IPAF winner Bahaa Taher leads literary masterclass
·
Bahaa
Taher is joined as mentor by shortlisted author Ibrahim Nasrallah and former
judge Zhor Gourram
·
Nine
emerging writers to take part in writers’ workshop
·
Former
nadwa participants include 2014 IPAF winner, Ahmed Saadawi
Nine authors have begun an eight day workshop led by
three of the Arab world’s leading writers, Bahaa
Taher, Zhor Gourram and Ibrahim Nasrallah. This
marks the sixth year of the prestigious IPAF nadwa, which brings
together emerging writers from across North Africa and the Middle East and
gives them the opportunity to hone their skills under the tutelage of IPAF
winning and shortlisted authors.
The workshop, which takes place in the secluded Qasr
Al Sarab Desert Resort, is sponsored by His Highness Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed
Al-Nahyan, the Ruler's Representative in the Western Region.
The nine participants have been identified by former
judges of the International Prize for Arabic Fiction as ‘ones to watch’.
Aged 40 and under, they come from six different countries – the UAE, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria and Oman – and
a variety of writing backgrounds and professions.
The aim of the nadwa is to give the authors a
retreat where they are able to work on a new piece of fiction, or to develop an
existing, unpublished work. They will be mentored by three writers from the
IPAF fold: inaugural winner Bahaa Taher (2008), judge Zhor Gourram (2014) and
shortlisted author Ibrahim Nasrallah (shortlist, 2009; longlist, 2013 and
2014). They will also take part in daily discussions with their peers,
critiquing each other’s work as well as discussing literature in more general
terms.
The result of the nadwa will be nine new works
of fiction which will be, in time, edited and published through the IPAF
website: www.arabicfiction.org.
Two previous nadwa participants – Mansoura Ez Eldin and Mohammed Hasan
Alwan – have gone on to be shortlisted for the prestigious prize; the latter
for his 2012 novel, The Beaver, which began life in the IPAF nadwa
in 2009. Ahmed Saadawi, who participated in the 2012 nadwa, won the
prize in 2014 with Frankenstein in Baghdad.
The International Prize for Arabic Fiction is the leading international prize for Arabic literature.
Sponsored by Abu Dhabi Tourism & Culture Authority (TCA Abu Dhabi) and run
in association with the Booker Prize Foundation in the UK, the Prize aims to
celebrate the very best of contemporary Arabic fiction and encourage wider
international readership of Arabic literature through translation.
Further information on the Prize can be found at: www.arabicfiction.org.
No comments:
Post a Comment