Tag: Sarah Irving

Competition! Win a signed copy of ‘Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian Liberation’

leila_favorite2We have a fantastic opportunity for someone to win a copy of Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian Liberation, signed by Khaled herself and the author Sarah Irving.

Khaled, who continues to campaign for Palestinian liberation and human rights, signed the book with the comment ‘from Palestine with love’.

For this unique chance to win a copy, you just need to answer two rounds of questions correctly. The first round of questions are below, and we’ll be posting the second round here on Wednesday 15th May. Please do not email us your answers until the second round of questions has been posted. Once the second round has been posted, please send your answers to all questions to: marketing@plutobooks.com

The first person to answer all questions correctly will win the signed copy. Two runners-up will also win unsigned copies of the book.

Leila Khaled competition questions ROUND 1

1. Who was Abu Ammar?

2. Who wrote the famous Palestinian novel Men in the Sun?

3. What important event in Palestinian history began in 1936?

Leila Khaled competition questions ROUND 2 (final round!)

1. What is the name of the Palestinian ‘upside down’ food dish?

2. What is the name of the traditional Palestinian folk dance, also popular across the Levant?

3. What is the name of the cartoon Palestinian refugee child created by Naji al-Ali?

Leila Khaled

Icon of Palestinian Liberation

Sarah Irving

Compelling biography of a legendary Palestinian resistance fighter. From refugee camp to international infamy.

“Sarah Irving provides a fine portrayal of a compelling and mysterious figure from a tumultuous period in Palestinian history, mixing biography and historical critique to deliver a valuable insight into Leila Khaled’s character as well as her extraordinary appeal as a revolutionary icon.” – Nicholas Blincoe, Novelist and co-editor of Peace Under Fire: Israel/Palestine and the International Solidarity Movement

£12.99 only £11.50 on the Pluto site

Egypt, Palestine and the struggle for change – Sarah Irving and Ewan Stein

Tahir Square 2013

Sarah Irving, author of Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian Liberation (2012) has interviewed Middle East scholar Ewan Stein about his new book Representing Israel in Modern Egypt: Ideas, Intellectuals and Foreign Policy from Nasser to Mubarak (2013). In it, they discuss the current state of Egypt and it’s fluctuating relationships with both Palestine and North America.

Stein comments on President Morsi’s response to Israel’s bombing of Gaza:

I think he acted quite quickly and sensibly and it’s intelligible in those terms. The way he framed Egypt’s response was very much in terms of a unified Egyptian response — the regime and the people. And political forces, particularly the Freedom and Justice Party, which is the Brotherhood party, and the Salafis, had a strong interest in supporting this idea that Egypt is acting as one strong, unified country, so it was significant that both the PM [prime minister] and key political leaders went to Gaza. That represents a presentational change in Egypt’s approach.

Read the rest of the interview here.

Leila Khaled

Icon of Palestinian Liberation

Sarah Irving

Compelling biography of a legendary Palestinian resistance fighter. From refugee camp to international infamy.

“Sarah Irving provides a fine portrayal of a compelling and mysterious figure from a tumultuous period in Palestinian history, mixing biography and historical critique to deliver a valuable insight into Leila Khaled’s character as well as her extraordinary appeal as a revolutionary icon.” – Nicholas Blincoe, Novelist and co-editor of Peace Under Fire: Israel/Palestine and the International Solidarity Movement

£12.99 only £11.50 on the Pluto site

Praise for Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian Liberation

Leila Khaled

Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian Liberation by Sarah Irving reviewed by Ron Jacobs of Counterpunch:

The struggle of the Palestinians is a different looking struggle than it was when Leila Khaled’s name first became known to the world.  Yet, it is the same struggle.  Heroic figures like those mentioned above do not seem to be part of that struggle right now.  However, their stories are important and need to be told.  Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian Liberation does a great job of telling one such story.

Read the whole review here.

Meanwhile, writing in Red Pepper, Hilary Aked praises the book for reading:

like an oral history delicately framed within a political history of the past 65 years [...] a defiant and determined addition to a very limited literature and helps to demystify and humanise the woman behind the symbol.

Visit Red Pepper for the rest of Aked’s review.

Sarah Irving on gender and writing history

pankhurst

Sylvia Pankhurst speaks to an east London crowd

Sarah Irving, author of Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian Liberation and a series editor for ‘Revolutionary Lives’, has written a very interesting post on her own blog about gendered language:

When I was writing my biography of Leila Khaled for Pluto Press, my fabulous editor, David Castle, pointed something very valuable out to me. This is the fact that writers talking about men generally refer to them by their surname (‘Churchill’, ‘Cameron’), whilst women get called by their first names. It’s not 100% true, but go and look at most ‘serious’ or semi-serious books or journalism and you’ll see the trend. Women, it seems, even important historical or political figures, lack a certain gravitas conferred on men by the fact of having chromosome rot* and inherently funny-looking genitalia.

If you’re writing a biography, though, you tend to use your central subject’s name so often that you become desperate for a bit of variety. So what to do? For the Leila Khaled one, I tended to use ‘Khaled’ most of the time, breaking it up with her full name in key places and with ‘Leila’ at points which were more personal and intimate. It worked OK, I think (hope).

So far this spring, I’ve had two manuscripts to read as one of the editors of Pluto Press’ ‘Revolutionary Lives‘ biographical series, and so the subject has come back to haunt me. Writing about Salvador Allende, Victor Figueroa-Clark probably didn’t even think about the issue. One is writing about a man; one uses the surname (and I’m absolutely not blaming Figueroa-Clark for this – my point is that he didn’t need to think about it). For Paula Bartley, though, writing on Ellen Wilkinson, it became a question to ponder long and hard, and to engage in email discussions with myself and David over.

On the one hand, as an experienced historian of the British women’s movement, Bartley absolutely got the point. On the other, she felt that Ellen Wilkinson, as a woman who delighted in challenging formality and pomposity – especially of the male variety – would perhaps have preferred to be ‘Ellen’, and that the tone she was trying to set in her biography suited that better. Again, in the end, we reached a compromise that seems to satisfy everyone.

For another of the forthcoming Revolutionary Lives biographies, the issue takes on a slightly different slant. Katherine Connelly has written on Sylvia Pankhurst and, of course, there are rather a lot of Pankhurst women to mention in that life story. So Sylvia stays ‘Sylvia’ to differentiate her from Christabel, Emmeline et al, not to diminish her status as a political figure.

Visit Sarah Irving to read the blog post in full.

Leila Khaled in Gaza

 

Leila Khaled Gaza

In December Leila Khaled, subject of Sarah Irving’s biography, visited Gaza to speak at a rally for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. The appearance came on the occasion of the  45th anniversary of the founding of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the 25th anniversary of the start of the Intifada.

In January she gave an interview to Electronic Intifada in which she spoke about the situation in the West Bank and Gaza, the need for continued struggle and the situation in the refugee camps of Lebanon. Visit Electronic Intifada to read the interview in full.

 

Forthcoming Revolutionary Lives titles: Sylvia Pankhurst and Salvador Allende

We are proud to announce the forthcoming release of two more titles in the Revolutionary Lives series. Sylvia Pankhurst: Suffragette, Socialist and Scourge of Empire by Katherine Connelly (published in September) tells the story of the communist suffragette campaigner who was instrumental in anti-colonial struggles, left politics and the popularisation of council communism in England.

Victor Figueroa Clark’s Salvador Allende: Revolutionary Democrat (published in August) is an account of one of the most important figures in 20th century South American politics, a man who led Chile into a social revolution which was quickly crushed by the brutal dictatorship of Pinochet but remains an inspiring example of democratic socialist revolution. 

Sylvia Pankhurst

Suffragette, Socialist and Scourge of Empire

Katherine Connelly

£12.99 only £11.50 on the Pluto site

Salvador Allende

A Revolutionary Legacy

Victor Figueroa Clark

A political biography of one of the 20th century’s most emblematic political figures.

“This is a much-needed account of Allende’s life, showing the consistency of his political project and arguing persuasively that he was always at heart a revolutionary. Figueroa Clark’s study shows the relevance of the Chilean experience to current developments in several Latin American nations which have proclaimed ’21st Century Socialism’ as their goal.” – Diana Raby, Senior Fellow, University of Liverpool

£12.99 only £11.50 on the Pluto site

Photos from Manchester launch of ‘Leila Khaled’

The Manchester launch event for Leila Khaled: Icon of Palestinian Liberation was a great success. A number of people came after reading about the cancellation of the original event in the Manchester Evening News. Keep an eye on Sarah Irving’s blog for more news, information and events.

Leila Khaled

All of these were sold!

Sarah Irving

Sarah Irving

Leila Khaled – Icon of Palestinian Liberation launch

Leila Khaled – Icon of Palestinian Liberation launch

Leila Khaled – Icon of Palestinian Liberation launch

Leila Khaled

As I mentioned in my introductory blog for the series, it’s now nearly seven years since I brought the tentative idea of a Leila Khaled biography to David Castle of Pluto. It’s almost four years since I conducted the week of interviews – in a 40+ degree heatwave in Jordan, with no air-conditioning, during Ramadan and with a memorably unpleasant traveller’s lurgy – which form the backbone of the book. In researching it, I’ve spanned secondary materials ranging from records of the heyday of the Palestinian secular resistance to lurid and deeply distasteful Israeli writings celebrating the Mossad’s notorious assassination squads. And in following up that initial gruelling interview, I’ve had to get used to activities which still seem only half-real, like having Skype conversations with one of the most high-profile figures in the Palestinian resistance of the 1960s and 70s.
Even before it was launched, this book has faced fierce opposition. People – including those sympathetic to Khaled’s political cause – also make assumptions about its subject matter. Most seem to expect it will engage mainly with the two most famous incidents in Leila Khaled’s life, her aeroplane hijackings of 1969 and 1970.
But in keeping with the spirit of this series, these two incidents actually have a comparatively small place in the book. Much more interesting, to my mind, are three other questions. Firstly, what brought Leila Khaled to become the world’s best-known female hijacker? Secondly, what impact have those two brief acts, and the political commitment which made her carry them out, had on the rest of her life? And thirdly, where does Leila Khaled fit into the wider Palestinian resistance movements in which she has been such a famous figure?
I hope, in allowing Leila Khaled’s own words to tell much of her story, but in also trying to put them in the context of Palestinian history, of debates around nationalism and gender, and of the place of Palestine solidarity in other contemporary global movements, I have gone a small way to answering those questions.

From the series editor(s)

From Sarah Irving, one of the three editors of the Revolutionary Lives series:

Nearly seven years ago, I wrote to David Castle, one of the commissioning editors at Pluto Press, suggesting a biography of Leila Khaled. I actually asked him if he thought it would be of interest to another publisher, with which Pluto used to have a relationship. “I’d rather you spoke to us!”, he wrote, and the seeds of the Revolutionary Lives series were sown.
It feels like a long time since then, and a lot of planning, shaping, negotiation and probably prevarication have gone on since. Seeking political broadness and balance, we brought Brian Doherty of Keele University and Paul LeBlanc of LaRoche College on board as fellow editors, and have gone on to develop what we think is an exciting list of planned publications. Three of them are now in the public domain – Jean-Paul Marat by Clifford Conner, the forthcoming title on Gerrard Winstanley by John Gurney, and my own biography of Leila Khaled. I can’t let any of the names for 2013 and beyond out – yet – but rest assured they cover a broad sweep of issues, continents and eras. We’re bringing together a wonderful group of authors from around the world, from academic, activist and journalistic backgrounds. Finally seeing it all come together is very exciting.