Syria

Peter Clark explores the roots of the Syrian crisis, Robin Yassin-Kassab explores revolutionary culture, Sam Hamad dissects the Islamist opposition, Rasha Omran rejects the notion that sect can be a homeland, Ella Wind pursues an inside perspective on the Syrian uprising, Malu Halasa samples the local lingerie of Aleppo, Afra Jalabi agonises over a photograph of a lost child, Amal Hanano recalls the massacre of Hama, Frederic Gijsel visits a pre-revolution House of Poetry, Ross Burn is concerned about the loss of cultural property, Brigid Waddams remembers Old Damascus, Hania Mourtada has a disturbing encounter on Skype, Boyd Tonkin finds it difficult to distinguish between volunteers and terrorists, Itaz Azzam gets the refugee women involved in a production of ‘Trojan Women’, Maysaloon chides Syrian drama for its complicity, Yasmin Fedda and Daniel Gorman praise the underground cinema of defiance, and Laurens de Rooji reads two recent books on Syria.

In this issue

  • Hafez al-Assad waving at a crowd of people
    Issue 11 Syria

    Revolutionary Culture

    In ‘Assad’s Syria’, as the slogans at the borders and in the streets called it, schools taught by rote and intimidation. The universities were…

    Robin Yassin-Kassab
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