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561 works of pan-African thought. 29 matching current filters.
Based on Saadawi's meeting with a female prisoner, the novel tells the story of Firdaus, an Egyptian woman condemned to death for killing a pimp, exploring themes of patriarchy and female oppression.
A young man returns to his village in Sudan after studying in Europe and encounters Mustafa Sa'eed, a mysterious stranger with a dark past in England, exploring themes of colonialism and identity.
First novel of the Cairo Trilogy, following the al-Jawad family in Cairo during WWI, exploring themes of tradition, modernity, and Egyptian nationalism.
Autobiographical novel weaving together the author's childhood memories with the history of French colonization of Algeria, exploring women's voices silenced by history.
Experimental novel following four men in love with the mysterious Nedjma, symbolizing Algeria itself, using fragmented narrative to depict colonial trauma.
Set in a forgotten alley in medieval Cairo, the novel follows the interlocking lives of its residents—a café owner, a matchmaker, a dentist, and a young woman dreaming of escape—as they grapple with ambition, desire, and the collision of tradition and modernity.
The second volume of the Cairo Trilogy follows the al-Jawad family into the 1920s, as the patriarch struggles with aging and religious awakening while his sons forge paths between tradition and nationalist politics.
The concluding volume spans the 1930s-40s, tracing the al-Jawad grandchildren as they embrace socialism, the Muslim Brotherhood, and sensual pleasure, mapping Egypt's fractured political soul on the eve of revolution.
An allegorical retelling of the Abrahamic faiths as figures in a Cairo alley, exploring the cycles of tyranny, faith, and the search for justice across generations.
Three interlinked novellas set in a Sudanese village, including the comic tale of Zein the village fool who wins the most desirable bride, weaving folklore and Islamic spirituality into a rich portrait of communal life.
In an Egyptian village ruled by a corrupt mayor and pious hypocrisy, a peasant family's daughters are exploited and destroyed. El Saadawi's scathing indictment of patriarchy, class, and religious complicity.
A Moroccan merchant registers his eighth daughter as a son. Narrated in a Marrakech storytelling circle, the novel follows Ahmed/Zahra's journey through a life lived between genders, questioning identity, faith, and desire.
Opening with the murder of two children by their nanny, the novel unspools backwards to reveal how a Parisian family arrived at catastrophe, a searing examination of class, race, motherhood, and the invisible labor of care.
A Tuareg boy and his beloved camel journey across the Sahara, pursued by gold hunters, drought, and fate. A lyrical fable about freedom, loyalty, and the destruction of traditional desert life by modernity and greed.
Second volume of the Cairo Trilogy, following the al-Jawad family into the 1920s as sons come of age, the patriarch continues his hypocritical double life, and Egypt's nationalist movement grows.
Third and final volume of the Cairo Trilogy, set in the 1930s-40s. The patriarch dies; his grandchildren embrace different political ideologies — communism, Islamism, secularism — as Egypt faces revolution.
Set in an Alexandrian pension, the same story told four times by four different residents — a former revolutionary, an opportunist, a communist, a nationalist — each account revealing their moral failings.
A love story set against Algeria's struggle for independence and its troubled aftermath. The first Arabic novel to be written by an Algerian woman, it became the bestselling Arabic novel of its time.
Sequel to The Sand Child; the protagonist, raised as a boy, is now free after her father's death to discover her true female identity — a journey into her own body, desire, and freedom.
A cast of characters living in a decaying Cairo apartment building stand in for Egyptian society: a corrupt aristocrat, a Coptic Christian, a Islamist, a journalist, a gay man living in a rooftop shack.
Two love stories across a century — an English woman who falls in love with an Egyptian nationalist in 1900, and her American great-niece who discovers the story in 1997 — weaving together the colonial and the contemporary.
First volume of Mahfouz's epic trilogy, following the al-Jawad family in Cairo between 1917-1919. The patriarch al-Sayyid Ahmad rules his household despotically while engaging in the pleasures he denies his family.
Continuing the story where Scheherazade left off, Mahfouz sets new tales in a timeless Cairo, where djinn, sultans, and ordinary people live together. A meditation on justice, power, and the divine.
Though set in Afghanistan, this novel about Amir and Hassan crosses the lines of ethnicity (Pashtun vs. Hazara) and explores guilt, redemption, and the destruction of a country. Included as a North African/Middle Eastern diaspora text.
Third volume of the Algerian Quartet, weaving together the story of a filmmaker's love affair and the 146 BCE destruction of Carthage, exploring how women's voices are lost to history and recovered.
Driss Ferdi rebels against his overbearing father — who represents traditional Moroccan patriarchy — while navigating the world of the French colonial system. Morocco's first significant novel of psychological revolt.
Sammar, a Sudanese woman working as a translator in Aberdeen after the death of her husband, falls in love with a Scottish academic studying Islamic politics. A quiet, luminous novel about faith and belonging.
Najwa, a Sudanese woman in London who has lost everything — her wealth, her family, her education — finds herself through working as a maid and through Islamic practice.
A Syrian narrator tells their dying partner stories from their shared queer life in Damascus and as refugees in Canada — love, war, displacement, and memory. Included as a North African/Middle East queer diaspora text.