Tag: Morocco

Moon Morocco Local Insight, Strategic Itineraries, Desert Excursions (Moon Middle East & Africa Travel Guide), 3rd Edition


Free Download Moon Morocco: Local Insight, Strategic Itineraries, Desert Excursions (Moon Middle East & Africa Travel Guide), 3rd Edition by Lucas Peters
English | November 28th, 2023 | ISBN: 1640499776 | 544 pages | True EPUB | 34.21 MB
Grand imperial cities, calm desert oases, Mediterranean beaches, and ancient history: experience an incredible crossroads of culture with Moon Morocco.

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Cybersecurity in Morocco


Free Download Yassine Maleh, "Cybersecurity in Morocco "
English | ISBN: 3031184777 | 2022 | 112 pages | PDF | 2 MB
This SpringerBrief contains eight chapters and presents an overview of the evolution of the Moroccan Cybersecurity Strategy. It also draws attention to the development of cybersecurity in Morocco and to ensure national security in the context of the current and developing information confrontation in the international community. However, it cannot promise to provide an in-depth examination. The issue of cybersecurity is simply too wide-ranging for our purposes. This acknowledgment is meant to encourage more detailed research into the broader topics covered in this brief to better inform current approaches to national cybersecurity performance evaluation.

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Paul Bowles’s Literary Engagement with Morocco Poetic Space, Liminality, and In-Betweenness


Free Download Bouchra Benlemlih, "Paul Bowles’s Literary Engagement with Morocco: Poetic Space, Liminality, and In-Betweenness"
English | ISBN: 1498548024 | 2018 | 214 pages | EPUB | 376 KB
This study argues that Paul Bowles is more perceptive than many American travelers in Morocco. The book provides us with what are perhaps the most sustained meditations to date on Bowles’s translation work and his autobiography, as well as perceptive analyses of key stories such as "A Distant Episode" and "Here to Learn" and his second novel, Let It Come Down, set primarily in Tangier. The chapter on translation dwells on the complex interactions between Moroccan storytellers and Bowles. The work considers translation as a site where the oral and written, colonial and post-colonial scene, and English and Maghrebi come face to face; it is a place where things are worked out in dynamic interaction. The chapter on Bowles’s autobiography Without Stopping, urges us to take this piece of self-writing (famously dubbed Without Telling by William Burroughs) more seriously, drawing our attention to baroque architectural features of mind and external landscape, worlds distorted by mirrors, dreams, and fluid transit where forms morph. The work also highlights difference between experience and representation of experience through language, transformed through the prism of memory. In the chapter on Without Stopping as well as in my discussions of Bowles’s fiction, I provide useful elaborations of connections between Bowles’s work and that of Edgar Allan Poe. My reading of one of Bowles’s best-known stories, "A Distant Episode," brings to the surface a recognition that the tragic fate of the Professor, the story’s protagonist, is an outcome of his inability to admit that cultures are not static. The academically trained linguist demonstrates an unwillingness or inability to adapt to change, or to read cultural signs accurately. The message is that Morocco is not stuck in time, and cannot be held in place by Orientalist fantasies or preconceived, externally derived intellectual constructs and assumptions. The book concludes that against the grain of Samuel Huntington’s notion ofClash of Civilizations, Bowles’s poetic and geographical journey forcefully projects cosmopolitanism and transnational attention confirming that civilizations and ‘identities’ open up rather than shut down, war or clash.

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