PODCAST · education
Reading the World | قراءة العالم | World Literature, Critical Reading, & Culture
by Ali A. Alhajji | World Literature & Culture
Reading the World | قراءة العالم is a bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) that explores world literature, culture, and higher education—as interconnected ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested across societies—through the practice of critical reading.At its core, the podcast asks a foundational question: What does it mean to read the world?Not only books or literary texts, but also narratives, institutions, media discourses, educational systems, and cultural assumptions that shape how knowledge is formed and whose voices are heard.Drawing on approaches from the humanities, each episode treats reading as a method of inquiry rather than a neutral skill. Through careful attention to language, context, power, and perspective, the podcast asks: who is speaking, from where, and for whom?World literature is approached not as a fixed canon of great books, but as a frame
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Science Diplomacy: Bridging Divides — Building Peace Through Cross-Cultural Scientific Collaboration
Explore the transformative power of science diplomacy and cross-cultural communication in this compelling episode of Reading the World. Dr. Zafra Lerman, a renowned chemist and peacebuilder, shares how the Malta Conferences forge critical connections between scientists from conflicted regions, promoting reconciliation and hope through a unique blend of equality, trust, and embodied friendship. This discussion delves into how these innovative efforts embody principles rooted in global humanities and cultural studies, emphasizing the potential for science to transcend political boundaries and foster lasting peace. You'll hear remarkable stories of collaboration between Israeli and Palestinian scientists, illustrating how a critical reading of political and cultural narratives can lead to profound understanding and change. Perfect for listeners interested in world literature, academic discourse, and the broader humanities, this episode highlights how the universal language of science helps humanize conflict and build bridges where diplomacy often fails.Human Rights and Peace: A Personal OdysseySend us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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Small Town Secrets and Their Role in Shaping Characters | World Literature & Critical Reading
Explore how Susan Gooch's novels use small-town secrets to reveal complex social dynamics, offering rich insights into world literature and literary theory. This episode highlights the significance of critical reading in understanding how family, reputation, and community shape narrative perception. Gooch's work exemplifies crosscultural communication and global humanities by challenging surface-level judgments and exposing the nuanced interplay of love, loyalty, and secrecy. Join us as we dive into the storytelling techniques that craft layered characters and social worlds, illuminating the power of interpretation and the hidden structures that influence human experience within small-town settings. Whether you're a writer, reader, or academic interested in cultural studies and narrative media, this conversation provides valuable perspectives on how fiction can deepen our understanding of complex social fabrics and global literature.To follow Susan's work, visit: https://www.instagram.com/susangoochauthor/.Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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Reading the World: Economics as Language, Story, and Moral Narrative | Economics and Narrative
In this episode of Reading the World—an academic podcast dedicated to critical reading, world literature, and global humanities—Ali Alhajji converses with economist Dr. Doug Cardell to explore how economic ideas are constructed as language, story, and moral narrative. They examine the profound influence of economic storytelling on moral and political beliefs, shedding light on capitalism, socialism, and the complex systems that regulate society.Listeners will gain a deeper understanding of how narratives shape economic perceptions, and how evidence-based thinking interacts with emotional and moral framing in public discourse. The episode also discusses the unpredictable nature of economic systems, clarifies key concepts like equality and equity, and highlights the vital role of education in shaping economic worldviews.By applying critical reading strategies to economics, this conversation reveals the broader implications for cultural studies, translation studies, and cross-cultural communication. If you're interested in global literature, humanities, and narrative media, this episode offers valuable insights into the stories that underlie our economic realities.You can find out more about Dr. Cardell's work at: https://whysocialismstruggles.com/ Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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How a Syllabus Reads the World: Exploring Knowledge and Canon Formation
In this solo episode of Reading the World, Ali Alhajji explores the syllabus as a critical lens through which we can understand world literature, knowledge production, and the structure of higher education. Far from being a neutral administrative tool, the syllabus serves as a map of intellectual authority and inclusion, shaping how students engage with global humanities and cultural studies. By reading the syllabus critically, we uncover its role in organizing time, canon formation, translation studies, and disciplinary habits that influence cross-cultural communication.What does it mean to view a syllabus as a theory of the world? How does it dictate what is seen as foundational or peripheral in academic discourse? This episode unpacks the hidden narratives within syllabi and their impact on how students learn to read and imagine the world itself.Bridging literature, cultural studies, and educational theory, this discussion highlights why the syllabus is a powerful narrative medium in academic and global literature contexts. It invites listeners to rethink not only what is taught, but how curricula shape our understanding of culture and knowledge across borders.Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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The Hidden Rules of Visibility That Quiet Achievers Need to Know
Most employees don’t lack visibility— they lack the clarity to decode what "being visible" actually demands in their organization. Serena Low reveals the hidden rules that shape whose voice is heard—and how introverted high achievers can lead and influence without turning up the volume.In this episode, Serena unpacks how corporate norms favor extroverted confidence and what quiet leaders can do to be seen and recognized on their own terms. She shares powerful stories, from her journey away from law to her insights on navigating high-stakes meetings, managing imposter syndrome, and reframing sales and networking as acts of service. You'll discover concrete strategies for amplifying quiet strengths—like deep listening, strategic patience, and authentic contribution—without sacrificing your identity or wellbeing.We break down the mental shifts needed to reframe visibility as influence, not performance, and how to influence rooms where loud voices dominate. Serena explains how organizational biases undervalue quiet leadership and what it takes to build trust and authority while staying true to your nature. Plus, she offers practical questions to decode what "being visible" really means in your workplace—and how to leverage your natural talents to create impact.If you've ever felt overlooked because you're not the loudest in the room, this episode will change how you see your own power. Whether you’re aiming for more influence, navigating reinvention after 40, or simply want to show up authentically, Serena’s insights empower you to make a difference without acting out of character.Perfect for introverted leaders, high achievers, and anyone tired of equating confidence with noise—this episode gives you the tools to turn subtlety into strength and quiet impact into lasting influence.Serena Low is a trauma-informed coach and founder of the Visible Introvert Academy, specializing in helping high-achieving introverts thrive in extrovert-biased cultures. Her work transforms the way quiet voices are seen, heard, and trusted. https://serenalow.com.au/Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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Reading Images Like Text: 3 Questions to Decipher the True Story Behind a Travel Photo
Most travel photos don’t just show us a destination — they shape what we believe about a place before we even set foot there. Ausra Osipaviciute reveals how images translate the unfamiliar into subjective stories, and how every shot risks both revealing and distorting reality. If you’re tired of passively consuming travel photos and want to start reading them with more insight and ethical awareness, this episode is your guide.We dive into the power of a single frame to evoke emotion and tell a story — or just fragment it. Ausra shares how she approaches visual storytelling beyond prettiness, aiming to capture the true texture, mood, and life of a place. Learn why many travel shots create stereotypes, even when photographers don’t intend them to, and how they inherently carry ideological and ethical implications. You'll discover the subtle yet vital questions to ask whenever you see a travel photo: Who benefits from this story? What’s excluded? And how does the image shape your expectations?Ausra also lifts the veil on the ethics of street and travel photography. She discusses where to draw the line between honest storytelling and exploitation, emphasizing the importance of consent and local context. Her insights about authenticity challenge superficial notions — authentic images aren’t just un-staged, they’re honest about the reality they depict, including its shadows.This episode isn’t just about better photography; it’s about becoming a more conscious viewer and creator. Whether you’re a traveler, a photographer, or a curious listener, you’ll walk away with practical habits to decode images, deepen your understanding, and challenge your assumptions about the stories behind the photos.Perfect for anyone eager to read beyond the surface and see the world in a more truthful, ethical light. Ready to shift from passive viewer to informed reader of images? Hit play and start seeing the stories behind every shot.For more information about Ausra's work, visit: https://theroadreel.com/. Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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The Uninsurable Future: Reading Risk, Insurance, and Ecological Design
What does “risk” really mean—who defines it, and who benefits from the way it’s narrated into institutions?In this episode of Reading the World | قراءة العالم, Ali Alhajji speaks with Joshua Harrison, Director of the Center for the Study of the Force Majeure (UC Santa Cruz), about the relationship between risk, insurance, and ecological design—and why the idea of an uninsurable future reveals more than a market problem. It reveals a crisis of imagination, governance, and accountability.Starting with the insurance industry’s growing inability to price climate volatility, the conversation reframes insurance as critical infrastructure: a system that quietly shapes where people can live, what futures remain investable, and whose losses are deemed acceptable. From there, the discussion turns toward prevention rather than reaction, and asks what it would mean to redesign our institutions around stewardship.We then move into ecological and cultural “reading scenes”: how design changes what becomes visible, how fire can be understood as a tool of land care rather than only catastrophe, and how Indigenous knowledge complicates dominant frameworks of expertise. The episode closes with Two-Eyed Seeing as a way of thinking across knowledge systems—while staying attentive to power, translation, and responsibility.In this conversation:How institutions narrate risk—and what those narratives eraseInsurance as a front line of climate governanceWhy prevention is the missing logic in modern risk systemsStewardship, “good fire,” and ecological design as forms of readingTwo-Eyed Seeing and the ethics of knowledge-sharing across systemsReading the World | قراءة العالم is a bilingual podcast (English/Arabic) that takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without shortcuts.Keywords: risk, insurance, ecological design, institutional narratives, climate change, Indigenous knowledge, governance, prevention, stewardship, ecological crisisSend us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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الباحث غير المؤسسي: كيف تُنتَج المعرفة خارج الجامعة؟
في هذه الحلقة من «قراءة العالم»، نطرح سؤالًا واحدًا بهدوء ومن دون اختصارات: ماذا يكشف لنا نموذج الباحث غير المؤسسي عن إنتاج المعرفة خارج الجامعة؟ وكيف تتغير مفاهيم السلطة والشرعية والخبرة عندما يُنجَز العمل الفكري الجاد بعيدًا عن الأطر الأكاديمية الرسمية؟ضيفنا هو الدكتور شيلدون غريفز، مؤلف كتاب «دليل الباحث غير المؤسسي»، الذي يتحدث عن عوائق الوصول إلى المعرفة، وجدران الدفع التي تحاصر البحث، وعن بدائل الصرامة العلمية خارج المؤسسة: المجتمعات المعرفية، القراءة البطيئة، والتحقق، وبناء شبكات تعلّم تُصحّح وتُراجع بدل أن تكتفي بالتصفيق.نناقش أيضًا لماذا لا تكفي “الاستقلالية” وحدها، وكيف يمكن للبحث المستقل أن يكون ممارسة اجتماعية تُنتج معرفة قابلة للمساءلة، لا مجرد تجربة فردية معزولة.ملاحظة مهمة: التسجيل الأصلي لهذه الحلقة تم باللغة الإنجليزية. وهذه النسخة العربية هي دبلجة خاصة أُنتجت خصيصًا لمستمعي العربية، مع الحفاظ على مضمون الحوار وروحه.استمعوا… واقرأوا ببطء… وأصغوا بعناية… ولا تنخدعوا بالطريق المختصر.Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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The Guerrilla Scholar: Knowledge Beyond Academia
In this episode of Reading the World | قراءة العالم, Ali Alhajji sits down with Dr. Sheldon Greaves to treat the “guerrilla scholar” as a figure of knowledge production—a way of thinking about what counts as knowledge, who gets to authorize it, and what changes when serious intellectual work happens outside formal academic structures.We begin with a thesis-level prompt—define “guerrilla scholar” in one sentence—and then follow the question where it leads: legitimacy, rigor without institutional supervision, reading as a method of judgment (not just information), and the practical infrastructures that make independent learning possible.On-record note: This conversation was recorded in both audio and video; the episode is released primarily as audio, with short video clips occasionally shared.In this conversation, we explore:What the term “guerrilla scholar” is actually naming in how knowledge is organized and legitimizedWhat makes intellectual work “count” outside universities—and who gets to decideWhat replaces peer review: feedback, rigor, correction, and the social life of legitimacyReading as method: slow reading, interpretation, and why the core issue is judgmentCommunity as infrastructure (without romanticizing isolation)Limits and tradeoffs: sustainability, credibility barriers, mentorship gaps, and the risk of romanticizing precarityA closing question designed to unsettle one assumption about learning and knowledgeGuestDr. Sheldon Greaves is the author of The Guerrilla Scholar’s Handbook. He earned a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley while living and working in Silicon Valley during the dot-com boom, developing an approach to intellectual life shaped by constraints, independence, and a long career doing serious work outside academia.Reading the World | قراءة العالم — one question at a time.Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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Episode 3: AI and the Humanities — Who Shapes Knowledge Now?
Artificial intelligence is increasingly involved in how knowledge is produced, summarized, translated, and circulated. But what kind of knowledge does AI generate—and on whose terms?In this episode, we explore the relationship between AI and the humanities, asking how data, language, institutions, and power shape what AI systems present as knowledge. Approaching AI through the lens of critical reading, the conversation treats AI not as a neutral or purely technical tool, but as a cultural and interpretive system—one that inherits assumptions, hierarchies, and exclusions embedded in its training data.Through a reflective dialogue, the episode examines the difference between pattern and meaning, fluency and understanding, and speed and judgment. It considers how AI reshapes authority and trust, why critical interpretation remains essential in an AI-driven world, and how the humanities provide tools for reading AI outputs rather than accepting them at face value.The episode also reflects on education, voice technologies, and the ethical stakes of using AI as a shortcut to answers instead of a prompt for deeper inquiry.Reading the World | قراءة العالم takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.In the next episode, we turn to another question:What happens when ideas travel from one language to another?Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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الحلقة الثانية: هل المعرفة محايدة فعلًا؟
كثيرًا ما تُوصَف المعرفة بأنها «موضوعية» ومحايدة، منفصلة عن السياسة والسياق. لكن في العلوم الإنسانية، لا تُعد الحيادية نقطة انطلاق بقدر ما هي سؤال يحتاج إلى فحص.في هذه الحلقة، نتأمل كيف أن كل فعل معرفي ينطلق من موقع محدد: لغة، وتاريخ، ومؤسسة. فما ندرسه، وكيف ندرسه، وأي الأسئلة تُعَد مشروعة، كلها قرارات غير بريئة، تشكّل فهمنا للعالم قبل أن ننتبه إلى أثرها.من خلال أمثلة تمتد من الخطة الدراسية إلى الإعلام، والتقارير السياسية، والبيانات، توضّح الحلقة كيف تُنتَج المعرفة داخل علاقات السلطة، دون أن يعني ذلك اختزالها في الدعاية. فالمعرفة ليست زائفة بالضرورة، لكنها مُتموضعة، مرتبطة بسياقها وشروط إنتاجها.تدعو الحلقة إلى قراءة العالم بعناية عبر طرح أسئلة أساسية:ما الافتراضات الكامنة في الخطاب؟وأي منظور يُقدَّم بوصفه عالميًا؟وأي التجارب تُدفع إلى الهامش بوصفها «سياقية»؟كما توضّح أن القراءة النقدية لا ترفض الخبرة، بل تتعامل معها بجدية كافية تتيح مساءلتها. ومن هنا تبرز أهمية العلوم الإنسانية، لا لأنها تقدّم إجابات سهلة، بل لأنها تعلّمنا كيف تُنتَج الإجابات أصلًا.في زمن يختلط فيه التفكير النقدي بالتشكيك أو العدميّة، تذكّرنا هذه الحلقة بأن النقد ممارسة أخلاقية، وطريقة للبقاء مسؤولين أمام تعقيد الواقع.فقراءة العالم تعني رفض الاختصارات، والبقاء مع الصعوبة وقتًا كافيًا لفهم ما الذي هو على المحك.قراءة العالم | Reading the Worldسؤال واحد، في كل مرة.Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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Episode 2: Is Knowledge Ever Neutral?
We often hear the phrase “objective knowledge”—neutral, detached, above politics. But in the humanities, neutrality is not a starting point; it is a question that critical reading helps us examine.In this episode, we explore how every act of knowledge comes from somewhere: a language, a history, an institution. What we study, how we study it, and which questions are treated as legitimate are never accidental.Using examples from syllabi, media narratives, policy reports, and data practices, the episode shows how knowledge is shaped through inclusion and exclusion—often long before we become aware of its effects. These processes do not occur outside power, yet this does not mean that all knowledge is propaganda. It means that knowledge is situated.To read the world carefully is to ask:What assumptions are at work here?Whose perspective is treated as universal?And whose experience is framed as “context”?This episode argues that critical reading does not reject expertise. It takes expertise seriously enough to interrogate it. In a time when critical thinking is often mistaken for cynicism, the humanities remind us that critique is an ethical practice—a way of remaining accountable to complexity.Reading the World | قراءة العالم is a bilingual podcast that takes one question at a time, inviting careful attention to how meaning, knowledge, and authority are produced.In the next episode, we turn to another question:What happens when ideas travel from one language to another?Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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ماذا يعني أن نقرأ العالم؟
ماذا يعني أن نقرأ العالم؟ليس المقصود هنا قراءة الكتب فقط، ولا الأدب بوصفه غاية قائمة بذاتها، بل قراءة القصص والافتراضات والسرديات التي تُشكِّل فهمنا للثقافات والمجتمعات، ولأنفسنا وللآخرين. من هذا السؤال التأسيسي تنطلق هذه الحلقة الافتتاحية من بودكاست Reading the World | قراءة العالم.في هذه الحلقة، نعيد التفكير في معنى «القراءة» كما يُفهم في العلوم الإنسانية: لا باعتبارها نشاطًا فرديًا معزولًا، بل منهجًا نقديًا يقوم على الانتباه إلى اللغة، والسياق، والسلطة، والمنظور. القراءة هنا تمتد لتشمل السرديات الإعلامية، والافتراضات الثقافية غير المعلنة، والأنظمة التعليمية، بل وأحيانًا ما لا يُقال—الصمت نفسه.تطرح الحلقة ثلاثة أسئلة محورية تُعد مفتاحًا لقراءة العالم:من يتكلم؟ومن أي موقع؟ولمن يُوجَّه هذا الكلام؟انطلاقًا من هذه الأسئلة، تناقش الحلقة مفهوم الأدب العالمي، لا بوصفه قائمة بأهم الأعمال أو "مدونات معيارية" مغلقة، بل باعتباره طريقة لفهم كيف تنتقل النصوص عبر اللغات والثقافات والسياقات السياسية. هنا تبرز الترجمة بوصفها فعلًا مركزيًا في إنتاج المعنى، لا عملية تقنية محايدة. فكل ترجمة هي بالضرورة تفسير، وكل تفسير مشروط بسياقه الثقافي والتاريخي.كما تتناول الحلقة دور الجامعات ومؤسسات التعليم العالي، لا باعتبارها جهات تمنح الشهادات فحسب، بل باعتبارها فاعلًا أساسيًا في تحديد ما يُعد معرفة، وأي الأصوات تُمنح الشرعية، وكيف تتشكل الأفكار التي تتداول في المجال العام. وعندما يُختزل التعليم في أوراق اعتماد أو مسارات مهنية ضيقة، نخاطر بفقدان شيء جوهري: القدرة على التفكير النقدي عبر الاختلاف، والإنصات لوجهات نظر متعددة.تؤكد هذه الحلقة أن قراءة العالم ليست مهارة أكاديمية مخصصة للباحثين فقط، بل مهارة مدنية أيضًا، تتعلق بكيف نفهم الخطاب العام، ونقيّم المعرفة، ونتعامل مع التعقيد بدل الهروب منه. إنها دعوة إلى التمهّل، وإلى القراءة بعناية أكبر، وإلى الإصغاء عبر الحدود اللغوية والثقافية.Reading the World | قراءة العالم بودكاست ثنائي اللغة (العربية والإنجليزية) يستكشف الأدب، والثقافة، والتعليم العالي في سياق عالمي. تركز كل حلقة على فكرة واحدة، بوضوح وعناية، ومن دون تبسيط مُخلّ.إذا كان هذا النوع من الحوار يعني لك شيئًا، فهذه الحلقة هي نقطة البداية. الحلقات القادمة ستتناول سؤالًا واحدًا في كل مرة.Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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What Does It Mean to Read the World?
What does it mean to read the world—not only texts, but the cultural narratives, assumptions, and systems that shape how meaning is produced? In this episode, we explore reading as a critical practice that extends beyond literature to translation, education, and public discourse. The episode introduces the idea of “reading the world” as a way of understanding how texts travel across languages and cultures, why meaning is always mediated, and why careful reading remains a civic skill in contemporary global conversations.Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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دليل كيمبردج للأدب العالمي
الأدب العالمي والشمولية. ما هو تعريف الآدب العالمي. الأدب العالمي والترجمة. الأدب العالمي والتواصل عبر الثقافي. Send us Fan MailReading the World | قراءة العالمA bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) exploring world literature, culture, and higher education as ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested.Each episode takes one question at a time—carefully, clearly, and without oversimplification.Follow the podcast to continue the conversation.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Reading the World | قراءة العالم is a bilingual podcast (English and Arabic) that explores world literature, culture, and higher education—as interconnected ways of understanding how meaning is produced, circulated, and contested across societies—through the practice of critical reading.At its core, the podcast asks a foundational question: What does it mean to read the world?Not only books or literary texts, but also narratives, institutions, media discourses, educational systems, and cultural assumptions that shape how knowledge is formed and whose voices are heard.Drawing on approaches from the humanities, each episode treats reading as a method of inquiry rather than a neutral skill. Through careful attention to language, context, power, and perspective, the podcast asks: who is speaking, from where, and for whom?World literature is approached not as a fixed canon of great books, but as a frame
HOSTED BY
Ali A. Alhajji | World Literature & Culture
CATEGORIES
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