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To: Maurice Winn who wrote (237619)7/24/2007 4:07:05 AM
From: Elroy  Respond to of 281500
 
Girls of Riyadh spurs rush of Saudi novels
Reuters
Published: July 24, 2007, 00:06

gulfnews.com

Riyadh: Saudi Arabia has seen a literary explosion in the last two years after the success of Girls of Riyadh, a taboo-breaking novel that this month went on sale worldwide in English.

Rajaa Alsanea's insight into the closed world of Saudi women and their disappointments in love caused a storm in the Islamic state where the Beirut-published book was at first banned, although it is now available.

But strikingly, Saudi Arabia's literary output doubled in 2006, with half of the authors women, and publishing industry insiders suggest the growing interest is partly due to Alsanea's book, which centres on four women from affluent homes who must navigate a minefield of rules and taboos on sex, marriage and social caste to get and keep their men.

"I see Girls of Riyadh as a turning-point for readership in Saudi Arabia," said Hassan Al Neimy, a short story writer who heads a group of Saudi literati called Hewar, Arabic for Dialogue. "The boldness of the book got women writing in the same style, publishing their own daily experiences."

Around 50 novels were published in 2006 compared with 26 in 2005, Al Neimy said. Exact figures are hard to establish since some were published outside Saudi Arabia and are hard to obtain.

Novelists publishing inside Saudi Arabia normally submit their work to the ministry of information in advance. Only a handful are technically banned, but many writers resort to Arab publishers outside Saudi Arabia and leave individual bookstores inside the country the choice of whether to risk importing them.

The increase is telling in Saudi Arabia, where modern literature itself has been viewed as suspect by a powerful clerical establishment in an austere religious society that practises strict gender segregation.

Women grow up cocooned - facing great barriers to mixing with unrelated men in public, prevented from driving cars and prodded into arranged marriages. So their private worlds are fertile ground for literature.

Critics have noted that sexual relationships dominate in the output of the new writers, with sensational titles such as Al Hobb fil Saudiyya, Arabic for Love in Saudi and Fosouq, which means Debauchery.

One example is Al Akharun (The Others) by a woman using the pen name Siba Al Harz. It has attracted attention because of its dark treatment of lesbianism, guilt and marginalisation among Saudi Arabia's minority Shiites, as well as its sophisticated use of classical Arabic.

Al Harz described the book as "a long response to pain and alienation" in an interview with an Arabic newspaper.

New phenomenon

Eschewing comparisons to Alsanea's breezy read, Al Harz has said she thought of publishing on the internet until the Lebanese publisher that put out Alsanea's book in Arabic came forward to take it on.

It remains unavailable in Saudi Arabia. Her publisher, Saqi Books, says Al Akharun is one of the best novels from the young female writers of Saudi Arabia.

"We have offered the chance to lots of young Saudi writers, especially female writers. It's a whole new phenomenon," said Hassan Ramadan from Saqi Books London office.

"Though it's not necessarily moving in the right direction in terms of literary merit, it's a way of communicating with the outside world," he said of the new Saudi literature, noting the quality was not always high.

Writer Al Neimy said treatment of taboo sexual topics goes back to the novels of Saudi writers Turki Al Hamad, Abdo Khal and Gazi Algosaibi in the 1990s.

The books made their authors the bete noire of Saudi Islamists although they were just as significant for their discussion of Saudi political life.

But the communications revolution since then has given a new push to literary expression, Al Neimy said. Saudi Arabia's native population has doubled since 1990 to 17 million, and official statistics show some 60 per cent are under 21 years old.

"Society has been opened wide to changes outside the region. It's a generation that has opened its eyes to rapid changes and the novel is a reflection of these changes on society," he said.

Few Saudi novels have made it into translation for world audiences but that could be changing, says Abdullah Hassan, project editor at the American University in Cairo Press, which this year published work by Saudi author Yousuf Al Mohaimeed.

Window to Arab world

"Foreign publishers have become interested in Arab fiction, especially from Iraq and Saudi Arabia. It's become a window to the Arab world," Hassan said, while adding that Arabic literature was generally a "tough sell".

The interest has been fed by the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq in 2003 and the September 11 attacks in the United States, carried out by 19 Arabs including 15 Saudis.

The success since 2003 of Egyptian novelist Alaa Al Aswany's The Yacoubian Building in Arabic, English and French has shown Arabic literature can garner a wide audience, Hassan said.

While Arabic sales for Girls of Riyadh are in the tens of thousands, The Yacoubian Building has sold several hundred thousand copies.

Some warn, however, that the 'industry' of depicting Saudi Arabia is in danger of falling into cliches of representation.

Saudis and Westerners are cashing in on this mystique, Abdul Aziz Al Khadr recently wrote on an Internet forum called Saudi Debate (www.SaudiDebate.com).

"Many publishing houses [are] clearly tempted to make large profits and Saudi novelists to earn sudden and huge publicity," he said.

"All these market-attracting titles exceeded all past sales figures, turning what was rare in this field of literature into something abundant."

The increase is telling in Saudi Arabia, where modern literature itself has been viewed as suspect by a powerful clerical establishment in an austere religious society that practises strict gender segregation.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (237619)7/24/2007 6:30:35 AM
From: arun gera  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
>Then India booted them out and stole the property>

The British collected taxes from Indians. Indians fought and died for them in two World Wars. India was not the property of British. When Bush is forced to leave the government because he is ineffective, he cannot cry that the new government stole the Whitehouse and Air Force One from him.

Can you point out if any British citizen's private property was stolen by Indians?

-Arun



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (237619)7/24/2007 11:47:20 AM
From: c.hinton  Respond to of 281500
 
The world’s oldest family companies
familybusinessmagazine.com

One hundred lessons in endurance from 17 countries

Is there any institution more enduring or universal than a family business? Professor William O’Hara, the pre-eminent expert on this subject, posed that rhetorical question in his recent book, Centuries of Success. He also provided his answer: “Before the multinational corporation, there was family business. Before the Industrial Revolution, there was family business. Before the enlightenment of Greece and the empire of Rome, there was family business.”
Since the mid-1990s, research by O’Hara and his associate Peter Mandel has provided the foundation for two of this magazine’s most popular features: “America’s Oldest Family Companies” (updated most recently in Spring 2003) and “The World’s Oldest Foreign Family Companies” (Spring 2002). But the list that follows is the most definitive of all. In it we’ve combined the two previous lists, added newly discovered companies, and weeded out businesses that no longer qualify. The result is a compilation of the world’s 100 oldest continuously family-owned firms—all firms that can indisputably claim to have outlasted governments, nations, cities and certainly once-mighty corporations.

All of the listed companies are at least 225 years old; four have lasted in the same family for more than a millennium. The very oldest remains Japanese temple-builder Kongo Gumi, founded in 578.

As we’ve noted before, this compilation is hardly scientific; it’s certainly not comprehensive or entirely accurate. It relies instead on the best information available to us. As in the past, readers are invited to pass along corrections or information that we may have missed.