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Lamia Makaddam

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Lamia Makaddam
لمياء المقدم
Born
OccupationAuthor

Lamia Makaddam (Arabic: لمياء المقدم) (born 1971 in Sousse) is a Tunisian poet, journalist and translator.

Biography

Lamia Makaddam was born in 1971 in Sousse, Tunisia.[1] She began writing poetry at an early age and, despite having no female mentors in poetry, was encouraged by her family and teachers in her writing. She published her first poem in the leftist newspaper Badil.[2]

She has written two books of poetry, and her work has been translated into English, French, Dutch, and Kurdish. She was awarded the al-Hijara Literary Prize in the Netherlands in 2000.[1]

She has an MA in Arabic language and literature and, in addition to writing, works as a translator. She has lived in the Netherlands for 20 years[2] and currently lives in Amsterdam.[1]

Prizes

  • al-Hijara Literary Prize, the Netherlands, 2000[3]

Selected Works

Books of Poetry

  • Intahā hāḏahi al-qaṣīda .. intahā hāḏā al-ḥubb (This poem is done, this love is done), 2015[3]
  • Biṭaʻm al-fākiha al-šatwiyya (With the taste of winter fruit), 2007[3]

Translations

  • Anta qulta (You said it), translation of the Dutch novel Jij zegt het, by Connie Palmen[4]

Poems Translated into English

  • Two poems ("Poetry was created to solve family problems", "Love makes woman a man and man a woman"), World Literature Today, 2018[5]
  • Four poems ("The bread seller", "If I ever wrote poetry", "A short skirt", "Something must break in the end"), Banipal, 2017[6]
  • Three poems, Banipal[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Banipal (UK) Magazine of Modern Arab Literature - Contributors - Lamia Makaddam". www.banipal.co.uk. Retrieved 2018-04-27.
  2. ^ a b "بالصور.. التونسية لمياء المقدم لـ بوابة الأهرام : لا أساتذة لي في الشعر.. والمشهد مرتبك كسائر الأجناس الأدبية" [In pictures: Tunisian Lamia Makaddam to "Buwabat al-Ahram": I had no female mentors in poetry, a genre that is troubled like any other]. بوابة الأهرام (Buwaba al-Ahram) (in Arabic). 2015-11-20. Retrieved 2018-04-28. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  3. ^ a b c خضر, أحمد نبيل (2015-03-27). ""انتهت هذه القصيدة".. ديوان جديد الشاعرة التونسية لمياء المقدم" ["This poem is done" .. New collection from the Tunisian poet Lamia Makaddam]. البديل (el-Badil). Retrieved 2018-04-28.
  4. ^ "انت قلت" [You said it]. www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2018-04-28. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  5. ^ Makaddam, Lamia (May–June 2018). "Two poems". World Literature Today. 92 (3). Translated by M. Faiza and K. McNeil: 28–29. ISSN 0196-3570.
  6. ^ Makaddam, Lamia (Autumn–Winter 2017). "Four poems". Banipal. 60. Translated by K. McNeil and M. Faiza: 48–52. ISSN 1461-5363.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  7. ^ Makaddam, Lamia (Autumn–Winter 2008). "Three Poems". Banipal. 27. ISSN 1461-5363.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)