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Syed Manzoorul Islam

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Native name
  
সৈয়দ মনজুরুল ইসলাম

Home town
  
Nationality
  
Bangladeshi

Name
  
Syed Islam


Alma mater
  
Education
  
University of Dhaka

Occupation
  
Professor, Writer

Residence
  
Dhaka, Bangladesh

Syed Manzoorul Islam archivethedailystarnetphoto20110618201106

Born
  
January 18, 1951 (age 73) Sylhet, Bangladesh (
1951-01-18
)

Notable work
  
প্রেম ও প্রার্থনার গল্প, আধখানা মানুষ, তিন পর্বের জীবন

Dr syed manzoorul islam


Syed Manzoorul Islam (born January 18, 1951) is a Bangladeshi academic, writer, novelist, translator, columnist, and critic. He is a professor of English at the University of Dhaka. He has published several collections of short stories and several novels from Dhaka and Kolkata. His works of fiction have been highly praised for their surrealistic, magic realistic and post-modernistic nature.

Contents

As a literary critic, Islam has written substantive criticism on writers including Michael Madhusudan Dutt, Kazi Nazrul Islam, Sudhindranath Dutta, Samar Sen, and Shamsur Rahman. He received a Bangla Academy Award in 1996, and his 2005 short stories collection Prem o Prarthanar Galpo was Prothom Alo's book of the year.

Syed manzoorul islam at bengal architecture symposium now next


Biography

Syed Manzoorul Islam was born in the city of Sylhet to Syed Amirul Islam and Rabeya Khatun.

Education

Syed Manzoorul Islam passed the entrance examination from Sylhet Government Pilot High School in 1966 and Intermediate examination from Sylhet MC College in 1968. He received his graduate and post-graduate degree from University of Dhaka respectively in 1971 and 1972. Later he went to Canada and there he garnered a PhD from Queen’s University, Kingston in 1981. In 1989, he went to the University of Southern Mississippi at Hattiesburg, USA as a Fulbright Scholar and taught a semester there.

Islam used to write from his childhood. While reading in class six, he published his writing in a magazine, Shikkhok Samachar. During his university days as a student, his friend's father fell sick and died in pain. This emotionally affected Islam and led him to write his first story, "Bishal Mrittu" in 1973. It received a positive response; but he abstained from publishing anything during his days in Canada. On his return to Bangladesh, he returned to writing and began contributing a regular column "Olosh Diner Hawa" in the literary section of the Dainik Sangbad. He wrote on issues including art and literature. In 1989, Islam started writing for the magazine Bichinta, which published many of his post-modern stories.

Writing style

Islam describes himself as "a critic by training and a writer by compulsion". Though he writes in many genres, he himself values his fictional work more than his other writings. In his stories, he usually incorporates his own experiences. He tries to live the life of his characters, seeing the world through their eyes and describing their pain and happiness. Of the surrealistic nature in his writing, he said that in his childhood he used to listen to fairy-tales in which surrealistic elements were an integral part and that gave his writing a similar texture. He believes that "the surreal is the flip side of reality - it is what gives meaning to our everydayness".

References

Syed Manzoorul Islam Wikipedia