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Littérature / édition
Abdulrazak Gurnah
Ecrivain/ne, Dramaturge, Conférencier/e
Tanzanie, Royaume-Uni
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Écrivain et dramaturge tanzanien.
Abdulrazak GURNAH est un écrivain et dramaturge.
Né en 1948 sur l’île de Zanzibar (côte orientale de l’Afrique), Abdulrazak Gurnah est l’auteur de six romans, dont « Paradis » (Le Serpent à plume, 1999) et « Près de la mer », qui ont tous deux fait l’objet d’une sélection au Book Prize et au Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Son dernier livre, « Desertion » (Londres, Bloomsbury, 2005), a été sélectionné pour la Commonwealth Writers Prize de 2006 et sera également publié par Galaade. Abdulrazak Gurnah vit aujourd’hui à Brighton (Royaume-Uni) et enseigne la littérature à l’université de Kent.
Lauréat 2007 du Prix RFI Témoin du Monde pour « Près de la mer », il reçoit le Prix Nobel de Littérature en 2021.
Abdulrazak GURNAH est un écrivain et dramaturge.
Né en 1948 sur l’île de Zanzibar (côte orientale de l’Afrique), Abdulrazak Gurnah est l’auteur de six romans, dont « Paradis » (Le Serpent à plume, 1999) et « Près de la mer », qui ont tous deux fait l’objet d’une sélection au Book Prize et au Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Son dernier livre, « Desertion » (Londres, Bloomsbury, 2005), a été sélectionné pour la Commonwealth Writers Prize de 2006 et sera également publié par Galaade. Abdulrazak Gurnah vit aujourd’hui à Brighton (Royaume-Uni) et enseigne la littérature à l’université de Kent.
Lauréat 2007 du Prix RFI Témoin du Monde pour « Près de la mer », il reçoit le Prix Nobel de Littérature en 2021.
English
Tanzanian writer and stage writer.
Abdulrazak GURNAH is a writer (novelist) and stage writer (for theater).
Novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah was born in 1948 on the island of Zanzibar off the coast of East Africa.
He came to Britain as a student in 1968 and now teaches literature at the University of Kent. He is associate editor of the journal Wasafiri.
His first three novels, Memory of Departure (1987), Pilgrims Way (1988) and Dottie (1990), document the immigrant experience in contemporary Britain from different perspectives. His fourth novel, Paradise (1994), is set in colonial East Africa during the First World War and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Admiring Silence (1996) tells the story of a young man who leaves Zanzibar and emigrates to England where he marries and becomes a teacher. A return visit to his native country 20 years later profoundly affects his attitude towards both himself and his marriage. By the Sea (2001), is narrated by Saleh Omar, an elderly asylum-seeker living in an English seaside town.
The most famous of these are Paradise, Desertion and By the Sea, the first of which was shortlisted for both the Booker and the Whitbread Prize. By the Sea, meanwhile, was long listed for the Booker and shortlisted for the Los Angeles Times Book Award.
Abdulrazak Gurnah lives in Brighton, East Sussex. His latest novels are Desertion (2005), shortlisted for a 2006 Commonwealth Writers Prize, and The Last Gift (2011).
In 2007 he edited The Cambridge Companion to Salman Rushdie..
Winner of the 2007 RFI Witness of the World Prize for « By the Sea », he received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2021.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Novels:
– Memory of Departure (1987)
– Pilgrims Way (1988)
– Dottie (1990)
– Paradise (1994)
– Admiring Silence (1996)
– By the Sea (2001)
– Desertion (2005)
– The Last Gift (2011)
Short stories:
– My Mother Lived on a Farm in Africa (2006)
Abdulrazak GURNAH is a writer (novelist) and stage writer (for theater).
Novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah was born in 1948 on the island of Zanzibar off the coast of East Africa.
He came to Britain as a student in 1968 and now teaches literature at the University of Kent. He is associate editor of the journal Wasafiri.
His first three novels, Memory of Departure (1987), Pilgrims Way (1988) and Dottie (1990), document the immigrant experience in contemporary Britain from different perspectives. His fourth novel, Paradise (1994), is set in colonial East Africa during the First World War and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Admiring Silence (1996) tells the story of a young man who leaves Zanzibar and emigrates to England where he marries and becomes a teacher. A return visit to his native country 20 years later profoundly affects his attitude towards both himself and his marriage. By the Sea (2001), is narrated by Saleh Omar, an elderly asylum-seeker living in an English seaside town.
The most famous of these are Paradise, Desertion and By the Sea, the first of which was shortlisted for both the Booker and the Whitbread Prize. By the Sea, meanwhile, was long listed for the Booker and shortlisted for the Los Angeles Times Book Award.
Abdulrazak Gurnah lives in Brighton, East Sussex. His latest novels are Desertion (2005), shortlisted for a 2006 Commonwealth Writers Prize, and The Last Gift (2011).
In 2007 he edited The Cambridge Companion to Salman Rushdie..
Winner of the 2007 RFI Witness of the World Prize for « By the Sea », he received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2021.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Novels:
– Memory of Departure (1987)
– Pilgrims Way (1988)
– Dottie (1990)
– Paradise (1994)
– Admiring Silence (1996)
– By the Sea (2001)
– Desertion (2005)
– The Last Gift (2011)
Short stories:
– My Mother Lived on a Farm in Africa (2006)
Livres(s)
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Admiring silenceRomanA man escapes from his native Zanzibar to England. His furtive departure makes it unlikely that he will ever return, but he and his family agree a bright future lies ahead. He meets an English woman and they bu…Abdulrazak Gurnah est lié(e) à ce livre en tant que ecrivain/ne
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The last giftRomanAbbas is a 63 year old man living in the English town of Norwich, after emigrating to the UK from Zanzibar decades before. He is faithful to his wife Maryam, a mixed descent British woman orphaned as an infant,…Abdulrazak Gurnah est lié(e) à ce livre en tant que ecrivain/ne
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ParadisRomanBorn in East Africa, Yusuf has few qualms about the journey he is to make. It never occurs to him to ask why he is accompanying Uncle Aziz or why the trip has been organised so suddenly, and he does not think t…Abdulrazak Gurnah est lié(e) à ce livre en tant que ecrivain/ne
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Littératures d’Afrique australe 2. DE L’ANGOLA A ZANZIBARRevueAbdulrazak Gurnah est lié(e) à ce livre en tant que ecrivain/ne
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Adieu ZanzibarRomanKenya, 1899. Il est apparu à l’aube comme une figure de légende avant de s’effondrer aux pieds d’Hassanali. Martin Pearce, écrivain britannique, a été battu, volé et abandonné par ses guides dans le désert. Rec…Abdulrazak Gurnah est lié(e) à ce livre en tant que ecrivain/ne
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Près de la merRomanAngleterre, 1994. Saleh Omar, 65 ans, est demandeur d’asile. Il a fui Zanzibar et les violences qui ont suivi l’indépendance, un coffret d’encens rare pour tout bien précieux, et se présente à la douane de l’aé…Abdulrazak Gurnah est lié(e) à ce livre en tant que ecrivain/ne
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