Ali Bader

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Ali Bader (Arabic: علي بدر, Alī Bader, born 1979 in Baghdad living in Bruxelles) is an award winning Arabic novelist and a Filmmaker, author of thirteen works of fiction, and several works of non-fiction, he has also worked as war correspondent covering the Middle East. He rose to prominence in the Arab world in the last decade.[1] In addition to his work as an author, he is also an Arabic media journalist. His novels are considered unique in Arabic fiction. [2][3]

Biography

Bader was born 1979 in Baghdad, where he studied western Philosophy and French Literature. In 2001, he published his seminal novel, Papa Sartre[2] (Arabic: بابا سارتر). The focus of the novel is the 1960s generation, whom he sought to critique for the negative impact of their cultural influence still felt by the current generation today. In particular, the novel highlights the trials and tribulations of the pseudo-intellectuals of sixties Baghdad in parody form.[4] It also includes memorable portrayals of Iraq’s wealthy and influential families in their decline. For this work, he was awarded the State Prize for Literature in Baghdad in 2002[5] and the Tunisian Abu Al-Qassem Al-Shabi Award. Following its critical acclaim in the Arab world, it was translated into English[6]

In 2002, his novel The Family's Winter (Arabic: شتاء العائلة) appeared, revisiting with the decay of the decline of Iraq's elite, but this time focusing on the aristocracy in the 1950s. That same year, he received Prize of Literary Creativity in the United Arab Emirates[7]].

Following his work on The Family's Winter, Bader completed his 2003 novel entitled The Road to Mutran Hill. In it, he dealt with Iraqi social problems and the increasing division among its numerous segments, prophesying the disintegration of Iraq's already tattered socioeconomic fabric.

In 2004, he followed up with another novel, The Naked Feast (Arabic: الوليمة العارية), exploring the emergence of the Iraqi intelligentsia at the beginning of the 20th century.[8] Bader's novel Tumult, Women and a Sunken Writer (2005) is his most popular piece that depicts the marginalized generation of Iraqi poets and novelists in the 1990s under Saddam Hussein's dictatorship and the international sanctions. One of the essays he published is called "Mid-night Maps", set during a journey to Iran, Turkey and Algeria, for which he was given the Ibn Battuta Prize for Contemporary Journeys. In 2006, Bader published his novel Jerusalem Lantern, a fictional portrayal of Edward Said.

In 2007 his novel Running after the Wolves, which highlights the Iraqi intellectuals who fled to Africa because of persecution under Saddam Hussein's dictatorship continued to increase his stature in Arab literary circles. In 2008, his novel the Tobacco keeper, highlighted the cultural life after the tumultuous events of 2003. At the center of the novel is the life of an Iraqi Jewish musician killed in Baghdad in 2006, and his struggle as an artist to integrate into Iraqi society. Critics welcomed the novel, resulting in its nomination for the Booker Arab Prize.[9] In 2009, he published his novel titled Kings of the Sand about the conflict between Iraqi army and the inhabitants of desert, which was a bestseller in Arab book fairs.[citation needed] In 2010 he published Crime, Art, and Dictionary of Baghdad, a novel about the secremantal and philosophical schools in Abbasid era. Ali Bader has also written some non-fiction books, including Massignion in Baghdad (2005), Sleeping Prince and Waiting Campaign (2006), and Shahadat: Witnessing Iraq's Transformation after 2003 (2007)[10] Adding to his awards for fiction writing, MNSG: Navigation between Home and Exile (2008) won Bader the Every Human Has Rights Media Award of 2008[11]

In addition to fiction and non-fiction, he is a columnist in the Arabic newspapers, among them Al-Hayat, Al-Mada, Al-Dustour, Al-Riyadh. His journalism career has included rotations as a war correspondent.

Bibliography

Novels

  • Papa Sartre (2001) Translated into English ISBN 978-977-416-298-5
  • Family's Winter (2002)
  • The Naked Feast (2003)
  • The Road to Moutran Hill (2004)
  • Tumult, Women, and Sunken Writer (2005)
  • Jerusalem Lantern, novel about Edward Saed (2006)
  • Running After the Wolves (2007)
  • The Tobacco Keeper (2008) (Long list Arab Booker Prize) Translated into English, Bloomsbury, 2011
  • Kings of the Sands (2009)(Long list Arab Booker Prize)
  • Crime, Art, and Baghdad Dictionary (2010)
  • The professors of illusion (2011)
  • The infidel woman (2015)
  • The musician of the claude (2016)

Poetry

  • Book of the Trade: Baghdad in 1898, ethnographic poems (1996)
  • Crimes of velvet and cream (2002)
  • Book of assassins (2004)
  • Book of the desert (2005)
  • Book of erotic man (2009)
  • Book of the happy exiled (2012)

Essays

  • An invitation card to celebrities party (2010)
  • Mid-night Maps (2006)
  • Massignion in Baghdad (2005)
  • Sleeping prince and waiting campaign (2005)
  • Shahadat: witnessing Iraq's transformation after 2003

Theater

  • 2004 The world of non married women
  • 2009 The tavern of immigrants
  • 2013 Fatima whose name is Sophie.

Films

  • Under the Ashes with Ziad T. Jazzaa
  • The Story of Iraqi literature

Awards

  • State Prize of literature (Baghdad 2002)
  • Abu al-Qassim Al-Shabi Prize (Tunis 2003)
  • Prize of Literary Xreativity (U E A 2004)
  • Ibn Battuta Prize for Traveling Books (Abu Dhabi 2005)
  • Every Human Has Rights Media Award of 2008 Paris

References

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External links