Omar Ben Salem

Amor Ben Salem
عمر بن سالم
Born Amor Ben Salem
(1932-08-06) 6 August 1932
Métouia, Tunisia
Occupation Writer
Language Arabic
Nationality Tunisian
Notable works An Oasis Without Shadow, waha bila thil (Arabic: واحّة بلا ظلّ,AbouJahl Addahhas (Arabic: أبو جهل الدّهّاس

Amor Ben Salem (Tunisian Arabic: عمر بن سالم) is a Tunisian Arabic writer.

Biography

Amor Ben Salem was born in the village of Métouia in the south eastern province of Gabes in Tunisia where he attended his primary education and secondary education in Gabes. He obtained a diploma in philosophy from Tunis in 1957 after which he flew to Cairo to attend journalism courses in the University of Cairo from 1958 to 1959. He then flew to Beirut to commence his higher education at the High Teachers Institution (Lebanese University), obtaining his bachelor's and master's degrees in the Arabic language and literature in 1960. Upon his return to Tunisia, he had taught in several high schools until 1965, the same year in which he travelled to France to join the University of Paris III: Sorbonne Nouvelle to commence his doctorate degree in Arabic grammar, which he completed in 1968 and returned to Tunisia. He pursued his passion in teaching by joining the High Teachers Institute in Tunis, then lastly the Social and Economic Research and Studies Centre (CERES) as a full-time professor since 1972. He opened and supervised a department dedicated to literature research which remains active after his retirement in October 1993. In his youth, and to date, Amor Ben Salem was a passionate writer and poet, composing prose in both literary and dialect Arabic. He published numerous short stories, novels, plays, children's stories and critical studies. He also published a biographical dictionary of Tunisian writers and anthologies of Tunisian literature.[1]

Bibliography

Translations

Works

References

  1. Rafik Darragi, « The Tunisian Stage: Shakespeare's Part in Question », Critical Survey, vol. 19, n°3, 2007, pp. 95–106
  2. Jean Fontaine, « Arabic-Language Tunisian Literature (1956–1990) », Research in African Literatures, vol. 23, n°2, 1992, pp. 183–193 (read online)
  3. MAGNIER Bernard. "Le Patriarche dans son miroir". Jeune Afrique, 2–8 Décembre 1993, n°1717, p. 37
  4. (French) Badreddine Ben Henda, « Saveurs de fables et résonances de satire sociale », Le Temps, 8 août 2010
  5. (French) prize list of Comar d'or 2010
  6. (French) Samia Harrar, « La revanche de l'écrit », Le Temps, 1 mai 2010
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