Bashar Abdulah

Bashar Abdulah
Born Bashar Abdulah
17 September 1961 (1961-09-17) (age 50)
Mosul,
Republic of Iraq
Occupation Poet, Novelist, Pressman, Translator
Nationality Iraqi
Alma mater Mosul University
Period 1980-
Literary movement Post-Modernism
Notable award(s) Najii Nauman Prize in Literature

Bashar Abdulah الشاعر بشارعبدالله (born September 17, 1961) Mosul Iraq, a Najii Nauman Prize winning[1] Iraqi post-modernist poet, novelist and translator. His book, cowritten with critic Saad Mahmood, a two part book entitled Alqabul Jumjuma (Nick Names of the Same Skull), has influenced modern literary writing and reading techniques in Iraq.

Contents

Qusasa and Maqsusa

In Alqabul, Jumjuma Bashar Abdulah and Saad Mahmood launched Watheqatul-Qusasa, published first in Al-Hadbaa Newspaper on July 13, 1993, which they titled qusasa [scrap of paper) as a symbol of the neglected writers in Iraq. Soon thereafter, they wrote Wathequatul-Maqsusa, referring to the narrative depending on simple, compound or complex poetic elements.

Books

Translations

Arabic IChing Website

Jobs

After his release from military service in 1991, he worked as a translator of English literature, and as a private teacher until 2003 April, when the U.S. forcibly occupied Iraq.

During 2003-2006, he worked as Director of Azzaman International Newspaper, and Alsharqiya Satellite TV in Nineveh- Iraq

References