Jump to content

Iman Mersal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Iman Mersal (Arabic: إيمان مرسال; born November 30, 1966, Mit 'Adlan, Dakahlia, Egypt) is an Egyptian poet.[1]

Life

[edit]

Iman Mersal graduated from Mansoura University, and received her MA and PhD from Cairo University.[2] She co-founded Bint al-Ard (Daughter of the Earth), which she co-edited from 1986 to 1992.[3] [4] She immigrated to Boston, in 1998, and then to Edmonton, Alberta with her family in 1999. Mersal serves as Associate Professor of Arabic literature at the University of Alberta.[5]

Her work has appeared in Blackbird,[6] The American Poetry Review,[7]Parnassus,[8]The New York Review of Books,[9] and Paris Review.[10] She has read at numerous poetry festivals around the world, including the London Poetry Parnassus, billed as the biggest gathering of poets in world history,[11] where she represented Egypt.

Selected poems from Mersal's oeuvre have been translated into numerous languages, including English, French, German, Spanish, Dutch, Macedonian, Hindi, and Italian. These Are Not Oranges, My Love, a selection of Mersal's work translated into English by Khaled Mattawa, was published by Sheep Meadow Press, New York in 2008.

One of her poems was selected for inclusion in the volume Fifty Greatest Love Poems. Another ("Solitude Exercises") concludes a chronological anthology featuring 38 Arab poets spanning 15 centuries, from Imru' al-Qays to Mahmoud Darwish.

In her book How to Mend: On Motherhood and its Ghosts, Iman Mersal "navigates a long and winding road, from the only surviving picture of the author has with her mother, to a deep search through what memory, photography, dreams and writing, a search of what is lost between the mainstream and more personal representations of motherhood and its struggles. How to mend the gap between the representation and the real, the photograph and its subject, the self and the other, the mother and her child."[12] The book was first published in Arabic by Kayfa ta and Mophradat in 2016, and the English edition was published in 2018 by Kayfa ta and Sternberg Press.

She lives with her husband, ethnomusicologist Michael Frishkopf and their two sons (Mourad and Joseph) in Edmonton, Canada. Mourad is currently a cognitive science major at Yale.

Works

[edit]
  • 2019. Fi Athar Enayat al-Zayyat (In the footsteps of Enayat al-Zayyat). Cairo: Al Kotob Khan.
  • 2016. Kayfa talta'em: 'an al umuma wa ashbahuha (How to Mend: Motherhood and its ghosts). Cairo: Kayfa ta, Brussels: Mophradat. ISBN 978-3-956791-70-3
  • 2013. Hatta atakhalla `an fikrat al-buyut (Until I Give Up The Idea Of Home) Cairo: Dar Sharqiyat, Beirut: Dar al-Tanwir.
  • 2006. Jughrafiya Badila (Alternative Geography). Cairo: Dar Sharqiyat.
  • 2004. Mamarr mu'tim yasluh lita'allum al-raqs (A Dark Alley Suitable for Learning to Dance), second edition, Cairo: Dar Sharqiyat.
  • 1997. al-Mashy Atwal Waqt Mumkin (Walking As Long As Possible). Cairo: Dar Sharqiyat.
  • 1995. Mamarr mu'tim yasluh lita'allum al-raqs (A Dark Alley Suitable for Learning to Dance), first edition. Cairo: Dar Sharqiyat.
  • 1990. Ittisafat (Characterizations). Cairo: Dar al-Ghad.

Translation to Arabic

[edit]
  • 2016. ذبابة في الحساء. (A Fly in the Soup), Charles Simic, Iman Mersal, translator. Cairo: El-Kotob Khan.
  • 2011. Bira fi Nadi al-Bilyardu. (Beer in the Snooker Club), Waguih Ghali, Iman Mersal, co-translator. Cairo: Dar el- Shrouk.

Works in English

[edit]
  • 2024: Traces of Enayat. trans. Robin Moger. Transit Books. ISBN 978-1945492846
  • 2022: The Threshold: Poems. trans. Robyn Creswell. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0374604271
  • 2019: Contributor to A New Divan: Lyrical Dialogue Between East and West ISBN 9781909942288
  • 2018. How to Mend: Motherhood and its ghosts. Cairo: Kayfa ta, Berlin: Sternberg Press. Translated by Robin Moger. ISBN 978-3-95679-425-4
  • 2008. These are not oranges, my love: selected poems, Sheep Meadow Press, ISBN 978-1-931357-54-8

Awards

[edit]

Her book The Threshold was shortlisted for the 2023 Griffin Poetry Prize.[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Iman Mersal". wordswithoutborders.org. Retrieved 2023-02-04.
  2. ^ "Iman Mersal (poet) - Egypt - Poetry International". www.poetryinternational.org.
  3. ^ "Iman Mersal - Words Without Borders". Words Without Borders. Retrieved 2017-12-06.
  4. ^ "The Other Extremists: Marxist Feminism in Egypt, 1980-2000". Bridgewater State University. Retrieved 2023-02-04.
  5. ^ "Iman Mersal". ualberta.ca. Retrieved 2023-02-04.
  6. ^ "Iman Mersal, Blackbird". blackbird.vcu.edu.
  7. ^ "The American Poetry Review". The American Poetry Review.
  8. ^ "Parnassus". archive.org.
  9. ^ "CV". The New York Review of Books.
  10. ^ "Iman Mersal". The Paris Review.
  11. ^ Flood, Alison (2012-04-17). "Poetry Parnassus to gather poets from every Olympic nation". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-12-06.
  12. ^ "How to Mend: Motherhood and its ghosts". Kayfa-ta.com. Retrieved 2019-05-31.
  13. ^ "Iman Mersal". Sheikh Zayed Book Award. 2021.
  14. ^ Cassandra Drudi, "Susan Musgrave, Iman Mersal among Griffin Poetry Prize finalists". Quill & Quire, April 19, 2023.
[edit]