'Maasri's account of the changing landscape of visual culture in 1960s Beirut provides immense insight into a critical moment in the shifting local, regional, and global dynamics animating post-colonial Lebanon. She challenges exceptionalist and teleological narratives while offering a historically grounded and analytically rigorous account of that period and its legacies.' Ziad M. Abu-Rish, Ohio University
'This fascinating and absorbing book tells the story of how visual political materials was produced in 1960s Beirut, then an international node in Third Worldist and anti-imperialist movements. What makes Maasri's narrative stand out is its focus not only on the visual scaffolding of transnational solidarity but also on material published by the state, tourism organisations and CIA-funded cultural bodies. This compelling account illuminates the role of both publishing and visual materials in the working of political ideologies and movements.' Laleh Khalili, Queen Mary University of London
'In snappy prose, Zeina Maasri decenters both nationalist and Eurocentrist readings of book cultures beyond the West to reveal the vibrant panoply of mobile, political, aesthetic engagements in page lay-outs, cover designs, and color choices. Vividly describing a previously undocumented translocal visuality, Maasri extends the work of art historians who ask what pictures want, of anthropologists who probe materiality in the formation of affective horizons, and of social scientists who study globalization from below. Even people who do not yet know they are interested in the arts should read Maasri's lucid, nuanced study.' Kirsten Scheid, American University of Beirut
'Maasri's book unearths reams of archival and printed material, suggesting that these changes occurred at a moment of generative aesthetic and political tension in Beirut, when a Western modernism brushed up against a pan-Arab nationalism ... Running through Maasri's chapters is an attempt to decenter both 'the West' and 'the nation' in an evaluation of the period's visual culture - and in doing so, complicate the conventional understanding of this Arabic Modernism that saw Beirut as its capital.' Kaleem Hawa, Artforum
'... Cosmopolitan Radicalism is a captivating and beautiful read, richly illustrated through both black and white figures throughout the text and colour plates at the centre of the book ... It offers a good starting point to dive deeper into these trajectories and look at each of the actors involved - be it people, objects or institutions - in further detail.' Nadia von Maltzahn, H-Soz-Kult von