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Rising Among Ruins, Dancing Amid Bullets

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Rising Among Ruins, Dancing Amid Bullets

Contributors:

By (Author) Maryam Ashrafi
By (author) Allan Kaval
By (author) Mylne Sauloy
By (author) Carol Mann
By (author) Kamran Matin

ISBN:

9782490952168

Publisher:

Hemeria

Imprint:

Hemeria

Publication Date:

23rd March 2022

Country:

France

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

779.995672

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

304

Dimensions:

Width 203mm, Height 254mm

Description

This book is the Winner of the Lucie Photo Book Prize 2022 Traditional Category.


From 2012 to 2018, social documentary photographerMaryam Ashraficovered the struggle of Kurdish people for its freedom and independance,choosingto stay behind the front lines and observe the daily lives of combatants.


Rising Among Ruins, Dancing amid Bulletsis a photographic project I have been working on since 2012 in Iraqi and Syrian Kurdistan, to bear witness to the consequences of war, namely to the lives of civilians returning to their homes after their cities are liberated, as well as to the daily life of the fighters behind the front lines while emphasizing the role of women in their ranks."

-Maryam Ashrafi



Author Bio

Maryam Ashrafi

is a Paris-based Iranian photographer. Born in Tehran in 1982 during the Iran and Iraq war, Maryam is passionate for sociology which led her to focus her interest in social and socio-political issues in countries around the world. Graduated with a BA in social documentary photography from the University of Wales, Newport in England, she began to explore these issues, focusing in particular on the situation of Kurds. For several years, she has been working on different subjects: refugees in Paris, mobilization of the Kurdish and Iranian diasporas, the Indignants Movement in Paris and riots in Paris following different social and political issues around the world. Above all, as a freelance independent photographer, she has covered the aftermath of wars from Kobane in Northern Syria to Sinjar in Iraqi Kurdistan, until 2018.
Her long-term work on Kurdish issues has also led her to work as a camerawoman for documentaries such as I Am The Revolution (2018) and to direct and shoot her upcoming documentary in Iraq and Syria about PTSD (Eternal Sentinel, 2021).



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