the street. Through all this, he wants people to meet Jesus and come to know His unconditional love for them.Jonathan joins me today to discuss the causes of homelessness, ways to address homelessness, how volunteers can help a person without a home, why they chose a for benefit corporation rather than nonprofit and what some of the challenges have been, as well has his advice at the end.“We just find that, if you have a social home, addressing that financial poverty becomes a lot easier and higher likelihood that the person is able to do that. And then the physical home can follow thereafter.” - Jonathan KumarToday on Startups for Good we cover:Why Jonathan is drawn to helping the homelessPaying generosity forwardCauses of homelessnessLeaning on people to help you through tough timesDoes mental illness and substance abuse play a role?How Samaritan worksRaising capital as a public benefit corporationConnect with Jonathan Twitter and LinkedInSubscribe, Rate & Share Your Favorite Episodes!Thanks for tuning into today's episode of Startups For Good with your host, Miles Lasater. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave a rating and review on your favorite podcast listening app.Don't forget to visit our website, connect with Miles on Twitter or LinkedIn, and share your favorite episodes across social media. For more information about Purpose Built visit our website.
Episode 143: The "Lush Garden" of Andalusian Music In this podcast, Dr. Carl Davila explores the Andalusian music tradition of Morocco, known as al-ala, through the written song collections, such as the famous Kunnash al-Ha'ik. By examining the literary record, embodied in around 40 handwritten manuscripts found in libraries across Europe and North Africa, we can come to understand the evolution of the repertoire over the past two and a half centuries. Of special interest here is a little-known work called al-Rawdat al-Ghanna' fi Usul al-Ghina' ("The Lush Garden for the Principles of Song'') of which there are just three surviving copies — including one in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Rabat. In this podcast we will explore such questions as: Who wrote this work, and when? What is actually in it? And perhaps most significant: Where does it fit in the history of the written repertoire of Andalusian music? Dr. Carl Davila holds a PhD in Arabic Studies from Yale University (2006). He lived in Fez off and on for nearly three years in the early 2000s and has visited Morocco frequently since then. Being the first scholar to write extensively in English on the Andalusian music in Morocco, he has published two monographs and numerous articles on the cultural, historical and literary aspects of this grand musical tradition. At the moment, he is developing a book series with E.J. Brill that will present English translations and commentary for all eleven nubas in the modern and historical repertoires. He is currently Associate Professor of History at the State University of New York in Brockport. This episode was recorded on April 21st, 2022 at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). To see related slides, please visit our website : www.themaghribpodcast.com Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Topic discuss: Homeopathy and Ramadan and forgiveness. Presenter: Sheikh Sharjeel Ahmad Dr Tariq Bajwa Homeopathy This World Homeopathy Week we take a closer look at the alternative medicine which claims that 'like cures like'. Why it is so heavily disputed by modern science and why are there so many people who still say it has helped improve their health? Join us as we discuss medicine and above all the need to pray to God, the Healer, for any medicine to be effective. Ramadan and forgiveness The Promised Messiah (on whom be peace) has said that Allah states I forgive the sins of one who repents even if the sins are the size of mountains. Knowing this, why would any Muslim waste the blessed month of Ramadan in counting down the hours, when they can be seeking forgiveness from the Merciful Lord? Join us as we discuss forgiveness and reform during this blessed month. Guests: Selina Hatherley RSHom (Selina is Vice Chair for the Society of Homeopaths) Nosheen Rehman (5:15 pm) (G1 inchrage in Talim ul Quran and Waqfe Arzi U.K) Imam Ibrahim Noonan PRODUCERS: Kafi Zafar Sofia Aamir
Tampok sa episode na ito ang unang dalawang liham mula sa MGA LIHAM KAY ELIAS na “Talim” at “Sigasig” na nasulat ko noong Hulyo 24 at Hulyo 25, 2021. Binasa ko rin dito ang ikasiyam na bahagi ng tulang “Pikhukhu” mula sa libro kong SAMANTALANG SAKOP AT INIIBIG: PANIBAGONG TULAMBUHAY. ✨ Kung gusto ninyong magkaroon ng access sa transcripts nitong podcast, bisitahin lang ang http://www.patreon.com/ecsamar para sa detalye. Bisitahan din ang personal na website kong http://ecsamar.com para sa lahat ng iba pang impormasyon tungkol sa akin. ✨ At kung namimili kayo sa Lazada o Shopee, maaari ring gamitin ang mga sumusunod na link sa Shopee (https://shp.ee/28h683p) o Lazada (https://tinyurl.com/MTNPxLazada) para makatanggap kayo ng discount at bilang pagsuporta rin dito sa podcast: ✨ Kung gusto naman ninyong mag-sign-up sa Podmetrics para sa pagmo-monetize ng inyong podcast, pumunta lang sa http://podmetrics.co at gamitin ang REFERRAL CODE na: MgaTeoryaNgPagkahulog. ✨ Kung naghahanap kayo ng VPN, please check out NordVPN! Nag-o-offer sila ng 73% discount ngayon sa listeners ng MGA TEORYA NG PAGKAHULOG podcast! Go to this link: http://nordvpn.com/teorya and use the coupon code: teorya when you check out! Maraming salamat!
Episode 132: Queens Of Words: Moroccan Women Zajal Poets In this podcast, Catherine Cartier speaks about Queens Of Words: Moroccan Women Zajal Poets. Zajal, which flourished in 14th century Andalusia, is a genre of poetry composed in spoken Arabic—Moroccan Arabic/Darija in this case. The genre reemerged in postcolonial Morocco, when it was largely published in newspapers. The recent history of zajal may appear male dominated: the 1992 edition of Afaq, the Journal of the Moroccan Writer's Union, highlighted modern zajal poetry but included only one poem by a woman poet. But many Moroccan women who write zajal today look to history for inspiration, often citing Kharbousha, an iconic figure who resisted oppressive rulers through her poetry, as an example they seek to emulate. Beyond this, Facebook and TikTok, provide a rich and accessible realm for sharing poetry. Her research, grounded in interviews with zajalat (women zajal poets) and close readings of their work, examines how and why Moroccan women write zajal poetry today, and what their experiences on and off the page can tell us about Darija as a literary language. Catherine Cartier received her B.A. in History and Arab Studies in May 2020 from Davidson College (USA). Prior to Fulbright, she worked as an investigative intern and consultant at the Center for Advanced Defense Study and reported as an independent journalist from Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and Tajikistan. Her Fulbright research examines zajal poetry written by Moroccan women. This episode was recorded on September 22, 2021 at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
تواضع اختیار کیجئے Tawazu' Ikhtiyar Kijiay Dr. Farhat Hashmi 15-02-2021 Talim al-Quran 1, Islamabad Online
سستی کا علاج Susti Ka Ilaj Dr. Farhat Hashmi 22-02-2021 Talim al-Quran 2, Islamabad Online
علم کا راستہ Ilm Ka Rastah Dr. Farhat Hashmi 08-03-2021 Talim al-Quran 3-4, Tadabbur, Islamabad Online
03.12.2021 | Dijital Hayat Bölüm356 - TRT Radyo1 | "20. Milli Eğitim Şurası - Özel Yayın" Bilal Eren'in hazırlayıp, sunduğu Dijital Hayat programımızda bu hafta, Talim ve Terbiye Kurulu Başkanı Prof. Dr. Cihad Demirli ile; - Milli Eğitim Şurası Nedir, Amacı Ne? - 20. Milli Eğitim Şurası'nın Katılımcıları Kimler? - 20. Milli Eğitim Şurası'nın Teması Ne, Neler Konuşuldu? - 20. Milli Eğitim Şurası Sonuçları Neler Oldu? - Uzaktan Eğitim ve Dijital Uçurum, Eğitimde Fırsat Eşitliğini Nasıl Etkiledi? - Ders İçeriklerinde Dijital Çağa Uygun Neler Yapılıyor? - Talim ve Terbiye Kurulu Başkanlığı Bilgi Sistemi Nedir, Amacı Ne? - Talim ve Terbiye Kurulu Başkanlığı Bilgi Sistemi Nasıl Çalışıyor? - Talim ve Terbiye Kurulu Başkanlığı Bilgi Sistemi Panelistleri Kimler Olabilir, Nasıl Belirleniyor? - kitapinceleme.gov.tr web sitesi üzerinden işleyecek sistemin zaman planı nasıl? - Ders İçeriklerini Değerlendirme Sistemi Dijital mi Olacak? Başlıklarını konuştuk. Dijital Hayat, her cuma saat 15:30'da TRT Radyo1 mikrofonlarında canlı yayında... Tüm geçmiş ve gelecek yayınlarımız için; Web: https://www.dijitalhayat.tv
Kai Talim wants to talk about curiosity. Douglas Detrick and this pianist turned podcaster and entrepreneur had a thoughtful conversation about how following our curiosity can lead to new directions in our lives.
Episode 131: Roots And Traces Of Contemporary Cultural Life In Tangier In this discussion at Youmein 2021: Roots and Traces, anthropologist George Bajalia and journalist Aida Alami explore the roots and traces of contemporary cultural life in Tangier, especially as they relate to northern Morocco's border regions. From questions of diversity and difference to the roots of present debates around representation, responsibility, and justice, Youmein 2021: Roots and Traces was an open-ended artistic inquiry into how the structures of our past have shaped our current moment. The traces of this past appear in unexpected places, both institutionally and in the social milieu from which we develop artistic reflections. Uncomfortable inequities and realities sit adjacent to the rise of powerful populist and progressive movements worldwide. Since Youmein began in 2014, xenophobia, isolationism, and neo-imperialism have grown simultaneously with new forms of solidarities and ways of being in-common. How will these movements leave their traces in our shifting social orders, and how will they transform, sediment, and root themselves differently? So far, each edition of the Youmein Festival has taken on themes speaking to Tangier as a space of both border and bridge: al-barzakh, crisis, imitation, limit(s), and desire. This year, those themes became the fertile ground on which we will reconvene and dig deep into what has come before and make choices about where we want to go next. After a year of isolated reflections, and alongside the Bicentennial of the Tangier-American Legation, Youmein invited the artists, speakers, and the public to critically reflect on the view from Tangier, and the cultures, peoples, and conditions which compose it. As a part of the 2021 Youmein Festival, Alami and Bajalia reflected on Tangier and its myths, past and present, and alternative cultural histories and present realities in this corner of the Strait of Gibraltar. From Maalem Abdellah Gourd and the renovation of his home in Tangier medina to the role of the Tangier American Legation Museum in the city, they share thoughts how different flows of people through the city, categorized differently as migrants, immigrants, “ex-pats,” and artists, intersect and overlap. George Bajalia is an anthropologist (Ph.D., Columbia University), Assistant Professor at Wesleyan University, and theatre director based between Morocco and New York. He is the co-founder of the annual Youmein Creative Media Festival in Tangier, Morocco and the Northwestern University in Qatar Creative Media Festival. His work has been supported by the CAORC-Mellon Mediterranean Research Fellowship, the American Institute of Maghrib Studies Long-Term Fellowship, and the Fulbright Foundation, and he is a Fellow of the Tangier- American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies. Aida Alami is a Moroccan freelance journalist who's frequently on the road, reporting from North Africa, France, the Caribbean, and more recently, Senegal. She regularly contributes to the New York Times, and her work has also been published by the New York Review of Books, The Financial Times, and Foreign Policy. She earned her bachelor's degree in media studies at Hunter College and her master's degree in journalism at Columbia University. She mainly covers migration, human rights, religion, politics and racism. These days, Aida spends a lot of time in France, where she is directing a documentary feature on antiracism activists and police violence. This episode was recorded on July 28th, 2021 at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Episode 130: Writing on Kingdom Walls: Practices, Narratives and Visual Politics of Graffiti and Street Art in Jordan and Morocco Soufiane's focus is a comparative study on cultural practices and narratives related to art production and its entanglement with resistance and visual politics in North Africa and the Middle East. By working on Morocco and Jordan, he mainly focus on wall-writings, street art, and graffiti in order to understand what wall expressions do, the extent to which they have a particularly political place in society, and how they relate to socio-political transformations. Soufiane Chinig is a first-year PhD student of anthropology in the Berlin Graduate School Muslim Cultures and Societies at Freie Universität Berlin. His research in anthropology is on writing and painting on walls in Morocco and Jordan. He also holds an MA in Sociology and Anthropology from Hassan II University in Mohammedia, and a BA in Sociology from Mohammed V University. Alongside his academic work, he is also active in promoting Moroccan cultural heritage and evaluating urban policies in that country. This episode was recorded on July 31st 2021, at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Episode 128: Protecting Morocco´s Rarest Forests The high mountains of Talassemtane National Park protect some of the rarest trees and animals in Morocco and North Africa. Forest fires can have negative as well as positive effects on conserving these unique ecosystems. Research ranging from satellite images to tree-ring analysis is being applied to help forest managers protect the forest and adapt to changing climate. Dr. Peter Fulé is a professor in the School of Forestry at Northern Arizona University. His research is at the intersection of forests, wildfire, climate and people around the world. Peter works with students and colleagues using multiple research techniques including tree rings to assess tree growth and forest fires over many centuries. Using models of forest growth and climate, they test forest restoration treatments and simulate changes into the future. He has taught and done research on five continents. Currently he is a visiting Fulbright Scholar in Tétouan, Morocco, working with Abdelmalek Essaâdi, University and Talassemtane National Park. This episode was recorded on June 12th, 2021 at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Posted by: Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Kajian Talim di Nuhda
On May 17, 2021, the American Legation building in Tangier celebrates its bicentennial. A U.S. National Historical Landmark (NHL) since 1982, Sultan Moulay Suliman presented the building, now part of a larger complex, to the United States in 1821. The building is a powerful symbol of the long-standing and strong historical, cultural, and diplomatic ties between the U.S. and the Kingdom of Morocco. While it no longer serves a diplomatic purpose, it is still owned by the U.S. Government and is occupied by the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM), which comprises a museum, library, cultural and research center. John Davison, TALIM's director, discusses the history and importance of the building, both past and present, in this episode. The building is the oldest continuously occupied U.S. diplomatic property in the world. The relationship between the U.S. and Morocco is long and deep. Sultan Mohammed III issued a decree opening Morocco's ports to American ships in 1777, making Morocco one of the first countries to recognize the newly independent United States. The Treaty of Peace and Friendship, signed by the U.S. and Morocco in 1786, is the longest unbroken treaty relationship in U.S. history. It is the only NHL listing or designation in a foreign country, excluding those in countries that grew out of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands. NHLs are those that have been recognized by the Secretary of the Interior as possessing national significance: properties that help us understand our history. All NHLs are part of the National Register of Historic Places, which is the official list of the nation's historic properties worthy of preservation. Landmarks constitute more than 2,500 of more than 90,000 entries in the National Register; the others are of state and local significance. Both the NHL program and National Register of Historic Places are run by the National Park Service. TALIM website: https://legation.org/ Virtual tour: https://legation.org/virtual-tour/ TALIM social media channels: https://www.facebook.com/TangierAmericanLegation https://www.instagram.com/tangieramericanlegation/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoWoGL8gO9n-Rjon-HYI2Jg Outdoor Organization Feature: Get Out Stay Out/Vamos Afuera is committed to increasing diversity and representation for people of color, especially indigenous youth, within the outdoor industry by ensuring they have opportunities to run, play, and discover themselves in the natural world. Follow Get Out Stay Out on Instagram (@getout.stayout). Please consider a donation to support their work - 100 percent of your donation will go to youth excursions: check out their website at vamosafuera.org. Resources: https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalhistoriclandmarks/list-of-nhls-by-state.htm Legation.org https://savingplaces.org/stories/american-history-foreign-soil-tangier-american-legation-morocco#.YKBL5GYza3I Photo courtesy of TALIM
Episode 115: Les significations profanes de la pandémie Covid-19 à Oran Dans ce podcast, Pr. Mohamed Mebtoul présente les résultats de son enquête menée à Oran, avec la participation de l’Association Santé Sidi El Houari et L’Observatoire Régional de la Santé d’Oran sur les significations profanes de la pandémie Covid-19. D'après lui, les mots, les métaphores et les propos des personnes sont essentiels pour comprendre les sens attribués à la pandémie Covid-19 à Oran. Les sens du mal sont importants à mettre en exergue. Ils traduisent les rapports des individus à la société et au politique. Seule une recherche socio-anthropologique centrée sur l’écoute attentive de la personne, pouvait nous permettre de prendre distance avec les certitudes, les jugements moraux et les étiquetages rapides sur la façon de se comporter vis-à-vis de la pandémie (« inconscience », « indiscipline », etc.). La rigueur scientifique est déployée à partir d’une enquête qualitative plus soucieuse de la qualité des mots que de la représentativité. Elle permet de relever les profondes secousses relationnelles occasionnées durant la pandémie, les inégales valeurs de vie face au confinement identifié à une « prison », une gestion sécuritaire, administrée et patriarcale de la pandémie. Mohamed Mebtoul est en retraite. Il a été professeur de sociologie à l’Université d’Oran 2, directeur de l’Unité de Recherche en Sciences Sociales et Santé, fondateur de l’anthropologie de la santé en Algérie en 1991 et co-fondateur du GRAS (groupe de recherché en anthropologie de la santé). Ses recherches socio-anthropologiques ont porté sur les questions sociosanitaires centrées sur les logiques sociales déployées par les malades chroniques, les familles, les professionnels de santé et les pouvoirs publics. Sa trajectoire scientifique sur le “sens du mal” a été remobilisée pour décrypter les pratiques de la population vis-à-vis de la crise sociosanitaire D’autres travaux ont concerné la sexualité des jeunes, la santé dite “reproductive” des femmes, les tensions autour de l’alimentation de l’enfant, sous le prisme des rapports sociaux de sexe. Ces recherches micro-sociologiques lui ont permis de questionner la notion de citoyenneté en Algérie, dans une perspective anthropologique, montrant son absence dans la société algérienne et surtout les raisons de sa non-constitution. Ce qui l’a conduit à appréhender le “Hirak” algérien du 22 février 2019, en investissant l’espace public pour tenter de comprendre de l’intérieur les objectifs, les logiques d’action et les interactions des manifestants. Sa trajectoire scientifique sur le “sens du mal” a été remobilisée pour décrypter les pratiques de la population vis-à-vis de la pandémie Covid-19. Ce dernier travail a été réalisé avec la participation de l’Association Santé Sidi El Houari et L’Observatoire Régional de la Santé d’Oran Cet épisode s'inscrit dans le cadre du cycle des conférences “Santé et humanités au Maghreb” de l'American Institute for Maghrib Studies (AIMS), organisé par le Centre d'Études Maghrébines en Algérie (CEMA) et le Centre d'Études Maghrébines à Tunis (CEMAT) en étroite collaboration avec Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Ce podcast a été enregistré via Zoom le 10 décembre 2020 entre Oran et Tunis. Dr. Robert P. Parks, Directeur du CEMA, a modéré le débat. Nous remercions Dr. Jonathan Glasser, anthropologue culturel au College of William & Mary, pour son istikhbar in sika à l'alto pour l'introduction et la conclusion de ce podcast. Réalisation et montage: Hayet Lansari, Bibliothécaire / Chargée de la diffusion des activités scientifiques (CEMA).
Episode 109: Bread and Circuits: Illness, Food, and the Course of Empire in Algeria In the midst of ongoing drought, famine, and epidemic disease in the 1860s, a few settlers in Algiers got sick with a mysterious illness. Investigations determined that the culprit was construction debris from the Haussmannization of Paris, shipped across imperial channels and then used as fuel in a few Algiers bakeries. Lead pain become poison in loaves as this material combusted in colonial bread ovens. The modernization of the imperial metropole, that is, turned into toxic debris in the colony. In this podcast, Dr. Brock Cutler takes a look at how this story about poisoned bread can expose the filaments that tied together an imperial space in the western Mediterranean, along the way illuminating the role bread played in performances of modern imperialism. Dr. Brock Cutler is an Associate Professor in the Department of History at Radford University. He is the author of numerous articles and book chapters dealing with ecology and history in North Africa. His forthcoming book, "Crisis Ecologies: Imperialism, Death, and Debris in Algeria," centered around a massive ecological disaster in which 800,000 Algerians died between 1865 and 1872, explores how the new eco-social dynamics in the late nineteenth century cleaved societies from environments and people from society, creating the new insides and outsides of modernity and imperialism. This episode is part of “Health and Humanities in the Maghrib” a lecture series by the American Institute for Maghrib Studies (AIMS), organized by the Centre d'Études Maghrébines à Tunis (CEMAT) and the Centre d'Études Maghrébines en Algérie (CEMA), in close collaboration with the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). It was recorded on the 15th of October 2020 between Oran, Radford (VA), St. Petersburg (FL) and Tunis. Dr. Adam Guerin, Associate Professor in the Department of History at Eckerd College, moderated the lecture and debate. To see related slides visit our web site www.themaghribpodcast.com We thank Dr. Jonathan Glasser, Cultural Anthropologist at the College of William & Mary for his istikhbar in sika on viola for the introduction and conclusion of this podcast. Realization and editing: Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
For billions of children across the world, schooling and education has taken a new meaning. Bedrooms, kitchen counters, dining tables, a mat on the floor became the new classroom and the noise around EdTech rose to a crescendo. Amidst the din, it is easy to forget that in 1937, Gandhiji conceptualised Nai Talim, an alternate philosophy of education which states that work and knowledge are not separate. The three pillars of Gandhiji's pedagogy were it's focus on the lifelong character of education, it's social character, and it's form as a holistic process. I caught up with Sushama Sharma, the principal of Anand Niketan (a Nai Talim school) in Sewagram in Wardha District of Maharashtra. She is a Gandhian, farmer and activist who strongly believes that sustainability is the way forward. In our conversation, we spoke of what Nai Talim means today, how an alternate education philosophy creates impact, and why consumerism as a lifestyle is unsustainable. She shares exciting snippets of her personal journey so find a comfortable spot to look out the window and partake of an alternate possibility while the soundtrack of your own life plays in the background. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/manisha-kadagathur/message
(Allah) Adem'e isimlerin hepsini öğretti. (Bakara: 31) ayetinde bahsedilen isimlerden maksat nedir? Niçin insanın meleklere veya diğer yaratılmışlara potansiyel olarak üstün olması, onun isimleri bilmesiyle açıklanıyor? Videomuzda bu sorulara cevaplar bulmaya çalıştık. İyi seyirler. 00:00 - İnsanı diğer canlılardan ayıran özellik 01:38 - Giriş 02:53 - Dil ve Beyan 09:22 - Hz Adem'e arz 14:57 - İlim, Fen ve Sanat 18:38 - Talim ve Kapanış
Experiências concretas de tarifa zero: de Talim a Maricá
Hal Santiago’s name is synonymous with the komiks novels Pinoy Houdini, Talim and The Hands. The Hands won for him the award for Best Written and Illustrated Novel by an Artist from the komiks contributors’ association, WIKA, in 1984.The three aforementioned novels were all written by him when he joined Graphic Arts Service, Inc. (GASI) […] The post IKP 065: Interview with Hal Santiago – Pinoy Komiks Veteran appeared first on @mukatman online.
Episode 87: Building Habitat: The Atelier des Bâtisseurs in North Africa and Beyond In this podcast, Johanna Sluiter, PhD Candidate at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University, discusses the building habitat: The Atelier des Bâtisseurs in North Africa and Beyond. In 1949, the Atelier des Bâtisseurs (ATBAT) founded their first overseas bureau in Tangiers, Morocco. Having split with their mentor, Le Corbusier, and garnered worldwide attention for their first building site, the Unité d’Habitation in Marseille, ATBAT sought to expand its practice beyond France by establishing ATBAT-Afrique, before embarking upon future plans for ATBAT-Orient and ATBAT-Amérique, to be installed in Beirut and New York, respectively. This initial work abroad would therefore serve as both a critical test and potential catalyst for the young multinational, multidisciplinary firm. It would demonstrate the ability (or lack thereof) of European-trained architects to respond to contexts defined by radically new cultures, climates, and clients than they had previously addressed or even considered, and would articulate their idea of ‘habitat’ – a comprehensive framework for universal building – in visual form. This podcast addresses methodological approaches and challenges in researching ATBAT’s theoretical and concrete developments of habitat in Morocco before tracing the afterlives of these projects in adjacent Algeria, far-flung Cambodia, and ultimately returning to the Parisian suburbs at the end of the decade. Johanna Sluiter is writing a dissertation on the Atelier des Bâtisseurs and the development of habitat in post-war architecture. She is currently an associate researcher at the École Normale Supérieure d’Architecture Belleville in Paris and a Chester Dale Fellow at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. TALIM Director John Davison moderated the discussion for this podcast, which was recorded on 21 February 2020, at the Tangier American Legation and Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM), in Tangier, Morocco. Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Lawrence Peskin, a history professor at Morgan State University in Baltimore, is in Tangier to research the life of James Simpson, America’s first consul to Morocco (1797-1820). He is doing so as part of a larger book project that traces the development of the Early National American community in the Mediterranean region by studying the lives and networks of three consuls. In addition to Simpson, he is studying Robert Montgomery of Alicante, Spain and Thomas Appleton of Livorno, Italy. In addition to the many sources in the library at TALIM, he has benefitted from the opportunity to be able to walk around Tangier and understand the local geography. In doing so he has struggled to identify the remains of the 18th and early 19th century town and, particularly, the various consular houses in which members of the roughly 150-member European community resided. In the pod cast and in a more detailed blog post (http://legation.ipower.com/blog/?p=2085,) he discusses his efforts to find the location of the first American consular house (before the current American Legation) and Simpson’s country villa, “Mount Washington.” Further Reading: Luella J. Hall, The United States and Morocco 1776-1956 (NJ, 1971) Frank Lambert, The Barbary Wars: American Independence in the Atlantic World (NY, 2005) Richard B. Parker, Uncle Sam in Barbary (Florida, 2004) Priscilla H. and Richard S. Roberts, Thomas Barclay (1728-1793):Consul in France, Diplomat in Barbary (PA 2008)
Welcome Everyone to another episode! In today's episode we have the true honor and priveledge of having on the ICONIC Kira Buckland! Kira is a famous and phenomanal voice actress that has voices so many iconic characters from 2B in Yoko Taro's Nier Automata, Kyoko in River City Girls, Talim in Soul Calibur VI, Falke in Street Fighter V, and so much more! We dive into her journey as a voice actress and so much more! Twitter: @kirabuckland Instagram: @killercoffeequeen Facebook: /kiravoices www.kirabuckland.com www.voiceactingclub.comDigital Cards PSN 25$: https://amzn.to/33v5pUA XBL 25$: https://amzn.to/2ODBZza eShop 20$: https://amzn.to/2R36hgF Join The Channel Membership today by clicking here here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLAKtxpwPMXfaEtNBw0yMg/join Support the Channel and Streams with https://streamelements.com/mekelkasanova-2378/tip TubeBuddy: https://www.tubebuddy.com/MekelKasanova If you want to know what gear I'm using and want to get one or all then check out my Amazon page here and get your gear: https://www.amazon.com/shop/mekeljames Great ways to support the channel: Twitter ? http://twitter.com/MekelKasanova Instagram ? https://www.instagram.com/MekelKasanova Facebook ? https://www.facebook.com/MekelKasanova Discord ? https://discord.gg/Mmz9pM5 Patreon ?https://www.patreon.com/MekelKasanova TeeSpring ? https://teespring.com/stores/mekelkasanova Patrons: Shane, Devin Wolery/PCGamerZHawaii, Miguela Cruzeta, Tou Thao, Edward Bishop, Zachary Powell CHECK OUT THESE AWESOME CHANNELS: GamerThumbTV: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSkFr6hybdMu3Au-cBr855Q Lehua Superfina:https://www.youtube.com/user/superfina MacSplicer: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC83Ax23wYt8Xhdez_7FpRTA MY GEAR: Desktop: https://amzn.to/2GRTUhT Main Monitor: https://amzn.to/2DzFr83 Secondary Monitor: https://amzn.to/2l9sk7t Camera: https://amzn.to/2IM9TjL WebCam: https://amzn.to/2XUNeVI Secondary Webcam: https://amzn.to/2l6iS4z Studio Mic: https://amzn.to/2jGlyWk Headset: https://amzn.to/2IPBws2 NOTE: This description contains affiliate links that allow you to find the items mentioned in this video and support the channel at no cost to you. While this channel may earn minimal sums when the viewer uses the links, the viewer is in NO WAY obligated to use these links. Thank you for your support! All clips of audio and video used in this work are used for entertainment or education purposes under the fair use clause found in sections 107 through 118 of the copyright law (title 17, U. S. Code). If you have any dispute please contact me.
Episode 79: Moroccan-American Archaeological Project of Ancient Sijilmasa In this podcast, Prof. James Miller, Emeritus Professor of Geography at Clemson University, discusses the joint Moroccan-American archaeological project at the site of Sijilmasa, and the publication of that projects findings, The Last Civilized Place: Sijilmasas and Its Saharan Destiny (University of Texas Press, 2015). Co-authored with project director Prof. Ronald Messier, Emeritus Professor of History at Middle Tennessee State University, the book places Sijilmasa in the context of Moroccan and Islamic history, revealing the 1,000-year history of the caravan center as a focus of trans-Saharan trade and focal point of dynastic change. The podcast covers a wide variety of topics associated with Sijilmasa: its origins in the second century A.H. and the establishment of the Midrarid dynasty and their Sufri religious background, the significance of the surrounding irrigated oasis landscape of the Tafilalt, the unprotected nature of the site of Sijilmasa today, and the threats to it posed by the growth of the adjacent modern town of Rissani. The relations Sijilmasa long held with ancient Ghana and successor states south of the Sahara were rooted in the element of trade for which Sijilmasa was known far and wide from its earliest days, namely gold. Gold, African gold, was Sijilmasa’s fame, and the city and its caravans and commercial reach were the result of its long-held monopoly on the trans-Saharan gold trade. Prof. Miller received his Ph.D. in cultural geography from the University of Texas at Austin and taught in the Department of History and Geography at Clemson University for 28 years. Upon retiring from Clemson, he became the Executive Director of the Moroccan-American Commission for Educational and Cultural Exchange (MACECE – Fulbright Morocco) in 2009 and retired from that position in 2018. He was President of the American Institute for Maghrib Studies from 2007 to 2010 and has been Vice President since 2018. He serves on the boards of the Tangier American Legation and Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM) and CorpsAfrica. Prof. Miller is the author of a number of works, including Imlil: A Modern Moroccan Geography (Westview, 1984) and A Question of Place (Wiley, 1989 - co-authored with Paul Ward). TALIM Director John Davison moderated the discussion for this podcast, which was recorded on 30 September 2019, at TALIM, in Tangier, Morocco. Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
On Monday, September 30 2019, James Miller spoke with TALIM Director John Davison about the joint Moroccan-American archaeological project at the site of ancient Sijilmasa and the publication of book, “The Last Civilized Place: Sijilmasa and Its Saharan Destiny” (University of Texas Press, 2015). “The Last Civilized Place,” written by Miller and Project Director Ronald Messier, recounts the story of the Project, its archaeological findings, and places Sijilmasa in the context of Moroccan and Islamic history, revealing the 1000-year history of the caravan center as a focus of trans-Saharan trade and focal point of dynastic change. The conversation led to a wide variety of topics associated with Sijilmasa: its origins in the second century A.H. and the establishment of the Midrarid dynasty and their Sufri religious background, the significance of the surrounding irrigated oasis landscape of the Tafilalt, the unprotected nature of the site of Sijilmasa today and the threats to it posed by the growth of the adjacent modern town of Rissani. The relations Sijilmasa long held with ancient Ghana and successor states south of the Sahara were rooted in the element of trade for which Sijilmasa was known far and wide from its earliest days, namely gold. Gold, African gold, was Sijilmasa’s fame, and the city and its caravans and commercial reach were the result of its long-held monopoly on the trans-Saharan gold trade. James Miller received his PhD in cultural geography from the University of Texas and taught in the Department of History and Geography at Clemson University (South Carolina, USA) for 28 years. Upon retiring from Clemson, Miller became the Executive Director of the Moroccan-American Commission for Educational & Cultural Exchange (MACECE – Fulbright Morocco) in 2009 and retired from that position in 2018. Miller was, 2007-2010, President of AIMS and since 2018 has been Vice President of the organization. He serves on the boards of TALIM and CorpsAfrica. Miller is the co-author of the geography textbook, A Question of Place (Wiley) and the monography The Last Civilized Place: Sijilmasa and Its Saharan Destiny (University of Texas Press), and the author of Imlil: A Modern Moroccan Geography (Westview). Miller was a political officer in the U.S. Foreign Service and, retired, lives in Skaneateles, New York.
Episode 76: Land, Labor, and Youth Aspirations in the Gharb, Morocco In this podcast, David Balgley, Masters candidate in Arab Studies at Georgetown University, discusses some of the factors impacting the labor decisions of young people in the Gharb, including the ways in which gender, class, and access to productive capital create and constrain the opportunities for youth in the Moroccan countryside. In addition, he breaks down how young rural people negotiate the tension between maintaining social ties to their ancestral land with economic pressures to migrate. In this context, David explores how the privatization of collective land in the Gharb could stimulate new labor possibilities, livelihood shifts, and youth aspirations. In 2015, the Government of Morocco and the Millennium Challenge Corporation, a U.S. aid agency, signed the Morocco Land and Employability Compact. This Compact includes a project to title 51,000 hectares of collective land in the Gharb region, thereby turning it into private property. The project’s discourse emphasizes that integrating land into market systems leads to greater productivity, enhanced access to credit, and increased land values, all of which benefit rural populations. However, government reports largely fail to account for how agrarian transformations resulting from privatization have differentiated impacts on different rural population groups, particularly young people. The Gharb plain, which is located along the north-western Atlantic coast, has long been one of the most agriculturally productive regions of Morocco. Since the 1970s, demographic growth, land fragmentation, and the rise of foreign investment in agro-business have all contributed to shifts in rural livelihoods and income-generating activities. Many households no longer rely solely on agriculture as their primary source of income. As a result, young people living in collective land in the Gharb are pursuing diverse livelihood strategies, even as their future aspirations diverge significantly from those of previous generations. This episode was recorded on August 23rd 2019, at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Episode 72: Moroccan Shari’a In The Age Of Colonialism In this podcast, Ari Schriber, PhD Candidate in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations at Harvard University, discusses his research project entitled: 'Moroccan Shari’a in The Age of Colonialism.' Ari Schriber performed his dissertation fieldwork as a grantee of the American Institute of Maghrib Studies from 2018-2019. Likewise, he is a former Fulbright research grantee (2013-2014) and FLAS grantee (2012) in Morocco. He holds an AM (masters) in NELC from Harvard and a BA from the University of Virginia. This episode was recorded on July 25th 2019, at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM). Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Retired U.S. Ambassador Carleton Coon, Jr. served as Deputy Chief of Mission in Rabat in 1976, the year that the Department of State agreed to allow the Tangier American Legation to be converted into a private museum honoring the historic U.S.-Moroccan friendship. In this podcast, Emily Albrecht of Dartmouth College interviews Amb. Coon, who recounts the efforts made to restore the Legation in time for the celebrations of the U.S. Bicentennial. Ms. Albrecht's interviews form part of a series of oral histories she recorded for her senior thesis, entitled, "Mapping Memories, Creating History: The Tangier American Legation" (May 2016), a copy of which is available in TALIM's research library. Amb. Coon, who passed away at age 91 in December, 2018, was profiled in a Washington Post obituary: https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/carleton-coon-jr-a-diplomat-in-love-and-work-dies-at-91/2019/01/13/0c267d12-1539-11e9-90a8-136fa44b80ba_story.html?utm_term=.ae976838023e While serving as U.S. Ambassador to Nepal, he and his wife Jane Abell Coon, who was the U.S. Ambassador to Bangladesh, were profiled in the New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/1981/06/08/style/2-ambassadors-test-their-marriage.html Ambassador Coon was the son of noted anthropologist Carlton Coon, whose field work in Morocco's Rif Mountains led him to be selected to serve at the Tangier American Legation during World War II as head of the Office of Special Service, which he chronicled in his book, "A North Africa Story: The Anthropologist as OSS Agent." Amb. Coon was also first cousin of TALIM Board Member Elena Prentice.
This podcast featuring Ian VanderMeulen, doctoral candidate in Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at New York University, and TALIM resident director John Davison, was recorded February 7, 2019. According to some religious leaders and other intellectuals, Morocco is in the midst of a “recitational revival” (sahwa tajwidiyya). Though its scope and effectiveness are not yet clear, the intention is a re-emphasis on two core Islamic disciplines that relate to recitation of the Qur’an: first, tajwid, a system of rules that govern pronunciation and rhythm of the Qur’anic text in recitation performance; and the variance of those rules across seven, coherent, recitals or “readings” (qira’at) that are equally sound. Within this revival, Moroccan’s historical preference for riwayat Warsh, a lesser-practiced variant of one of the seven qira’at has become almost a point of national pride, and thus the Moroccan state has devoted many resources not only to specialist study of the qira’at, but also popularization of tajwid through mass media. Engaging fieldwork at a variety of institutions, including new and pre-existing schools and state radio, Ian maps an institutional framework of this revival and describes some of its core elements. In particular, he compares and contrasts the work going on at two institutions of qira’at study, the state-funded Ma‘had Muhammad Assadiss lil-dirasat wal-qira’at al-Qur’aniyya in Rabat, and the private Madrasat Ibn al-Qadi lil-qira’at in Sale. Taking inspiration from the growing field of “sound studies,” and grounding his fieldwork in historical research on tajwid, the qira’at, and the history of sound recording, Ian suggests that the sahwa tajwidiiyya is less a “revival” of previous practices of recitation per se, but a refashioning of such practices and their pedagogies through the application of new technologies, from modern classroom whiteboards to digital studio recording. Ian VanderMeulen is a doctoral candidate in the Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at New York University. A performing musician, Ian holds bachelor’s degrees in music and religious studies from Oberlin College and an M.A. from The Graduate Center, City University of New York. His research in France and Morocco has been funded by NYU’s Graduate Research Initiative and the American Institute for Maghrib Studies. Further Reading: Bates, Eliot. 2016. Digital Tradition: Arrangement and Labor in Istanbul’s Recording Studio Culture. Oxford University Press. Benmahan, Ahmed. 2014. Al-Tajwīd al-muyassar, b-riwāyat Warsh ‘an Nāfi‘ min tarīq al-Azraq. Al-Tab‘a al-thālitha. Rabāt: al-Iydā ‘ al-Qānuni. Denny, F.M., “Tad̲j̲wīd”, in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Feld, Steven and D. Brenneis. 2004. “Doing anthropology in sound.” American Ethnologist, 31 (4): 461-74. Hirschkind, Charles. 2006. The Ethical Soundscape: Cassette Sermons and Islamic Counterpublics. New York: Columbia University Press. Nelson, Kristina. 2002 (1985). The Art of Reciting the Qur’an. American University of Cairo Press. Paret, R., “Ḳirāʾa”, in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Rassmussen, Anne K. 2010. Women, the Recited Qur’an, and Islamic Music in Indonesia. Berkeley: University of California Press. Sterne, Jonathan. ed. 2012b. The Sound Studies Reader. New York: Routledge. ______. 2003. The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. al-Timsimānī, Muhammad bin Ahmed Huhuwar. 2013. Tarājim Qurrā’ al-Maghrib al-Aqsā, khilāl al-qarnayn al-thāni ‘ashar wa al-thālith ‘ashar al-hijjrīyin. Tangier: Dar al-Hadīth al-Kattāni. al-Wafī, Ibrahīm. 1999. al-Dirāsāt al-Qur’āniyya bil-Maghrib fil-qarn al-rābi‘ ‘ashr al-hijrī. al- Dār al-Baydā’: Dār al-Thaqāfa al-Maghribiyya.
Episode 58: Moroccan and Ottoman Contributions to 18th c. Diplomatic Developments Throughout the eighteenth century, the Ottoman and Russian Empires were at war. However, a decisive victory by the Russian Empire helped them assert their influence over both Crimea and the Mediterranean. The Ottomans, wanting to counteract this assumption of power fought to prevent Russian ships from entering through the Straits of Gibraltar, seeking assistance from the Moroccan king Sidi Muhammed Ben Abdallah. In this episode, Peter Kitlas, Ph.D. Candidate at the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University, discusses the vibrant developments in diplomatic activity between Morocco and the Ottoman Empire throughout the eighteenth century. The increased exchange of diplomats between these two non-European powers demonstrates how Morocco and the Ottoman Empire responded to changes in international relations during this time period while still maintaining a particular diplomatic ethos. Focusing on some entertaining anecdotes about diplomats and their adventures, Peter takes us through the travelogues (riḥla and sefaretname) of several Moroccan and Ottoman diplomats to demonstrate how they navigated the changing field of international relations. Here, Peter highlights that diplomatic history should deal just as much with developments in bureaucracy and statecraft as it does with its foundational standards and practices governed by a particular diplomatic mentality. Focusing on both actions and the governing influences behind those actions will help bring Morocco and the Ottoman Empire into broader conversations about diplomacy during this time period and might even help to uncover outlying developments in the European theater that have not fit into the particular ethos of a state-craft focused, bureaucratic teleology. Peter Kitlas is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University He is a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer from Morocco and holds an M.A. from the University of Michigan. He research in Morocco, Turkey, Gibraltar, and Dubrovnik has been funded by the Social Science Research Council and the Department of Education through the Fulbright-Hays Commission. This Podcast was recorded on 10 January at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM), in Tangier, Morocco. TALIM Resident Director John Davison moderated the discussion. Posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Ce podcast a été enregistré le samedi 2 Février au TALIM, le Tangier American Legation Institute for Maghreb Studies, dans le cadre d'une conférence animée par Dr Hassan Aourid, éminent politilogue, chercheur, écrivain ayant pour thème : les fondements institutionnels du Maroc traditionnel : Makhzen,Zaouias, Tribus. Dr Hassan Aourid a souligné le rôle de ces 3 composantes et leur pouvoir temporel ou spirituel. Le politologue est l'auteur d'essais, de nouvelles, de romans et de poèmes . Parmi ses ouvrages, on peut citer: Occident : est ce le crépuscule ? Bouregreg 2011 Le Morisque, Bouregreg 2011 Biographie d'un âne 2014 L'impasse de l'Islamisme 2015 Aux origines du marasme arabe, Tusna 2017 200 personnes ont assisté à cette rencontre .
Peter Kitlas: Moroccan and Ottoman Contributions to 18th c. Diplomatic Developments by TALIM
This podcast featuring American doctoral candidate in the department of Arabic and Islamic Studies at Georgetown University Anny Gaul and TALIM resident Director John Davison was recorded in October 24, 2018. The historical record suggests that during the early modern period, culinary cultures in Egypt and Morocco had far more in common than not. But in the nineteenth century, the way Egyptians and Moroccans ate began to transform. As a result, by the 1950s, the new urban middle classes were developing culinary styles that could be considered ‘national’ for the first time. Today, Egyptian and Moroccan food cultures have little in common. Anny Gaul's research uses ‘cuisine’ (understood as both a cooking style and a cooking space) as a new framework for understanding the emergence of modern national identities in North Africa. Using sources that include novels, memoirs, cookbooks, state archives, and ethnographic data, the project traces the history of North African food cultures from the colonial period through the early decades of political independence. In this interview, Anny discusses what she learned about the cuisine of the city of Tetouan and her methodological strategies for studying the kitchen, which she describes as being "both everywhere and nowhere" in the archive. Anny Gaul is a doctoral candidate in the department of Arabic and Islamic Studies at Georgetown University. She holds an MA from Georgetown's Center for Contemporary Arab Studies and blogs at http://cookingwithgaul.com. Her research has been supported by the Council of American Overseas Research Centers, the American Institute for Maghrib Studies, and the Social Science Research Council. You can also find her on Instagram and Twitter. Bibliography and further reading below; attaching a photo of rafisa as well as a photo of me shopping for used books. For recipes and more information on the dishes discussed in this interview see: "Chicken Rafisa," on Imik simik: Cooking with Gaul, September 17, 2012. "Seven Centuries of Bastila," on Imik simik: Cooking with Gaul, February 25, 2018. Further reading: Bennani-Smires, Latifa, La Cuisine marocaine (Casablanca: Editions Alpha, 1974) Calderwood, Eric, Colonial Al-Andalus: Spain and the Making of Modern Moroccan Culture (Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2018) Gaul, Anny, "Cooking "Civilized" Sauces in Egypt and Morocco," Kitchening Modernity blog, January 23, 2018. Khatib, Toumader, "L'art culinaire ou le savant mélange des couleurs, des senteurs et des saveurs," in Tétouan: Capitale méditerranéenne, edited by M'hammad Benaboud, Tetouan: Publications de l'Association Tétouan Asmir. al-Minuni, Muhammad, "Dūdat al-ḥarīr wa-ṣināʿāt ukhrā bi-Tiṭwān al-qarn XIX," in Aʿmāl nadwat Tiṭwān qabl al-ḥimāya, 12-13-14, November 1992: 21-31. Seremetakis, C. Nadia, ed., The Senses Still: Perception and Memory as Material Culture in Modernity (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994). Sutton, David E., “Food and the Senses,” Annual Review of Anthropology 39, no. 1 (September 23, 2010): 209–23, https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.012809.104957. Rahuni, Fatima, Fann al-ṭabkh al-Maghribī al-Tiṭwānī al-aṣīl, 5th ed. (Tetouan, Morocco: Matbaʿa al-Khalij al-ʿArabi, 2014); Roden, Claudia, The New Book of Middle Eastern Food, Revised edition (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2000)
Episode 48: La résiliance architecturale en Mauritanie Dans cet épisode, Dr. Franklin Graham, professeur de géographie à l'University of South Florida, présente une communication sur la résilience architecturale en Mauritanie. Traditionnellement le peuple sédentarisé en Mauritanie construisait leurs édifices et murs à base de pierres et d`argile. Le mot « toqleedi » en Arabe et en Hassaniyya, explique cette maçonnerie traditionnelle. Typiquement, les pierres sont d’origine sédimentaire et elles proviennent d'anciennes couches océaniques. Le grès, facile de retirer est mélangé à l’argile locale; la majorité des bâtiments ont été construits de cette façon. Des anciens quartiers d’Atâr, Ouâdâne, Chinguetti, Tidjikja, Er-Rachid, Ksar el-Barka et Oualata en sont des modèles. Dans les sites spécifiques, comme à Terjitt, Aoujeft, Tichitt et Néma, la schiste et l’argile sont utilisés par le peuple de « Trab el Hajra » pour bien profiter de leurs ressources locales. Pour charpenter les toits, ils utilisaient les plantes cultivées dans les jardins ou les plantes sauvages trouvées près de leurs habitations. Le bois de palmier, du dattier, « en nakhîl » en Arabe, trouvé dans les palmeraies, généralement fut utilisé à supporter les toits. Les arbres d’acacia, « talha et tamât », et le bois de dattier sauvage « teïchott » en Hassaniyya, étaient ramassés et utilisés pour renforcer les seuils et pour fabriquer les portes et les fenêtres. Typiquement les personnes s'adaptaient à l’environnement pour construire leurs maisons, magasins, greniers et mosquées. Les traditions peuvent évoluer dans le temps. Effectivement la maçonnerie mauritanienne témoigne d’un changement dynamique et profond. Mais le changement n’est ni facile ni uniforme à comprendre. Pour des raisons diverses des villes et villages toqleedi sont en train de vivre une renaissance, ils sont tombés dans l'oubli. Les circonstances environnementales, économiques et sociales influencent cette complexité. Ci-dessous se trouve le bilan des entretiens et observations enregistrées dans les onze villes et villages dans l’intérieur de la Mauritanie durant l’été 2017. Quarante-trois maçons ont été interviewés à Ouâdâne, Chinguetti, Aoujeft, Tidjikja, Er-Rachid, Tichitt et Oualata. L’enquête a démontré que le type de maçonnerie concernant les quartiers d’Ouâdâne, Chinguetti, Atâr, Tidjikja, Tichitt, Oualata, Néma et Ksar el Barka a été abandonné avant la période coloniale. Le site de Terjitt est le plus petit et dispose d'un ancien quartier, et le reste est habité et sillonné par une ancienne ville qui s’appelle en Hassaniyya et en Arabe « El Qadeema ». Ci-dessous, les résultats de la recherche sont expliqués pour chaque site, un sommaire est consacré aux régions de l’Adrâr, du Tagant et de l’Hodh ech-Chargui, et en conclusion pour la Mauritanie. Des propositions pour une recherche éventuelle sont proposées dans la conclusion. La conférence de Dr. Franklin Graham a eu lieu le 26 juin 2018 au Tangier American Legation Institute of Moroccan Studies (TALIM),à Tanger, Maroc. Pour consulter les diaporamas et la bibliographie, visitez notre site web: www.themaghribpodcast.com Posté par Hayet Lansari, Bibliothécaire / Chargée de la diffusion des activités scientifiques (CEMA).
This episode was recorded on April 12, 2018 at the Tangier American Institut of Moroccan Studies, as part of TALIM’s annual April Seminar on the theme “Documenting the Cultural Heritage of Northern Morocco”, which is organized in partnership with the Office Chérifien des Phosphates. In this podcast, we welcome Sharon C. Smith, AKDC Program Head, presents a lecture entitled "Documenting the Built Environment: Why and How?"
This episode was recorded on April 12, 2018 at the Tangier American Institut of Moroccan Studies, as part of TALIM’s annual April Seminar on the theme “Documenting the Cultural Heritage of Northern Morocco”, which is organized in partnership with the Office Chérifien des Phosphates. In this podcast, we welcome Dr. Michael A. Toler, Archnet Content Manager, Aga Khan Documentation Center at MIT, presenting a lecture entitled "The Documentation of Cultural Heritage a Society in Transition". Thank you for listening to Maghrib in Past & Present Podcasts. Other episodes are available on our website, www.themaghribpodcast.com, as well as on iTunes and PodBean.
This series was recorded on April 12, 2018 at the Tangier American Institut of Moroccan Studies, as part of TALIM's annual April Seminar on the theme "Documenting the Cultural Heritage of Northern Morocco", which is organized in partnership with the Office Chérifien des Phosphates. In the first podcast, we welcome Dr. Mhammad Benaboud, Vice President of the Tetouan Asmir and the General Secretary of the Tetouan Asmir Club of Friends of UNESCO, presenting a lecture entitled "Documenting the Cultural Heritage of the North Moroccan Medinas : the Case of the Medina of Tetouan". In the second podcast, we welcome researcher and doctoral candidat Jordi Mas Garriga from the University Rovira i Virgili, presenting a lecture entitled "Towards valuing Tangier's Alawite heritage"
This series was recorded on April 12, 2018 at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies, as part of TALIM’s annual April Seminar, organized annually in partnership with the Office Chérifien des Phosphates. This year’s seminar program was organized in collaboration with the Aga Khan Documentation Center at MIT (AKDC@MIT). In the first podcast, we welcome Dr. Mhammad Benaboud, Vice President of the Tetouan Asmir and the General Secretary of the Tetouan Asmir Club of Friends of UNESCO, presenting a lecture entitled "Documenting the Cultural Heritage of the North Moroccan Medinas : the Case of the Medina of Tetouan". In the second podcast, we welcome researcher and doctoral candidat Jordi Mas Garriga from the University Rovira i Virgili, presenting a lecture entitled "Towards valuing Tangier's Alawite heritage"
Episode 42: Colonial Andalus In this episode, Dr. Eric Calderwood, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature at the Department of Comparative and World Literature, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign speaks about his recent book, Colonial al-Andalus: Spain and the Making of Modern Morocco (Harvard University Press, 2018). Dr. Calderwood offers an overview of his book, and reflects on how the time he has spent in Morocco (especially Tetouan) has shaped his research topic and his understanding of Moroccan history and literature. Grounded in nearly a decade of research in Spain and North Africa, Colonial al-Andalus explores the culture, politics, and legacies of Spanish colonialism in Morocco (1859-1956). It traces the genealogy of a widespread idea about Morocco: namely, the idea that modern Moroccan culture descends directly from al-Andalus. This idea is pervasive in contemporary Moroccan historiography, literature, and political discourse. Colonial al-Andalus argues that Morocco's Andalusi identity is not a medieval legacy, but is, instead, a modern invention that emerged from the colonial encounter between Spain and Morocco in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In pursuit of this argument, the book examines a diverse array of Arabic, Spanish, French, and Catalan sources, including literature, historiography, journalism, political speeches, tourist brochures, and visual culture. Dr. Eric Calderwood is an Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he also holds faculty appointments in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese, the Center for South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, the Program in Medieval Studies, the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory, and the Program in Jewish Culture and Society. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 2011. His research explores modern Mediterranean culture, with a particular emphasis on Spanish and North African literature and film. In addition to his recent book on Morocco, he has published articles in such journals as PMLA, Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies, The Journal of North African Studies, and International Journal of Middle East Studies. He has also contributed essays and commentary to such venues as NPR, the BBC, Foreign Policy, and The American Scholar. This podcast was recorded at the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM), on 11 May 2018. To see related slides, visit our website: www.themaghribpodcast.com
0:00 - Weekend recap, including Abuget Cup, Viennality, and more 10:10 - Abuget Cup attempted to run its SFV tournament on PC 15:48 - CEO 2019 announced; returns to Daytona Beach 23:56 - Skullgirls to Switch 26:05 - Talim announced for SoulCalibur VI 27:14 - Evo Japan announced for February 2019 in Fukuoka 32:06 - Second 'season pass' potentially outed for Tekken 7 35:43 - Rumored list of characters for SFV's Season 4 40:23 - Eleague finals predictions 1:02:00 - SonicFox hosts grind session for top US DBFZ players: "Summit of Pawer" 1:05:04 - Our viewers offer tips to new father Efren 1:08:00 - We attempt a Block/Grab on new Tekken characters. Key word: attempt.
AlphaIzanagi(Chris) tells us about his first anime convention experience, we talk about battle royales as a genre, and EA.Timestamp:27:56 Anime Expo(JoJo part 5)33:40 EA Star Wars52:05 Bioware not making Star War games1:02:36 Fortnite Controversy1:14:56 No Man Sky Next1:22:32 Kill La Kill1:24:35 Bloodborne 2 leak fake and Talim announced1:37:30 Guild Wars 2 vontroversy1:40:02 Earthfall and GTFO1:54:48 Black Out player count discoveredSong of the week:Play that Beat2-Mello(from Cerebrawl)https://soundcloud.com/cerebrawlin/2-mello-play-that-beat-cerebrawl-ost
En éste episodio: el típico Vicio de la Semana [3m49s]. #Gaminforme [15m25s]. Comentando: - Square Enix Bussiness Division 8 trabaja en nuevo ARPG para PlayStation 4 y Nintendo Switch - Bandai Namco anuncia juegos Gamescom 2018 - Shenmue I&II tiene fecha de lanzamiento - SNK 40th Anniversary Collection con fecha para Occidente - Transmisión especial de Digimon - Velocity 2X llegará a Switch - Colaboración Monster Hunter World x Final Fantasy XV llegará en agosto - Demo de Warioware Gold está disponible para 3DS - Detalles de Warriors Orochi 4. Athena y más personajes. - Talim llega a Soul Calibur VI - Severed de PS Vita tendrá edición física por EastAsia Soft y Play-Asia - The Caligula Effect Overdose llegará a Occidente en 2019 en PS4, Switch y PC - Skullgirs 2nd Encore llegará a Switch - Demo de Yakuza Kiwami 2 está disponible - Despiden escritores de ArenaNet (responsables de Guild Wars 2) #Gamefemerides [57m14s] #TemadelaSemana [1h8m13s] : Juegos aclamados que no nos gustan. Recuerden dejar "me gusta" y comentarios en iVoox, y demás lugares donde nos escuchen. Facebook: https://web.facebook.com/LegionGamerRD/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/legiongamerrd/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/LegionGamerRD Este episodio en YouTube: https://youtu.be/h75QfhDucjs Nuestro blog: https://legiongamerrd.blogspot.com/ Estamos en Apple iTunes: https:/itunes.apple.com/do/podcast/legión-gamer-podcast/id1370438088 En TuneIn: https://tunein.com/podcasts/Podcasts/Legion-Gamer-Podcast-p1121452/ Radiocasters: https://radiocasters.com/podcast/16 En Twitch: https://twitch.tv/apa_zarozo También pendientes de nuestros amigos: Twitch de Darkjuste: http://twitch.com/darkjuste Cultura Cómic RD: https://www.facebook.com/groups/culturacomicrd/ GOXP Gamers : http://www.gameoverxp.com/ VeSh Gaming: https://veshgaming.com/ Kioshop: https://www.facebook.com/kioshops/ Spinelbreaker: https://www.youtube.com/c/spinelbreaker Maguita Gaming: https://www.youtube.com/user/Maguita70s RetroAct Entertainment: https://www.facebook.com/RetroActv
Morocco's little known tradition of women troupes who perform the famous Fantasia ("tbourida") equestrian ceremony is the doctoral focus of Fulbright scholar Gwyneth Talley from the University of California at Los Angeles, who discussed her research findings at TALIM on Monday, April 23. Gwyneth shared insights into the culture of tbourida and how the revival in women's equestrian sports, in particular the tbourida, coincided with the 2004 passage of Morocco's new personal status code, the Mudawana. The following afternoon, Gwyneth met separately with participants from TALIM's Women's Arabic Literacy program for a lively exchange on the same topic, this time in Moroccan dialect. Bibliography and Further Reading: Bimberg, Edward L. 1999 The Moroccan Goums: Tribal Warriors in a Modern War. London: Greenwood Press. Daumas, Eugène 1968(2012) The Horses of the Sahara. S.M. Ohlendorf, transl. Ausin, TX: The University of Texas Press. 1971(2012) The Ways of the Desert. S.M. Ohlendorf, transl. Austin, TX: The University of Texas Press. Djebar, Assia 1993[1985] Fantasia: An Algerian Cavalcade. D.S. Blair, transl. Portsmouth: Heinemann. Estrin, James 2015 A Female Fantasia In Morocco. In Lens. New York Times: New York Times. Mernissi, Fatima 1994 Dreams of Trespass, Tales of a Harem Girlhood. New York City, NY: Perseus Books. Sedrati, Azeddine; Tavernier, Roger & Wallet, Bernard 1997 L'art de la Fantasia: Cavaliers et Chevaux du Maroc. Casablanca: Plume. Talley, Gwyneth U.J. 2017 Tbourida: Performing Traditional Equestrianism as Heritage Tourism in Morocco. In Equestrian Cultures in Global & Local Contexts. M.T. Adelman, Kirrilly, ed. New York: Springer. Zand, Sahar 2016 Morocco's warrior women beating men at their own game. Pp. 2:39. London: BBC News. 2016 The Horsewomen of Fantasia. In BBC Women's Hour. S. Zand, ed. Woman's Hour. London: BBC.
http://media.blubrry.com/swallows_of_the_south/swallowsofthesouthpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/ichorandbreathep2.mp3 At Kaa Technologic’s request, Local, Fili, and Cleo continue their search for the missing shipment at Talim’s Buckwheat and Barley Bonanza. Link to discord: https://discord.gg/82zkBbN Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=4045304 Theme is Vault by Jahzzar released under the Creative Commons license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Cet épisode a été enregistré le 23 Février 2018, au TALIM, le Tangier American Legation Institut for Moroccan Studies, et présenté dans le cadre du colloque International organisé par l’association Al Boughaz de Tanger, intitulé “Le nouveau visage de Tanger.. lutte contre l’amnésie”. Sur cet épisode, vous écoutez l’intervention de Mr. Salaheddine Mezouar, l’ex ministre Des Affaires Etrangères et de la Cooperation.
Retired U.S. Foreign Service Office Harland Eastman served as Consul-General in Tangier in 1976, the year that the Department of State agreed to allow the Tangier American Legation to be converted into a private museum honoring the historic U.S.-Moroccan friendship. In this podcast, Emily Albrecht of Dartmouth College interviews Mr. Eastman, who recounts the enormous efforts made to restore the Legation in time for the celebrations of the U.S. Bicentennial. Ms. Albrecht's interviews form part of a series of oral histories she recorded for her senior thesis, entitled, "Mapping Memories, Creating History: The Tangier American Legation" (May 2016), a copy of which is available in TALIM's research library. Mr. Eastman's biography is found at: http://www.paulauger.com/halloffame/inductees/Eastman.html
(Yer yer cızırtı olmuş farketmemişiz, özür dileriz.) Eğitim sisteminde terbiyeye verilen önemi tartıştık, sosyal medyada gezen meslek lisesi sınıfındaki meseleyi ele aldık. Olay Video Linki https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qqCxYqS3rmo Prof.Dr.Ziya Selçuk hocamızın Talim-Terbiye temalı enfes sözünü paylaşmıştık, kendisinin twitter linki https://twitter.com/ziyaselcuk Eğitim sistemimizin ne zaman Elon Musk'lar yetiştireceği ile ilgili tahminlerde bulunmaya çalıştık, Geyikli eğitim ekibinin geçtiğimiz günlerde SpaceX'in uzaya gönderdiği Tesla yorumları, Erkan hocamız yayında öğrendi :) SpaceX'in Uzaya Gitme Anlarını Barış Öncan'la seyretmediyseniz eğer linki: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yG-9XIIELk4 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/geyikliegitim/message
سارة عريش مغنية، مؤلفة موسيقية و مديرة كورال, وقد تميزت وسط المشهد الفني في طنجة منذ سنها المبكر بأسلوبها المستوحى من الفولك والكلاسيكية والعربية الأندلسية والروك وموسيقى الجاز من خلال هذا العرض، قدمت سارة شكل جديد من الموسيقى الأندلسية و السفاردية، و قد قدمت أيضا ثلات أغاني من ألبومها الجديد و الذي سيتم خروجه ببداية سنة 2018. كانت سارة مرفقة بمحمد شكلي على آلة الكمان، و فرقة فرماطا بالكورال. Sarah Ariche is a singer, composer, and choirmaster. She has marked the Tangier musical scene since her early age with her style, inspired from folk, classical, Arab-andalousy, rock, and jazz music. Throughout this concert, Sarah has performed a new form of Andalusian and Sephardic music, and has also presented three songs of her upcoming album to be released in early 2018. Sarah was accompanied by Mohamed Chakli on violin, and the Fermata choir project for choir.
Presented by Borderline Theatre Project and the American Language Center in Tangier, the 2017 Youmein Creative Media Festival was a co-production with DABATEATR, in partnership with the Tangier-American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIM), TechnoPark Tanger, Association Tanger Région Action Culturelle (ATRAC), and Think Tanger. In its third edition, the Youmein Creative Media Festival took up the theme "imitation" or, in Arabic, "taqlid". Reflecting on the question, "how do cultures and society change, if not by imitation?" and [laying on the Arabic "taqlid" (imitation) and its plural form "taqalid," (traditions) many pieces in the festival explored the relationships between imitation and tradition, cultural borrowing and modernity, and mechanical reproduction. TALIM sponsored the annual Festival Round Table, this year with Moroccan-Algerian (and Tangier's own) curator Nouha ben Yebdri (Mahal Art Space; Madrassa Collective) and Ceutí architect, curator, and artist Carlos Pérez Marin (Caravane Tighmert, Marsad Drâa) moderated by festival Artistic Director and anthropologist A. George Bajalia. Artists: Nina Cholet & Boris Carré Ahmed Benattia; Carlos Alcántar; Nadia El Kastawi Loutfi Souidi Adam Raougui M'hammed Kilito Oussama Tabti Nassim Azarzar Mehdi Djelil Maya Benchikh El Fegoun Ramia Beladel & Lena Krause (invited Youmein alumnae artists)
Sudokshina Chatterjee explains why she started to sing, and her journey from the first singing lesson to now.
Transcript -- Sudokshina Chatterjee explains why she started to sing, and her journey from the first singing lesson to now.
Sudokshina Chatterjee explains why she started to sing, and her journey from the first singing lesson to now.
Transcript -- Sudokshina Chatterjee explains why she started to sing, and her journey from the first singing lesson to now.