Sneha Girap (Editor)

Salwa Bakr

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Name
  
Salwa Bakr

Role
  
Critic

Education
  
Ain Shams University


Salwa Bakr wwwwordswithoutbordersorgstaticimagesuploads

Books
  
The golden chariot, The Man from Bashmour, Such a beautiful voice, The Wiles of Men and Other Stories

Salwa bakr in discussion with her son


Salwa Bakr (born 1949) is an Egyptian critic, novelist and author. She was born in the Matariyya district in Cairo in 1949. Her father was a railway worker. She studied business at Ain Shams University, gaining a BA degree in 1972. She went on to earn another BA in literary criticism in 1976, before embarking on a career in journalism. She worked as a film and theatre critic for various Arabic newspapers and magazines. Bakr lived in Cyprus for a few years with her husband before returning to Egypt in the mid-1980s.

Contents

Bakr's father died early, leaving her mother a poor widow. Her work often deals with the lives of the impoverished and the marginalized. In 1985, she published her first collection of short stories, Zinat at the President's Funeral, which was an immediate success. She has published several collections of short stories since. Her debut novel was called Wasf al-Bulbul (1993).

Salwa Bakr is married with children and lives in Cairo.

Translations

Bakr's books have been translated into various European languages, including Spanish, French and Polish . Her work has appeared in Banipal magazine, Words Without Borders, and in a number of English-language anthologies.

Single-volume English translations of her work include:

  • The Man from Bashmour - translated by Nancy Roberts
  • The Golden Chariot - translated by Dinah Manisty
  • The Wiles of Men and Other Stories - translated by Denys Johnson-Davies
  • Such a Beautiful Voice - translated by Hoda El Sadda
  • Awards and reception

    The Man from Bashmour was named as one of the 100 best Arabic novels by the Arabic Writers' Union. In 1993, she won the German Deutsche Welle Prize for Literature.

    References

    Salwa Bakr Wikipedia