
The Journey: Memoirs of an Egyptian Woman Student in America
Piney Kesting
Radwa Ashour. Michelle Hartman, tr.
2018, Olive Branch Press, 978-1- 62371-9-975, $20, pb.
“From the moment I walked through the glass doors at Logan Airport in Boston [in 1973], I knew I’d stepped into a new world,” writes Radwa Ashour, who would become one of Egypt’s acclaimed novelists. The 27-year-old professor at Ain Shams University in Cairo had been accepted into the doctoral program at the new W. E. B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. The Journey, first published in Arabic in 1983 (Al-rihla: ayyam talibah misriyah fi amrika), is an intimate, often charmingly unfiltered view of Ashour’s reaction to this new world and the people she met. She shares her experiences not only as a scholar but as a political activist and young wife separated from her family and her Palestinian husband, poet Mourid Barghouti. In 1975 Ashour became the first student at the University of Massachusetts to receive a doctorate in African American literature, one of her many outstanding accomplishments before her untimely death in 2014.
You may also be interested in...
Book Deconstructs Myth Surrounding Egypt’s Most-Famous Boy King
Egyptologist Aidan Dodson sifts the evidence—from tomb paintings to statuary to temple inscriptions—in his quest to recover the real King Tutankhamun.Dissolved Monopoly’s Legacy Hinges on How India Honors Its Political Architecture
From the first fortified trading post in northeastern India, historian Rosie Llewellyn-Jones tracks the physical changes wrought by the English East India Company.British Museum Curator Takes Readers on Journey Spanning 6,000 Years
Southeast Asia curator Alexandra Green takes readers on a journey spanning 6,000 years, highlighting objects from Neolithic stone tools to contemporary paintings.