An Ottoman dragoman in robe and fur hat, reading a scroll — period costume plate
Edition 18 · 8 June 2026 · archive ›

Dragoman

the world, interpreted
Focus: MENA · Africa — 12 items · 6 native-language exclusives. Structural over breaking; the forgotten over the front page.
Many views on one question

Russia’s shrinking room for maneuver

A French Middle East reading sees Moscow careful and overextended, while an English essay on Russian ideology tracks the domestic creed that has hardened from Putin-era statism into militarized conservatism. One looks at Russia’s limits abroad; the other at the ideas that make those limits politically usable at home.

It
Il Tascabile · Global

Lacan alla scuola primaria

Aida Vasquez and Fernand Oury’s institutional pedagogy treated the classroom as a social and psychic institution, not a delivery mechanism for lessons. Lacanian psychoanalysis enters the primary school through rules, roles, speech, desire, and group life: children learn because the institution gives them a place from which to speak.

read in Italian, untranslated · 13d ago · 12 min · deep · opened — expand

Education policy looks different when the problem is not attention or achievement alone, but the institutional conditions that let a child become a subject.

educationpsychoanalysisinstitutions
Fr
La Vie des idées · Global

Anthropologie de la grande ville

Berlin’s expansion from the nineteenth century onward remade everyday perception, mobility, housing, class contact, and the rhythms of urban life. Nazi planning then tried to discipline that metropolitan complexity into an ordered political form, turning the modern city itself into an object of ideological control.

read in French, untranslated · 12d ago · 14 min · deep · opened — expand

The city becomes a political technology, not just a backdrop for politics.

urban historyBerlinanthropology
It
Doppiozero · Global

Quanto costa la playlist perfetta?

Spotify’s endless playlist is a labor system disguised as personal taste: recommendation, mood programming, rights contracts, and background listening reorganize what music is worth. The perfect playlist costs artists attention, bargaining power, and often money, while platforms turn continuity into control.

read in Italian, untranslated · today · 11 min · deep · opened — expand

Streaming’s cultural power sits less in censorship than in the quiet redesign of listening habits and musical income.

music economyplatformssoft power
En
Mada Masr · MENA

Could a New Municipal Bill Open the Door for Constitutional Amendments?

Egypt’s local administration law is not a boring governance bill; it reopens the machinery through which municipal representation, executive control, and constitutional amendment politics can be rearranged. A draft stuck since 2016 returns just as the regime needs new channels for political management below the national level.

English original · 4d ago · deep · opened — expand

Local government is where authoritarian durability is built before it appears as national consensus.

Egyptauthoritarianismlocal government
Fr
Orient XXI · MENA

Pologne. Le quotidien cruel de réfugiés afghans

Afghan refugees in Poland are trapped between EU return politics and border practices that block asylum claims before they can become legal cases. Detention, procedural limbo, and fear of deportation do the work that open anti-asylum law cannot always say aloud.

read in French, untranslated · 3d ago · deep · opened — expand

Europe’s Afghan policy is being made in detention centers and border offices, not only in Brussels communiqués.

migrationAfghanistanEurope
En
International Crisis Group · Global

Unexpected Visit Signals Potential Détente Between Niger and Benin

Niger and Benin’s border reopening is about more than neighborly repair: sanctions, coup politics, transit routes, and coastal access made their dispute economically expensive for both sides. The thaw tests whether West African regional order can be rebuilt through logistics and customs cooperation after ECOWAS coercion failed to settle the politics.

English original · deep · opened — expand

For landlocked Sahel states, diplomacy often starts with the corridor to the port.

SahelBeninregional politics
Es
Le Grand Continent (ES) · Global

Elecciones en Armenia: ¿hacia un tercer mandato de Pachinian?

Armenia’s election is a referendum on Nikol Pashinyan’s post-Karabakh order: security humiliation, Russian estrangement, Western opening, and domestic fatigue all flow into the same ballot. The question is whether a leader who lost the old national-security settlement can still govern the transition away from it.

read in Spanish, untranslated · yesterday · 3 min · deep · opened — expand

Armenia is deciding whether defeat produces restoration politics or a new geopolitical grammar.

Armeniapost-Soviet politicsCaucasus
Corroborated by Le Grand Continent
En
Engelsberg Ideas · Global

Has Iran Won the War by Not Losing?

Iran’s strategic success may lie in survival rather than battlefield victory: if the state absorbs strikes, keeps command intact, and preserves deterrent capacity, its enemies have not achieved their political aim. The logic is asymmetric: a weaker power can win by denying the stronger power a decisive endpoint.

English original · 12d ago · 5 min · deep · opened — expand

The war’s scorecard changes if regime endurance, not military parity, is the metric.

Iranwardeterrence
En
Majalla · MENA

Why People Flock to the Dollar When Local Currencies Collapse

Dollarization begins at street level when shopkeepers, landlords, workers, and savers stop believing the local currency will hold value long enough to price tomorrow’s goods. Once wages, rents, and savings mentally convert into dollars, monetary sovereignty becomes a social convention the central bank can no longer command.

English original · 2d ago · 3 min · deep · opened — expand

Currency collapse is a political crisis of trust before it is a technical failure of exchange rates.

currencyinflationpolitical economy
En
International Crisis Group · Global

Iran Crisis Monitor #8

The Iran war is tracked through escalation pathways, ceasefire bargaining, regional spillover, and the diplomatic constraints facing outside mediators. Crisis Group’s value is the map of incentives: who can de-escalate, who benefits from ambiguity, and where tactical moves can harden into a wider conflict.

English original · skim · opened — expand

The useful question is not who sounds most defiant, but which actors still have levers that can stop the next round.

IranMENAcrisis diplomacy
En
Mada Masr · MENA

Israeli Forces Cross the Litani River to South Lebanon’s Zawtar

Israel’s move north of the Litani looks like pressure diplomacy by military means, but the costs rise as Hezbollah can contest the advance on terrain where it is socially and operationally embedded. The report ties battlefield movement to ceasefire timing and U.S.-Iran truce talk rather than treating the crossing as an isolated escalation.

English original · 11d ago · skim · opened — expand

South Lebanon’s geography is also negotiation infrastructure: every village position changes the bargaining table.

LebanonHezbollahIsrael
It
Doppiozero · Global

Occhio rotondo 68. Nose Mask

Irving Penn understood fashion as “the image of an image”: not clothing alone, but pose, surface, reproduction, and social fantasy. The “nose mask” becomes a small object for thinking about how fashion converts bodies into signs.

read in Italian, untranslated · yesterday · 5 min · skim · opened — expand

Fashion’s power lies in making artificiality feel like social truth.

fashionphotographyvisual culture
Many tongues on one storm

When Sudan’s War Runs on Bullion, the Buyers Are Belligerents

Sudan is not simply two generals refusing peace. Gold mining, Dubai-facing finance, border corridors and civilian facades now let both camps act like states while feeding on the society they claim to govern. Follow the metal and the peace table moves outward: Darfur mines, Port Sudan banks, Chadian and Libyan corridors, Dubai companies, and European tolerance of Abu Dhabi all enter the room.

ع Sudanese civil-society policy work, in Arabic, looking from peacebuilding and local survival systems.
From War Economy to Peace Economy: Civil Society’s Role in Peacebuilding in Sudan
التحول من اقتصاد الحرب إلى اقتصاد السلام: دور منظمات المجتمع المدني في بناء السلام في السودان
The useful move is its three-layer map: combat economy, shadow economy, survival economy. Looting licenses, Dagalo markets, checkpoints, aid fees, gold, gum arabic and livestock turn civilian coping into revenue for armed rule; the SAF drains semi-formal state channels while the RSF builds a more openly predatory replacement economy.
Sudan Democracy Action Project · Arabic
De German policy-research view from Berlin; Sudan compared with Libya, Somalia and Ethiopia.
The Destabilising Role of the United Arab Emirates in African Conflicts
Die destabilisierende Rolle der Vereinigten Arabischen Emirate in afrikanischen Konflikten
Abu Dhabi’s Sudan role sits inside a wider method: arm or finance disruptive actors, use ports, logistics and companies for leverage, join diplomatic formats while undermining embargoes. The European angle is uncomfortable: Germany and its partners keep treating the UAE as a security and trade partner while its Africa policy fragments states and pushes refugees toward Europe.
Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik · German
Fr Francophone Africa-facing analysis of the Port Sudan/Darfur split and Sudan’s parallel political architectures.
In Sudan, “Two Projects That Have Nothing to Do With Democracy”
Au Soudan, « deux projets qui n’ont rien à voir avec la démocratie »
After Khartoum’s reconquest and El Fasher’s fall, the split has acquired institutions: Amal in Port Sudan and Tasis in Nyala. Civilians supply the language of government, but the power sits with armed coalitions controlling territory, resources and patronage; partition is becoming an administrative fact before it is a diplomatic one.
Afrique XXI · French
After the cameras left

Sudan After the Cameras Left: Bullion, Checkpoints, Kitchens, Cash

Sudan’s war did not settle into stalemate; it became a set of revenue systems. Gold, border fuel, port customs, livestock routes, aid permits, transfer commissions and emergency kitchens now decide who can fight, who can govern, and who gets to eat.

ع Sudanese anti-corruption / policy-research vantage, using interviews with traders, farmers and businesspeople inside the war economy.
Sudan: A War Economy Drowning in Corruption
السودان: اقتصاد حرب غارق في الفساد
The war economy is not only gold smuggling: it is customs offices, port exemptions, checkpoint receipts, harvest permissions, fuel routes and commanders treating public revenue as campaign finance or personal spoils. The strongest passages are granular: truckers paying RSF transit fees, farmers paying to harvest, fuel moving from Libya and South Sudan, and Port Sudan businessmen describing army-linked customs deals paid partly in goods.
Sudan Transparency and Policy Tracker · Arabic
ع Sudanese reporter writing in a regional Arabic outlet, close to Darfur displacement and aid politics.
Investing in Tragedy: Darfur’s War Economy Between the RSF and Abdel Wahid’s Movement
استثمار المأساة: اقتصاد الحرب في دارفور بين الدعم السريع وحركة عبد الواحد
Tawila, now holding hundreds of thousands displaced from El Fasher, is not simply a refuge; it has become a taxing ground where an armed movement extracts fees from aid groups, kitchens, traders and the displaced themselves. The piece is valuable because it breaks the false binary of army versus RSF and shows how “neutral” armed control can turn humanitarian survival into taxable revenue.
NoonPost · Arabic
ع Darfur-based local reporting from Nyala markets and RSF-controlled areas.
New Cash Injected Into Markets in RSF-Controlled Areas
ضخ كتلة نقدية جديدة في الأسواق بمناطق سيطرة قوات الدعم السريع
The RSF’s next move is monetary sovereignty: cash with an old central-bank signature appears in Nyala markets through Future Bank after transfer commissions had reached 20-25 percent, and RSF salaries shift from dollars to Sudanese pounds. This is what partition looks like before anyone declares it: a rival authority starts solving liquidity, payroll and acceptance problems.
Darfur24 · Arabic
A standing interest, freshly read

Who Gets to Manufacture Antiquity?

These four entries treat antiquity as a live political technology: Rome as platform masculinity, Greece as Europe’s invented origin, civic amnesia as a peace mechanism, and late antiquity as climate, plague, law, and empire rather than a single barbarian date. The common lesson is not “the ancients were like us”; it is that every usable past has owners, exclusions, and institutional machinery.

En Classical reception scholarship reading TikTok, X, memes, and far-right digital culture after Trump’s return.
This Is Their #RomanEmpire: Toxic Masculinity, Far-Right Propaganda and Social Media Trends Through Classical Reception Studies
The Roman Empire meme is not just harmless virality: it trains users to see Rome through “great men,” conquest, white masculinity, and decline myths. The strongest move is the link from memes, reels, and AI images to a new reception regime where Big Tech platforms, not classrooms or museums, set the public horizon for antiquity.
International Journal of the Classical Tradition · EN
It Italian intellectual review of a 2025 Einaudi book on Greek antiquity, German thought, antisemitism, exile, and European identity.
Mauro Bonazzi’s The Demon of Nostalgia: The Invention of Greece from Nietzsche to Arendt
“Il demone della nostalgia. L’invenzione della Grecia da Nietzsche a Arendt” di Mauro Bonazzi
German philhellenism appears here as an identity crisis, not admiration for marble serenity: Nietzsche’s anti-classical Greece, Wilamowitz’s political Plato, Heidegger’s rooted Greek destiny, Husserl’s universalist Europe, and Jewish exiles all build rival Europes out of the same ancient material. Greece is not Europe’s stable origin; it is the battlefield where Europe keeps rewriting what it wants to be.
Pandora Rivista · Italian
De German ancient-history review from H-Soz-Kult, focused on civil conflict, amnesty, memory, and political culture.
F. Bernstein: Forgetting as a Political Option
F. Bernstein: Vergessen als politische Option
Greek and Roman communities often ended internal conflict by ordering silence, not by truth work: amnesty, communication break, and restored homonoia or concordia stopped revenge spirals when compromise was not a normal political category. The uncomfortable contrast with modern liberal memory culture is precise: pluralism depends on keeping painful communication open, a habit the ancient consensus model often lacked.
H-Soz-Kult · German
Fr French ancient-history review of Sylvain Destephen’s reperiodization of late antiquity.
542: Chronicle of a Foretold Ending?
542, chroniques d’une fin annoncée ?
The old date 476 collapses too much into one theatrical dethronement; 542 gathers the deeper break: Justinianic legal centralization, Christian uniformity, plague, climatic shock, war with Persia, and the strain of Constantinople’s imperial system. Antiquity ends less like a coup than like a convergence of administration, ecology, disease, and sacred politics.
Nonfiction.fr · French