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Amina Said

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This article is about the author. For the victim of a 2008 honor killing, see Yaser Abdel Said. For the Somali author with a similar name, see Amina Said Ali.

Amina Said, also spelled Amina Saïd (born 1953 in Tunis) is a Tunisian author and poet. Her father is Tunisian and her mother is French. Said has been living in Paris since 1978, where she studied literature at the Sorbonne. She has published several books of poetry, Tunisian folk stories, short stories and essays. Much of her work has been translated into other languages, mainly Arabic, German, Turkish, English and Italian. Said has translated works by the Filipino writer Francisco Sionil José from English into French.

She is a member of the jury (poetry) for the Prix Max-Pol-Fouchet [fr]. The Australian composer Richard Mills used her poetry for his work Songlines of the Heart's Desire (2007).

Awards

Said received the Jean Malrieu Prize in 1989 for Feu d'oiseaux, and in 1994, the Charles Vildrac Prize.

Selected works

References

  1. Amina Saïd (Tunisia) at the Archivio di Stato di Firenze (in Italian)
  2. Amina Said Archived September 30, 2011, at the Wayback Machine in Banipal – Magazine of Modern Arab Literature
  3. "1993 Et le jour se fait femme, aquarelle, collages, extraits de poèmes du recueil Sable funanbules, Amina Saïd 1988". ouellette001.com.

External links


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