May Ziade

May Ziade
May Ziade
Born February 11, 1886
Nazareth, Palestine
Died October 17, 1941
Cairo, Egypt
Occupation Writer

May Ziade (née Marie, with Ziade also written Ziadé, Ziyada or Ziadeh) (Arabic: مي زيادة‎) (February 11, 1886.[1][2] – 1941), was a prolific Christian[3] Lebanese-Palestinian poet, essayist and translator.

A writer for the Arabic newspapers and periodicals, Ziade also wrote a number of poems and books. She was a key figure of the Nahda in the early 20th century Arab literary scene, and is known for being an "early Palestinian feminist" and a "pioneer of Oriental feminism"."[2][4][5]

Contents

Biography

Early life

Ziade was born in Nazareth in Palestine to a Lebanese Maronite father (from the Chahtoul family) and a Palestinian mother. Her father, Elias Ziade, was editor of al-Mahrūsah.

Ziade attended primary school in Nazareth. As her father came to the Kesrouan region of Lebanon, at 14 years of age she was sent to Aintoura to pursue her secondary studies at a French convent school for girls.[2] Her studies in Aintoura had exposed her to French literature, and Romantic literature, to which she took a particular liking.[6] She attended several Roman Catholic schools in Lebanon and in 1904, returned to Nazareth to be with her parents.[2] She is reported to have published her first articles at age 16.

Journalism & Classical studies

In 1908, she and her family emigrated to Egypt. Her father founded "Al Mahroussah" newspaper while the family was in Egypt, to which Ziade contributed a number of articles.[2]

Ziade was particularly interested in learning languages, studying privately at home coupled with a French-Catholic education, and studying at local university for a Modern Languages degree while in Egypt. As a result, Ziade was completely bilingual in Arabic and French, and had working knowledge of English, Italian, German, Spanish, Latin as well as Modern Greek.[7] She graduated in 1917.[1]

Key Arab literary figure

Ziade was well known in Arab literary circles, receiving many male and female writers and intellectuals at a literary salon she established in 1912. Among those that frequented the salon were Taha Hussein, Khalil Moutrane, Ahmed Lutfi el-Sayed, Antoun Gemayel, Walieddine Yakan, Abbas el-Akkad and Yacoub Sarrouf.[2]

Though she had never married,[1] from 1912 onward, she maintained an extensive written correspondence with Khalil Gibran. While they never met in person as he was living in New York City, the correspondence lasted 19 years until his death in 1931,[2] and Ziade is credited with introducing his work to the Egyptian public.[8]

Personal loss & depression

Between 1928 and 1931, Ziade suffered a series of personal losses, beginning with the death of her parents, her friends, and above all Khalil Gibran. She fell into a deep depression and returned to Lebanon where her relatives tried to place her in psychiatric hospital to gain control over her estate.[1] Nawal El Saadawi submits that Ziade was sent to the hospital for expressing feminist sentiments.[5] Ziade eventually recovered her lucidity and returned to Cairo where she died on October 17, 1941.[2]

Philosophical bases

Feminism

Ziade was deeply concerned with the emancipation of the Arab woman; a task to be effected first by tackling ignorance, and then anachronistic traditions. She considered women to be the basic elements of every human society and wrote that a woman enslaved could not breastfeed her children with her own milk when that milk smelled strongly of servitude.[2]

She specified that female evolution towards equality need not be enacted at the expense of femininity, but rather that it was a parallel process.[2] In 1921, she convened a conference under the heading, "La but de la vie" ("The goal of life"), where she called upon Arab women to aspire toward freedom, and to be open to the Occident without forgetting their Oriental identity.[4]

Romanticism and Orientalism

Bearing a romantic streak from childhood, Ziade was successively influenced by Lamartine, Byron, Shelley, and finally Gibran. These influences are evident in the majority of her works. She often reflected on her nostalgia for Lebanon and her fertile, vibrant, sensitive imagination is as evident as her mystery, melancholy and despair.[2]

Works

Ziade's first published work, Fleurs de rêve (1911), was a volume of poetry, written in French, using the pen name of Isis Copia. She wrote rather extensively in French, and occasionally English or Italian, but as she evolved she increasingly found her literary voice in Arabic. She published works of criticism and biography, volumes of free-verse poetry and essays, and novels. She translated several European authors into Arabic, including Arthur Conan Doyle from English, 'Brada' (the Italian Contessa Henriette Consuelo di Puliga) from French, and Max Müller from German. She ran the most famous literary salon of the Arab world during the twenties and thirties in Cairo.[9]

Well noted titles of her works in Arabic (with English translation in brackets) include:

- Al Bâhithat el-Bâdiyat باحثة البادية (Beginning Female Researchers)
- Sawâneh fatât سوانح فتاة (Platters of Crumbs)
- Zulumât wa Ichâ'ât ظلمات وأشعة (Humiliation and Rumors…)
- Kalimât wa Ichârât كلمات وأشارات (Words and Signs)
- Al Saha'ef الصحعف (The Newspapers)
- Ghayat Al-Hayât غاية الحياة (The Meaning of Life)
- Al-Mûsawâtالمؤسوات (Equality)
- Bayna l-Jazri wa l-Madd بين الجزر والمد (Between the Ebb and Flow)

Awards

In 1999, May Ziade was named by the Lebanese Minister of Culture as the personage of the year around which the annual celebration of "Beirut, cultural capital of the Arab world" would be held.[2]

See also

  • Women's literary salons and societies in the Arab World

See Also

References

Bibliography

  • Boustani, Carmen (2003). Effets du féminin: variations narratives francophones. KARTHALA Editions. ISBN 2845864337, 9782845864337 
  • Khalil Gibran (2006). Jesus, el hijo del hombre. Deva's. ISBN 9871102577, 9789871102570 
  • Peterson, Janice; Lewis, Margaret (2001). The Elgar Companion to Feminist Economics. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 1840647833, 9781840647839 

External links

French, English and Arabic profile of May Ziade http://www.onefineart.com/en/artists/mayziedeh/index.shtml

Further reading

  • Bloomsbury Guide to Women's Literature
  • Marilyn Booth, 'Biography and Feminist Rhetoric in Early Twentieth Century Egypt: Mayy Ziyada's Studies of Three Women's Lives', Journal of Women's History 3:1 (1991), pp. 38-64
  • Tahir Khemiri & G. Kampffmeyer, Leaders in Contemporary Arabic Literature: A Book of Reference (1930), pp. 24-27
  • Joseph T. Zeidan, Arabic Women Novelists: The Formative Years and Beyond. 1995.
  • Antje Ziegler, 'Al-Haraka Baraka! The Late Rediscovery of Mayy Ziyāda's Works', Die Welt des Islams 39:1 (1999), pp. 103-115

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • May (Vorname) — May ist eine weiblicher Vorname. Der Name kommt aus dem Lateinischen bzw. Arabischen und bedeutet Römische Göttin der Fruchtbarkeit. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Namenstage 2 Bekannte Namensträgerinnen 3 Einzelnachweise 4 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • May Ziyadah — (en árabe: مي زيادة‎) (escrito también Ziade, Ziadé o Ziadeh) (Líbano, 1886 El Cairo, 1941) fue una escritora libanesa palestina, poetisa, ensayista y traductora. Instalada en la capital de Egipto en 1908, fue la creadora de un salón literario… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Palestinian Christians — Part of a series on Palestinians …   Wikipedia

  • Palestinian people — Palestinians (الفلسطينيون al Filasṭīniyyūn) Tawfiq Canaan • …   Wikipedia

  • 1948 Palestinian exodus — Palestinian refugees in 1948 The 1948 Palestinian exodus (Arabic: الهجرة الفلسطينية‎, al Hijra al Filasṭīnīya), also known as the Nakba (Arabic: النكبة‎, an Nakbah, lit. disaster , catastrophe , or cataclysm ),[1] …   Wikipedia

  • Haj Amin al-Husseini — al Husseini in 1929. Grand Mufti of Jerusalem In office 1921–1948 Preceded by …   Wikipedia

  • Palestinian territories — Not to be confused with Palestinian National Authority, State of Palestine, or Palestine (region). Palestinian Territories …   Wikipedia

  • Arabic literature — (Arabic: الأدب العربي Al Adab Al Arabi ) is the writing produced, both prose and poetry, by speakers (not necessarily native speakers) of the Arabic language. It does not usually include works written using the Arabic alphabet but not in the… …   Wikipedia

  • Jordanian occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem — West Bank and East Jerusalem Annexed by Jordan ← …   Wikipedia

  • Nur-eldeen Masalha — Nur Masalha Arabic: نور مصالحة‎ Born 1957 (age 53–54) Galilee, Israel Occupation Historian Nur eldeen (Nur) Masalha (Arabic: نور مصالحة‎) (born 4 January 1957, Galilee, Israel) is a Palestinian writer and academic …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”