Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Salim Barakat

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Occupation
  
Genre
  
Magical realism

Language
  
Arabic


Nationality
  
Syrian

Name
  
Salim Barakat

Ethnicity
  
Kurdish

Role
  
Novelist

Salim Barakat wwwandotherstoriesorgaoswpcontentuploads201


Similar People
  
Mahmoud Darwish, Adunis, Zakaria Tamer

Notable works
  
Al-Jundub al-Hadidi

Salim barakat harsan video


Salim Barakat (Arabic: سليم بركات‎‎, Kurdish: Selîm Berekat‎) (b. Qamishli, 1951) is a Kurdish-Syrian novelist and poet. He was brought up in Qamishli in northern Syria and spent most of his youth there. In 1970 he moved to Damascus to study Arabic literature but after one year he moved to Beirut where he stayed until 1982. While in Beirut he published five volumes of poetry, a diary and two volumes of autobiography. He moved to Cyprus and worked as a managing editor of the prestigious Palestinian journal Al-Karmel, whose editor was Mahmoud Darwish. In 1999 he moved to Sweden, where he still resides.

Contents

His works explore his own Kurdish culture and chronicle their plight and history, as well as Arab, Assyrian, Armenian, Circassian and Yazidi culture. His earliest major prose work, Al-Jundub al-Hadidi ("The Iron Grasshopper"), is an autobiographical narration of his childhood in Qamishli. The book explores the violent and raw conditions of his early adolescent life, suffused with nostalgic feelings for the Kurdish land and culture. The first part of the book's lengthy subtitle translates to, "The unfinished memoir of a child who never saw anything but a fugitive land."

Barakat is considered one of the most innovative poets and novelists writing in the Arabic language. Stefan G. Meyer has described his style as "the closest by any Arab writer's to that of Latin American magical realism" and has called Barakat "perhaps the master prose stylist writing in Arabic today". Due to his complex style and application of techniques taken from classical Arabic literature, his influence has been almost one of a "neoclassicist."

Salim barakat reads


References

Salim Barakat Wikipedia