Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Hakawati’s Daughter: How the Syrian revolution inspired a rewrite
View through CrossRef
In 2009, I was living in Damascus, Syria, writing The Hakawati’s Daughter. The film told the story of the last remaining hakawati, oral storyteller, in Damascus. Like many traditions in the Arab world, the hakawati profession is an inherited one, passed on through the generations since 600 AD from father to son and so on. But in my film, the last hakawati has only one child, a daughter, and rather than adapting/modernizing this tradition and passing it on to her, he allows it to die. Two years later, the Syrian revolution broke out and the story, along with the country, fell apart. I have spent the years since reimagining what the story could be instead. Prior to the revolution, what interested me was how the film would explore the battle between tradition and modernity. What interests me today is ‘who has the right to tell the narrative of what is happening in Syria?’ Sadly, it is mostly men. This is the theme The Hakawati’s Daughter now wishes to explore. This article is an account of how the Syrian revolution inspired the rewriting of The Hakawati’s Daughter.
Title: The Hakawati’s Daughter: How the Syrian revolution inspired a rewrite
Description:
In 2009, I was living in Damascus, Syria, writing The Hakawati’s Daughter.
The film told the story of the last remaining hakawati, oral storyteller, in Damascus.
Like many traditions in the Arab world, the hakawati profession is an inherited one, passed on through the generations since 600 AD from father to son and so on.
But in my film, the last hakawati has only one child, a daughter, and rather than adapting/modernizing this tradition and passing it on to her, he allows it to die.
Two years later, the Syrian revolution broke out and the story, along with the country, fell apart.
I have spent the years since reimagining what the story could be instead.
Prior to the revolution, what interested me was how the film would explore the battle between tradition and modernity.
What interests me today is ‘who has the right to tell the narrative of what is happening in Syria?’ Sadly, it is mostly men.
This is the theme The Hakawati’s Daughter now wishes to explore.
This article is an account of how the Syrian revolution inspired the rewriting of The Hakawati’s Daughter.
Related Results
John Lennon, “Revolution,” and the Politics of Musical Reception
John Lennon, “Revolution,” and the Politics of Musical Reception
ABSTRACT
The Beatles recorded two starkly different musical settings of John Lennon's controversial 1968 song “Revolution”: One was released as a single, the other a...
“We All Hoisted the American Flag:” National identity
among
American Prisoners in Britain during the American Revolution
“We All Hoisted the American Flag:” National identity
among
American Prisoners in Britain during the American Revolution
“What is an American?” asked the French émigré
Hector St. John
Crèvecoeur in 1782. In so doing, Crèvecoeur posed one of
the fundamental
questions of the revolutionary era. Whe...
Violating Failures: Rosa Luxemburg's Spartacus Manifesto and Dada Berlin Anti-manifestation
Violating Failures: Rosa Luxemburg's Spartacus Manifesto and Dada Berlin Anti-manifestation
Some of the greatest Marxist historical accounts of revolutionary events are the accounts of great failures. One needs only mention the German Peasants' War, the Jacobins in the Fr...
The Geographer Marx
The Geographer Marx
In celebration of Marx's 200th birth anniversary, this symposium revisits how Marx has influenced geography research and pedagogy. Capital, capitalism, commodity, use value, surplu...
Názory venkovského faráře aneb "Velká evropská revoluce ještě není završena": „Correspondance littéraire“ Jana Ferdinanda Opize s Karlem Killarem
Názory venkovského faráře aneb "Velká evropská revoluce ještě není završena": „Correspondance littéraire“ Jana Ferdinanda Opize s Karlem Killarem
The study is based on an analysis of content and themes of the correspondence of the wellknown Enlightenment Era "provincial intellectual", a bank clerk from Čáslav Jan Ferdinand ...
The Moor for the Malayali Masses: A Study of "Othello" in "Kathaprasangam"
The Moor for the Malayali Masses: A Study of "Othello" in "Kathaprasangam"
Shakespeare, undoubtedly, has been one of the most important Western influences on Malayalam literature. His works have inspired themes of classical art forms like kathakali and po...
THE MAN WHO WROTE A NEW WOMAN NOVEL: GRANT ALLEN'STHE WOMAN WHO DIDAND THE GENDERING OF NEW WOMAN AUTHORSHIP
THE MAN WHO WROTE A NEW WOMAN NOVEL: GRANT ALLEN'STHE WOMAN WHO DIDAND THE GENDERING OF NEW WOMAN AUTHORSHIP
IN1895,GRANT ALLEN PUBLISHED A NEW WOMAN NOVELentitledThe Woman Who Did. This treatise-like novel appeared as part of the Keynotes Series, a group of ideologically progressive text...
Walter Gropius: Letters to an Angel, 1927–35
Walter Gropius: Letters to an Angel, 1927–35
A previously unpublished selection of letters by Walter Gropius to his daughter, Manon, reveals a personal side of the architect and Bauhaus founder. In Walter Gropius: Letters to ...