Abdul Rahman Munif

Abdul Rahman Munif (May 29, 1933 – January 24, 2004) (Arabic: عبد الرحمن منيف‎) is one of the most important Arabic novelists of the 20th century.[1]He is most noted for closely reflecting the political surroundings of his day.

Contents

Life

Munif was born a Saudi national and brought up in Amman, Jordan to a Saudi father and Iraqi mother.[2] In 1952 he moved to Baghdad to study law and later moved to Cairo. He received a law degree from the Sorbonne and a PhD in oil economics from the University of Belgrade's Faculty of Economics.[3] He later returned to Iraq to work in the oil ministry and became a member of the Ba'ath Party. He began writing only in the 1970s after he left his job with the ministry, quit the Ba'ath party, and moved to Damascus removing himself from a regime he opposed. He quickly became known for his scathing parodies of Middle Eastern elites, especially those of Saudi Arabia, a country which banned many of his books and stripped him of Saudi citizenship.[4] He used his knowledge of the oil industry to full effect criticizing the businessmen who ran it and the politicians they served.

The author of fifteen novels, his masterwork is the Cities of Salt quintet that followed the evolution of the Arabian peninsula as its traditional bedouin culture is transformed by the oil boom. The novels create an entire history of a broad region, evoking comparison's to William Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha County. The quintet begins with Al-tih (1984, Cities of Salt) in the desert oasis of Wadi al-Uyoun that is disrupted by the arrival of western oilmen in an image similar to that of the disrupted village of Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart. As Achebe described the effects on a traditional African village of the arrival of powerful missionairies, so Munif chronicles the economic, social, and psychological effects of the promise of immeasurable wealth drawn from the deserts of nomad and oasis communities. The quintet continues with Al-ukhdud (1985;The Trench), Taqasim al-layl wa-al-nahar (1989; Variations on Night and Day), Al-munbatt (1989; The Uprooted), and Badiyat al zulumat (1989; The Desert of Darkness). Daniel Burt, in his The Novel 100, ranked the quintet as the 71st greatest novel of all time.[5] The last novel in the series has not been translated into English.

While his works were never particularly successful in the west, throughout the Middle East they are both critically acclaimed and extremely popular. Cities of Salt has been described by Edward Said as the "only serious work of fiction that tries to show the effect of oil, Americans and the local oligarchy on a Gulf country."[6]

While he was one of the fiercest critics of Saddam Hussein and his regime, he was utterly opposed to the American invasion of Iraq and spent the last two years of his life working on non-fiction projects to oppose what he saw as renewed imperialism.

Bibliography – Works in English

Bibliography – Works in Arabic

Fiction

Non-Fiction

Obituary

References

  1. ^ Sakkut, Hamdi; Monroe, Roger. The Arabic novel. American Univ in Cairo Press. p. 93. ISBN 9789774245022. http://books.google.com/books?id=pewdETYrR6IC&pg=PA93. Retrieved February 24, 2011. 
  2. ^ Jiad, Abdul-Hadi (February 5, 2004). "Abdul-Rahman Mounif". The Guardian (London). http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2004/feb/05/guardianobituaries.booksobituaries. Retrieved April 23, 2010. 
  3. ^ http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/munif.htm
  4. ^ Munif biography in Peter Theroux's translation – Abdelrahman Munif (1987). Cities of Salt. New York: Vinatage International. pp. 629. ISBN 0-394-75526-X. 
  5. ^ Burt, Daniel S.; (2004). The Novel 100: A Ranking of the Greatest Novels of All Time. New York: Checkmark Books. ISBN 0-8160-4558-5. 
  6. ^ http://www.al-bab.com/arab/literature/munif.htm

Other Info

External links