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Randa Abdel Fattah

    6 giugno 1979

    Randa Abdel-Fattah esplora temi di identità musulmana e comprensione interculturale, attingendo al suo background legale e attivista per approfondire questioni di giustizia sociale. La sua scrittura offre una prospettiva acuta sulla rappresentazione, esaminando come le comunità emarginate vengono percepite e ritratte all'interno della narrativa sociale più ampia. Attraverso i suoi contributi letterari, cerca di promuovere il dialogo e costruire ponti tra diverse culture e fedi.

    No Sex in the City
    The Lines We Cross
    Where the Streets Had a Name
    11 Words for Love
    Does My Head Look Big In This (2022 NE)
    Sono musulmana
    • Amal ha sedici anni e vive in Australia. Adora fare shopping, ha un debole per "Friends" e quando non ha niente da mettersi si fa prendere dal panico. Amal è musulmano. Ha deciso di indossare a tempo pieno lo hijah, il velo islamico che copre i capelli, e non sarà un gioco da ragazzi. Perché dovrà vedersele con la direttrice e i professore della scuola e convincenre i compagni di classe che nessuno l'ha costretta con la forza. Di certo Tia Tamos, l'odiosa del terzo anno, se ne uscirà con una delle sue solite cattiverie. Ma soprattutto Adam... Che cosa dirà Adam?

      Sono musulmana
    • Amal navigates the challenges of being a 16-year-old Muslim girl in Melbourne, balancing her teenage interests with her faith. Her decision to wear a hijab, or "shawl up," brings a mix of humor, anxiety, and self-discovery as she faces societal misunderstandings. The narrative explores her personal growth and the complexities of identity, making it both a relatable and heartfelt story about faith, culture, and adolescence.

      Does My Head Look Big In This (2022 NE)
    • A moving and joyful book for children from all backgrounds about the many ways we love, from award-winning author Randa Abdel-Fattah and acclaimed illustrator Maxine Beneba Clarke.

      11 Words for Love
    • Thirteen-year-old Hayaat is on a mission. She believes a handful of soil from her grandmother's ancestral home in Jerusalem will save her beloved Sitti Zeynab's life. The only problem is the impenetrable wall that divides the West Bank, as well as the checkpoints, the curfews, and Hayaat's best friend Samy, who is always a troublemaker. But luck is on their side. Hayaat and Samy have a curfew-free day to travel to Jerusalem. However, while their journey is only a few kilometres long, it may take a lifetime to complete.

      Where the Streets Had a Name
    • The Lines We Cross

      • 400pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      A remarkable story about the power of tolerance from one of the most important voices in contemporary Muslim literature, critically acclaimed author Randa Abdel-Fattah.

      The Lines We Cross
    • No Sex in the City

      • 384pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      A heartwarming and funny novel about four girls on their quest for Mr. Right, by a bestselling and internationally acclaimed author.

      No Sex in the City
    • Jamie just wants to fit in. She doesn't want to be seen as a stereotypical Muslim girl named Jamilah, so she does everything possible to hide that part of herself, even if it means keeping her friends at a distance. But when the cutest boy in school asks her out and her friends start to wonder about her life outside of school, suddenly her secrets are threatened. Jamie has to figure out how to be both Jamie and Jamilah before she loses everything...

      Ten Things I Hate About Me
    • Focusing on the perpetrators of Islamophobia in Australia, the book delves into the responses toward the Muslim community in everyday interactions. Through ethnographic research, it highlights the perceptions of Muslims among both Anglo and non-Anglo Australians, emphasizing how whiteness influences minority responses. By examining historical and contemporary contexts, it reveals how racial exclusion shapes behaviors, illustrating how national and global events, alongside political rhetoric, contribute to the normalization of Islamophobic practices.

      Islamophobia and Everyday Multiculturalism in Australia
    • Coming of Age in the War on Terror

      • 352pagine
      • 13 ore di lettura

      'One minute you're a 15-year old girl who loves Netflix and music and the next minute you're looked at as maybe ISIS.' The generation born at the time of the 9/11 attacks are turning 18. What has our changed world meant for them? We now have a generation - Muslim and non-Muslim - who have grown up only knowing a world at war on terror. These young people have been socialised in a climate of widespread Islamophobia, surveillance and suspicion. An unparalleled security apparatus around terrorism has grown alongside fears over young people's radicalisation and the introduction into schools and minority communities of various government-led initiatives to counter violent extremism. In Coming of Age in the War on Terror Randa Abdel-Fattah, a leading scholar and popular writer, interrogates the impact of all this on young people's trust towards adults and the societies they live in and their political consciousness. Drawing on local interviews but global in scope, this book is the first to examine the lives of a generation for whom the rise of the far-right, the discourse of Trump and Brexit and the growing polarisation of politics seems normal in the long aftermath of 9/11. It's about time we hear what they have to say.

      Coming of Age in the War on Terror