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Agha Shahid Ali

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Ethnicity
  
Kashmiri

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Agha Ali

Religion
  
Islam

Occupation
  
Professor and Poet



Born
  
4 February 1949
New Delhi, India

Alma mater
  
University of Kashmir Hindu College, University of Delhi Pennsylvania State University (Phd) and University of Arizona (MFA)

Known for
  
National Book Award 2001 ,Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Notable credit(s)
  
The Country Without a Post Office, Rooms Are Never Finished and The Rebel's Silhouette

Died
  
December 8, 2001, Amherst, Massachusetts, United States

Education
  
University of Arizona (1985), Pennsylvania State University (1984), University of Kashmir

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Nominations
  
National Book Award for Poetry

Books
  
The Country without a, Call me Ishmael tonight, Rooms are never finished, The Veiled Suite: The Collected, The half‑inch Himalayas

Artist talk the poetry of agha shahid ali featuring izhar patkin and friends


Agha Shahid Ali (4 February 1949 – 8 December 2001) was an Indian-American poet of Kashmiri origin. His collections include A Walk Through the Yellow Pages, The Half-Inch Himalayas, A Nostalgist's Map of America, The Country Without a Post Office, Rooms Are Never Finished, the latter a finalist for the National Book Award in 2001.

Contents

Agha Shahid Ali httpswwwpoetsorgsitesdefaultfilesstyles2

The University of Utah Press awards the Agha Shahid Ali Poetry Prize annually "in memory of a celebrated poet and beloved teacher".

Agha Shahid Ali Agha Shahid Ali The Poetry Foundation

Izhar patkin agha shahid ali on all things considered


Early life and education

Agha Shahid Ali was born in Srinagar, India. He was raised in Kashmir but left for the United States in 1976. Shahid's father Agha Ashraf Ali is a renowned educationist of Jammu and Kashmir. Shahid's grandmother Begum Zafar Ali an educationist, was the first woman matriculate of Kashmir. Shahid was educated at the Burn Hall School, later University of Kashmir and the Hindu College, University of Delhi. He earned a Ph.D. in English from Pennsylvania State University in 1984, and an M.F.A. from the University of Arizona in 1985. He held teaching positions at nine universities and colleges in India and the United States.

Works

Ali expressed his love and concern for his people in In Memory of Begum Akhtar and The Country Without a Post Office, which was written with the Kashmir conflict as backdrop. He was a translator of the Urdu poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz (The Rebel's Silhouette; Selected Poems), and the editor for the Middle East and Central Asia segment of Jeffery Paine's Poetry of Our World.

He compiled the volume Ravishing DisUnities: Real Ghazals in English. His last book was Call Me Ishmael Tonight, a collection of English ghazals, and his poems are featured in American Alphabets: 25 Contemporary Poets (2006) and other anthologies. Ghat of the only world written by Amitav Ghosh is a tribute of friend to Agha Shahid Ali. Ali was the close friend of Amitav Ghosh.

Ali taught at the MFA Program for Poets & Writers at University of Massachusetts Amherst, at the MFA Writing Seminars at Bennington College as well as at creative writing programs at University of Utah, Baruch College, Warren Wilson College, Hamilton College and New York University. He died of brain cancer in December 2001 and was buried in Northampton, Massachusetts.

Influences

Ali was deeply moved by the music of Begum Akhtar. Several niches in his apartment had photos of the people who had deeply influenced his work - Akhtar's photo occupied one of these spaces. The two had met through a friend of Akhtar's when Ali was a teenager and her music became a lasting presence in his life. Features of her ghazal rendition - the presence of wit, wordplay and nakhra(affectation) were found in Ali's poetry as well. However, Amitav Ghosh suspects that the strongest connection between the two rose from the idea that "sorrow has no finer mask than a studied lightness of manner" - traces of which were seen in Ali's and Akhtar's demeanor in their respective lives.

References

Agha Shahid Ali Wikipedia