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I get her…
Variety@Variety
Léa Seydoux on why she started acting: “I’m going to tell you something very intimate,” she tells Variety’s @DPD_ in this week’s cover story. “The reason why I do this job ... I never really wanted to become an actress, but I wanted to exist. The only way I found to exist was to have my image printed on a film and have the proof of my existence.” Read the full cover story: wp.me/pc8uak-1lHhhG
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@cineTesha @selimjenx So, in that case, a Tunisian from the diaspora who doesn’t speak Tunisian Arabic can’t identify as Tunisian?
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@selimjenx It’s a top-down identity project, and that pattern shows up elsewhere too just like in our region lol
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@selimjenx My point wasn’t about the EU specifically it was about the idea of ‘the European’ as a collective identity. Think about how different a Portuguese person is from a Finnish one culturally, linguistically, historically. Yet politicians keep pushing this notion of a unified Europe
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@selimjenx Mind u do u realize what ure saying is straight up or in some ways intersect with z!0 propaganda 😭
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@cineTesha Panarabism is a delusional fantasy that will never work. Its gonna be yugoslavia on steroids. Even tho im against nationalism, forcing a fake “united Arab nation” would bulldoze every minority and end in bloody ethnic cleansing and chaos
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@selimjenx Panarabism is a delusional fantasy is a a narrative shaped by #certain agents that constantly terrorizing the region, Just to kill any attempt of achieving sovereignty, security and independence.
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@selimjenx The indigenous people still inhabits the same land as our ancestors it’s simply that terminologies of identification have changed
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@selimjenx Mind u I didn’t say we need to erase that from our culture and heritage I am for the preservation of all of that. However, again I simply don’t view it as a valid national identity in this current historical moment.
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@selimjenx That’s not me erasing Amazigh influence btw I fully acknowledge it. I just don’t think of it, as a solid grounds for a national identity!
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@selimjenx My ‘largely absent’ comment was mainly about language. As for the architecture, food, folklore and so on, I simply tend to label them as Tunisian or North African.
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