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Nawal El Saadawi (Arabic: نوال السعداوي, ALA-LC: Nawāl as-Saaʻdāwī, 22 October 1931 – 21 March 2021) was an Egyptian feminist writer, activist and physician. She wrote numerous books on the subject of women in Islam , focusing on the practice of female genital mutilation in her society. [ 1 ]
Woman at Point Zero (Arabic: امرأة عند نقطة الصفر, Emra'a enda noktat el sifr) is a novel by Nawal El Saadawi written in 1975 and published in Arabic in 1977. The novel is based on Saadawi's meeting with a female prisoner in Qanatir Prison and is the first-person account of Firdaus, a murderess who has agreed to tell her life ...
The following day, she posted a photo on Instagram with a caption quoting Egyptian feminist writer Nawal El Saadawi's 1975 novel, Woman at Point Zero as follows: "They said, 'You are a savage and dangerous woman.' I am speaking the truth. And the truth is savage and dangerous". [18]
The following list are the nominees with verified nominations from the Nobel Committee and recognized international organizations. There are also other purported nominees whose nominations are yet to be verified since the archives are revealed 50 years after, [6] among them Nawal El Saadawi [7] [8] [نوال السعداوي] (for Literature), Sonallah Ibrahim [9] [ صنع الله ...
Nawâl El Saadâwi (1931–2021), feminist writer and activist [Killam & Rowe] Mekkawi Said (1956–2017), novelist and short story writer; Salama Ahmed Salama (1932–2012), journalist and author; Ibtihal Salem (1949–2015), short story writer, novelist and translator; Muhammad Jamal Saqr (1966– ), poet; Khairy Shalaby (1938–2011 ...
Another author who works in the speculative genre, is Ahmed Khaled Towfik. He is one of the first Arab writers to write science-fiction. [5] He inspired other authors such as Ahmed Mourad. [5] Nawal El Saadawi was a feminist writer who wrote from the unique perspective of experience womanhood in a politically oppressive state. [6]
Osman Nusairi is a playwright and award-winning translator of Sudanese origin. [1] He has translated two Arabic novels into English - Nawal el-Saadawi's Two Women in One (1985; co-translator with Jana Gough) and Reem Bassiouney's The Pistachio Seller (2009). [2]
Hatata was married to the prominent Egyptian writer for the Women’s liberation Nawal El Saadawi; the couple met in 1964 and got married the same year. They lived in Cairo, but built a small house in Hatata's home village where they traveled to a number of times a year. The couple had one son, Atef Hatata, who is a film director in Egypt.