The Spectre of Orientalism in Craig Thompson’s Habibi

<p>It&rsquo;s easy to inventory my feelings about Craig Thompson&rsquo;s&nbsp;<em>Habibi</em>. For well over a year, I approached its release with equal parts excitement and fear. The fear sprang from the 2010 Stumptown Comics Festival &mdash; held in Thompson&rsquo;s hometown of Portland, OR near the completion of&nbsp;<em>Habibi</em>&nbsp;&mdash; as I sat in the audience of a Q&amp;A session with him about the processes of publishing and creation. There he explained (as he has in many venues since) that&nbsp;<em>Habibi</em>&nbsp;was going to be an expansive book about Islam and the idea was birthed out a place of post-9/11 guilt he felt in reaction to America&rsquo;s Islamophobic tendencies. Had he traveled much in the Middle East? No, except Morocco. Did he know Arabic? No, but he had learned the alphabet. At one point he actively said he was playing &ldquo;fast and loose with culture&rdquo; picking from here and there in order to tell his story as he saw fit. As I sat in the audience I saw red flags going up.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/@ndamluji/the-spectre-of-orientalism-in-craig-thompsons-habibi-dde9d499f403"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>