Assia Djebar
Onye ode akwụkwọ na onye ntụzi ihe nkiri Algeria (1936-2015) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fatima-Zohra Imalayen (Àtụ:Lang-arÀtụ:Lrm
ụdịekere | nwanyị |
---|---|
mba o sị | France, Algeria |
aha n'asụsụ obodo | Assia Djebar |
Aha ọmụmụ | Fatima-Zohra Imalhayène |
Aha enyere | Assia |
aha pseudonym | Assia Djebar |
Ụbọchị ọmụmụ ya | 30 Jụn 1936 |
Ebe ọmụmụ | Cherchell |
Ụbọchị ọnwụ ya | 6 Febụwarị 2015 |
Ebe ọ nwụrụ | 19th arrondissement of Paris |
Dị/nwunye | Malek Alloula |
Asụsụ obodo | French language |
asụsụ ọ na-asụ, na-ede ma ọ bụ were na-ebinye aka | French language |
Asụsụ ọ na-ede | French language |
onye were ọrụ | New York University, Algiers 1 University |
Ọkwá o ji | seat 5 of the Académie française |
ebe agụmakwụkwọ | École Normale Supérieure, Lycée Fénelon, Paris, École normale supérieure de jeunes filles |
onye otu ndọrọ ndọrọ ọchịchị | Workers' Party |
Ọrụ ama ama | La Femme sans sépulture, Nowhere in my Father's House, Q97104391, Fantasia: An Algerian Cavalcade, Q97104427 |
Onye òtù nke | Académie Française, Academie Royale de Langue et de littérature Françaises |
akwụkwọ faịlụ na | SAPA Foundation, Swiss Archive of the Performing Arts |
by her pen name Assia Djebar (Àtụ:Lang-ar), was an Algerian novelist, translator and filmmaker. Most of her works deal with obstacles faced by women, and she is noted for her feminist stance. She is "frequently associated with women's writing movements, her novels are clearly focused on the creation of a genealogy of Algerian women, and her political stance is virulently anti-patriarchal as much as it is anti-colonial."[1] Djebar is considered to be one of North Africa's pre-eminent and most influential writers. She was elected to the Académie française on 16 June 2005, the first writer from the Maghreb to achieve such recognition. For the entire body of her work she was awarded the 1996 Neustadt International Prize for Literature. She was often named as a contender for the Nobel Prize for Literature.