Description
Coordinate events in DC and NYC and their Consulates in local markets to sponsor events with translator and author Events in public appearances in the US planned for festivals, bookstores, and universities throughout 2019 Serial rights targeting The Paris Review, The New Yorker, The Guardian, Literal Magazine, Texas Monthly, Gulf Coast, McSweeney's, The White Review; One Story, Guernica, Tin House, Words Without Borders, Asymptote Print publicity targeting prominent literary journals and newspaper book sections Review copies will be sent targeting all major print and digital literary media outlets; additional review copies available upon request
About the Author
The Algerian-born academic and author Zahia Rahmani is one of France's leading art historians and writers of fiction, memoirs, and cultural criticism. She is the author of a literary trilogy dedicated to contemporary figures of so-called banished people: Moze (Sabine Wespieser Editions, 2003); Muslim: A Novel (Sabine Wespieser Editions, 2005); France: Story of Childhood (Sabine Wespieser Editions, 2006). The US edition of France, Story of Childhood was published by Yale University Press in 2016. The French Ministry of Culture named her Chevalier of Arts and Letters and as a member of the College of the Diversity. As an art historian, Rahmani is Director of the Research Program on Art and Globalization at the French National Institute of the History of Art (INHA), an interdisciplinary program that focuses on contemporary art practices in a globalized world and it links many networks in France and abroad. She is the founder and director of INHA's ambitious Interactive Bibliographic Database, on the globalization of art, its history and theoretical impact. Rahmani is a member of the Global Visual Cultures Academic Committee and she also created the graduate research program at the Ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts, which she directed from 1999-2002. Her multi-year international research project at the INHA in Paris and Marseille culminated in Made in Algeria: Genealogy of a Territory, a book and current exhibition of colonial cartography, high and popular visual culture, and contemporary art at the Museum of European and Mediterranean Civilisations (MuCEM), located in Marseille. Matt Reeck is an award-winning poet and translator from the French, Urdu, Hindi, and Korean. He is the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship to India, the American Institute of Indian Studies, and the PEN Foundation. He has translated from the Urdu novels by Saadat Hasan Manto, Bombay Stories (Vintage Classics UK & US, 2014) and Mushtaq Ahmed Yousufi, Mirages of the Mind (New Directions, 2015). His translations from the French include Abdelkebir Khatibi's Class Warrior-Taoist Style (Wesleyan University Press, 2017) and Zahia Rahmani's Muslim: A Novel (Deep Vellum, forthcoming 2019). He is currently completing his PhD in Comparative Literature at the University of California Los Angeles.
Reviews
Winner of the Albertine Prize 2020 One of Words Without Borders' most anticipated books of 2019 Part of the New York Times Globetrotting feature on upcoming 2019 Translations Included in Translated Lit's Most Anticipated Books of February 2019 Librairie Drawn & Quarterly's New & Notable books Included in Electric Literature's "20 Small Press Books You Might Have Missed" Finalist for Big Other's Book Award for Translation "A love letter to us: the outcasts, the hyphenated "others," those who have lost tongues and gained dialects. Zahia Rahmani speaks to the religious fairy tales of my girlhood, the Muslim lore we listened to while learning the Arabic alphabet. "Muslim" challenges the borders of genre, much like Rahmani pushes up against the boundaries of multiple, overlapping identities, investigating imposed definitions and complicating what it means to be colonized, woman, Muslim." - Dr. Seema Yasmin "'I was born into a minor language and escaped from a distant nowhere that didn't want me,' Zahia Rahmani writes in this chronicle of the numerous forms isolation can take-and the numerous ways that identity can be both claimed and projected onto someone. This novel is brief in length, but Rahmani's approach to it allows for a constant mutability of its form and a series of limitless stylistic renewals." - Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders "This is the ethical and political terrain at stake for Rahmani, whose literary fiction is an instrument for truths that as yet have nowhere else to be heard. That the very nature of our political regimes requires intervention by way of fiction suggests that literature has an indispensable role to play in the ongoing work of justice."- Jill Jarvis, Public Books "Absolutely essential reading." -Lyric Hunter, Brazos Bookstore "The role of myth and archetypes, identitarian persecution, faith, movement through borderlands, naming, and the limitations and potential of particular languages all figure into this autobiographical novel."-Aaron Robertson, Lit Hub
Book Information
ISBN 9781941920756
Author Zahia Rahmani
Format Paperback
Page Count 145
Imprint Deep Vellum Publishing
Publisher Deep Vellum Publishing