Crescent Pen (4 results)
More images- Manuscript
Seller: Versandhandel Boeger, Weil am Rhein, , GermanyVersandhandel Boeger
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Used
US$ 7.05
US$ 2.90 shippingShips from Germany to U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Carte Postale Alte Postkarte Powys War Memorial Pen Y Gareg Dam Bridge Clock Tower Crescent Powys postalisch nicht gelaufen nach 1965 Erhaltung siehe scans Alte Ansichtskarte Postkarte Frierer.

Published by Contentum Ltd., Larnaca, Cyprus
- Art Print
Seller: Contentum, Nicosia, CyprusContentum
Contact seller4-star sellerCondition: New
US$ 21.50
US$ 16.82 shippingShips from Cyprus to U.S.A.Quantity: Over 20 available
Loose Leaf. Condition: New. Reproduction. None. No.

Published by Contentum Ltd., Larnaca, Cyprus
- Art Print
Seller: Contentum, Nicosia, CyprusContentum
Contact seller4-star sellerCondition: New
US$ 21.50
US$ 16.82 shippingShips from Cyprus to U.S.A.Quantity: Over 20 available
Loose Leaf. Condition: New. Reproduction. None. No.

Language: English
Published by Praeger 2006
- Hardcover
- First Edition
Seller: killarneybooks, Inagh, CLARE, Irelandkillarneybooks
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Used - Very good
US$ 50.44
US$ 39.10 shippingShips from Ireland to U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. The Crescent and the Pen: The Strange Journey of Taslima Nasreen by Hanifa Deen. Cloth hardcover, xvi + 274 pages, NOT ex-library. ISBN 0275991679. Limited gentle wear, book is clean and bright with unmarked text, free of inscriptions and stamps, fir…mly bound. Bright untorn dust jacket with a flap crease. -- In The Crescent and the Pen: The Strange Journey of Taslima Nasreen, writer and cultural historian Deen peels back the veil on one of the most emblematic and polarising literary figures of the late 20th century: Taslima Nasreen. Known globally as a symbol of feminist resistance and free speech under siege, Nasreen became a household name in 1993 after her novel Shame ignited a political firestorm in Bangladesh, drawing accusations of blasphemy, the issuing of a fatwa, and eventual exile. Lauded in the West as a fearless secularist, compared to Salman Rushdie, and celebrated as a human rights icon, Nasreen's story seemed straightforward - an unflinching woman taking on Islamic extremism at tremendous personal cost. But as Deen's meticulous and deeply personal investigation reveals, this narrative is far from complete. What begins as a biography slowly morphs into a gripping literary detective story that stretches across continents and ideologies. Over five years, Deen conducts more than a hundred interviews and embarks on a transnational investigation, travelling between Bangladesh, India, Europe, and beyond. The result is a penetrating, unflinching account that complicates the neat dichotomy of East versus West, victim versus villain, and hero versus heretic. Why, he asks, was there so little grassroots support for Nasreen in her homeland at the very moment when global literary communities and human rights organisations were rushing to her defence? How did a local controversy evolve into an international human rights campaign? And what role did Western media, political interests, and cultural fantasies play in constructing the legend of Taslima? Rather than vilifying or sanctifying his subject, Deen provides a layered portrait of Nasreen that includes her brilliance, contradictions, and imperfections. The Crescent and the Pen is not merely a book about persecution or religious intolerance - it is a profound interrogation of the myth-making machinery behind international literary celebrity, especially when layered with gender, race, and postcolonial politics. Deen explores the Western appetite for "rescuable" dissidents, the selective storytelling that underpins global activism, and the painful dissonance between a heroine's public image and private truths. Timely and prescient, especially in the wake of global debates around free speech, religious identity, and feminist resistance in the Muslim world, this book urges readers to rethink the easy narratives we are offered - and often eager to believe. Deen's writing is careful, elegant, and unafraid to challenge powerful ideologies on all sides. The Crescent and the Pen is ultimately a meditation on truth, power, and the costs of turning real people into global symbols. It is essential reading for anyone interested in human rights, Islamic politics, postcolonial identity, gender studies, and the complex ethics of literary advocacy.