Muhammad Aladdin

Muhammad Aladdin
Born October 7, 1979
Bab El Louk, Cairo, Egypt
Occupation novelist, freelance script writer
Nationality Egypt Egyptian
Literary movement Postmodern

Muhammad Aladdin, also known as Alaa Eddin (Arabic:محمـد علاء الديـن) is an Egyptian novelist, short story writer, and script writer. His first collection of short stories was published in 2003, and he is the author of five novels—The Gospel According to Adam, The Twenty-Second Day, The Idol (novel), The Foot (novel), and A Well-Trained Stray—and three short story collections—The Other Shore (Short-stories collection), The Secret Life of Citizen M, and Young Lover, New Lover,

As one of his generation’s noted young writers in both Egypt and the Arab countries,[1][2] Aladdin has gained acclamation for his first novel published ‘’The Gospel According to Adam’’ (Arabic:’’’إنجيل آدم’’’) in January 2006. The work has been hailed by writers like Bahaa Taher and Sonallah Ibrahim to be among the best of a promising new crop.[3][4] That novel breaks the conventional format of the novel, consisting as it does of a single 60-page-long paragraph that is written in a stream of consciousness style. A reviewer for Al-Ahram’s literary page on May 10, 2006 stated that ‘’The Gospel According to Adam’' reflects “a social reality that has lost all certainties".[5] In his book, "The Arab Novel and the Quest for Renovation" published by Dubi Althaqafia Magazine in May 2011, the famous Moroccan writer and critic Mohammed Berrada sites it as one of 5 novels has renovated the Arab novel.[6] The Egyptian writer Ibrahim Farghali wrote about it in the famous Lebanese newspaper An-Nahar that The Gospel According to Adam is "An experimental and substantial jump in narration style in the modern Egyptian novels".

He was chosen as one of the most important Egyptian writers in the new millennium by the Egyptian magazine Akhbar Al-Adab in 2011,[7] and one of the ‘’Six Egyptian writers you don’t know but you should’’ as the writer Pauls Toutonghi said in The millions.com.

In May 2013, Aladdin give a keynote speech in the name of the young Egyptian writers, in the First Convection for Egyptian Writers against the Muslim Brotherhood regime ruling Egypt back then, asserting on dissembling Egypt’s ministry of culture in order to establish a new republic. However, Aladdin spoke openly against the new regime in Egypt after 2013 Egyptian coup d'état and refused to participate in the Second conviction saying to ArabLit blog, in October 23, 2013 that ‘’They would use us as make-up for the same ugly face’’

Aladdin wrote for the MTV’s Rebel Music on Ramy Essam as ‘’The Revolution Singer’’ in November 2013.

Writings

Along with the American translation of the main title story, a Russian translation for one of the stories within it, The Voice (short story), was published by the Russian newspaper Moskovskij Komsomolets in their Egypt edition, translated by Sarali Gintsburg. In March 2014, the same story was translated to Italian by Barbra Benini and published in Editoriaraba, a notable Italian blog dedicated to Arabic Literature,[9] in 24 hours it was reblogged on the blog MedShake on the ISPI website, an Italian prestigious research institute on international politics.[10]

Other works

External links

References