
Justine Youssef â Somewhat Eternal
Somewhat Eternal explores the interconnected impacts of displacement and finds hope in acts of ritual and preservation. The publication expands on Youssefâs investigations into relationships to land, dispossession, and enduring beliefs.
Three commissioned texts reflect on the solidarities and postcolonial discourse Youssefâs practice engages with. Latoya Ruleâa Wiradjuri/Te Ätiawa, takatÄpu/queer writer, poet, and campaignerâwrites of solidarity between Aboriginal, Lebanese, and Palestinian communities in Australia. Filmmaker and writer Chi Tran considers Youssefâs metaphysical connections to the world as a form of resistance against colonial regimes. Dr Mykaela Saundersâa Koori/Goori and Lebanese writer and editor, teacher, and researcherâbridges the distances implicit in Youssefâs inheritances.
Somewhat Eternal shares affinities, affirms solidarities, and articulates the political and social relations between those whose own distinct lived experiences trace the global outlines of Youssefâs concerns.
52 pages, 18.5 x 20 cm, softcover, IMA (Sydney).
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Justine Youssef â Somewhat Eternal
Somewhat Eternal explores the interconnected impacts of displacement and finds hope in acts of ritual and preservation. The publication expands on Youssefâs investigations into relationships to land, dispossession, and enduring beliefs.
Three commissioned texts reflect on the solidarities and postcolonial discourse Youssefâs practice engages with. Latoya Ruleâa Wiradjuri/Te Ätiawa, takatÄpu/queer writer, poet, and campaignerâwrites of solidarity between Aboriginal, Lebanese, and Palestinian communities in Australia. Filmmaker and writer Chi Tran considers Youssefâs metaphysical connections to the world as a form of resistance against colonial regimes. Dr Mykaela Saundersâa Koori/Goori and Lebanese writer and editor, teacher, and researcherâbridges the distances implicit in Youssefâs inheritances.
Somewhat Eternal shares affinities, affirms solidarities, and articulates the political and social relations between those whose own distinct lived experiences trace the global outlines of Youssefâs concerns.
52 pages, 18.5 x 20 cm, softcover, IMA (Sydney).
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Somewhat Eternal explores the interconnected impacts of displacement and finds hope in acts of ritual and preservation. The publication expands on Youssefâs investigations into relationships to land, dispossession, and enduring beliefs.
Three commissioned texts reflect on the solidarities and postcolonial discourse Youssefâs practice engages with. Latoya Ruleâa Wiradjuri/Te Ätiawa, takatÄpu/queer writer, poet, and campaignerâwrites of solidarity between Aboriginal, Lebanese, and Palestinian communities in Australia. Filmmaker and writer Chi Tran considers Youssefâs metaphysical connections to the world as a form of resistance against colonial regimes. Dr Mykaela Saundersâa Koori/Goori and Lebanese writer and editor, teacher, and researcherâbridges the distances implicit in Youssefâs inheritances.
Somewhat Eternal shares affinities, affirms solidarities, and articulates the political and social relations between those whose own distinct lived experiences trace the global outlines of Youssefâs concerns.
52 pages, 18.5 x 20 cm, softcover, IMA (Sydney).
























