Apr 11 2024

Book Talk and Discussion with Mejdulene Bernard Shomali on Between Banat: Queer Arab Critique and Transnational Arab Archives

Nadwat Series

April 11, 2024

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM

Location

101 Taft Hall

Address

826 S Halsted St, Chicago, IL 60607

Flier has lavender background with a large black box with text in lavender, yellow, and grey. A photograph of the author is in the top right-hand side in black and white of a person with long black hair wearing glasses and speaking into a microphone. The book cover image is in the bottom right with a graphic drawing of two people facing away from the reader with long hair, one black and one purple and colorful clothes; they are looking at a number of buildings with windows in yellow and purple; one person is holding a cigarette in their hand whose smoke constitute a speech bubble above their heads with the title of the book. Logos of co-sponsoring entities is on the bottom.

Join the Arab American Cultural Center and the Global Middle East Studies Working Group in a book talk and discussion with Mejdulene Bernard Shomali of her book Between Banat: Queer Arab Critique and Transnational Arab Archives.

About Author: Mejdulene Bernard Shomali is a queer Palestinian poet and an associate professor in Gender, Women’s, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Maryland Baltimore County, where she is also the program coordinator for Arab and Muslim American Studies. Her poetry can be read in Copper Nickel, Tinderbox, Diode Press, The Pinch Journal, Mizna, and elsewhere. She has published articles in Multi-Ethnic Literatures of the US, the Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies, and several edited collections. Her first book, Between Banat: Queer Arab Critique and Transnational Arab Archives is available from Duke University Press. Her  poetry chapbook “agriculture of grief: prayers for my father’s dementia” is forthcoming from Finishing Line Press (August 2024).

About the Book: In Between Banat Mejdulene Bernard Shomali examines homoeroticism and nonnormative sexualities between Arab women in transnational Arab literature, art, and film. Moving from The Thousand and One Nights and the Golden Era of Egyptian cinema to contemporary novels, autobiographical writing, and prints and graphic novels that imagine queer Arab futures, Shomali uses what she calls queer Arab critique to locate queer desire amid heteronormative imperatives. Showing how systems of heteropatriarchy and Arab nationalisms foreclose queer Arab women’s futures, she draws on the transliterated term “banat”—the Arabic word for girls—to refer to women, femmes, and nonbinary people who disrupt stereotypical and Orientalist representations of the “Arab woman.”

“Mejdulene Bernard Shomali’s Between Banat will shatter everything you ever imagined you wanted out of a queer archive. Rejecting hetero-Orientalist binaries, Between Banat creates an epistemology of ‘between’—a generative way of being, knowing, and desiring that constantly moves toward joyful freedom by sidestepping demands for legibility and authenticity. Theorizing intimacy outside of hetero- and homonormative frameworks, Between Banat is a long-awaited, lyrical love letter that invites us to forge collective, liberatory, queer Arab futures.” — Amira Jarmakani, author of An Imperialist Love Story: Desert Romances and the War on Terror

Event is co-sponsored by The Gender and Women's Studies Department, the Gender and Sexuality Center and the Institute for the Humanities

Space is accessible by wheelchair. For other questions, email us at arabamcc@uic.edu

Contact

Arab American Cultural Center

Date posted

Feb 21, 2024

Date updated

Feb 21, 2024