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  • 5th Winner of Saif Ghobash–Banipal Prize for Arabic Literary Translation Announced

    5th Winner of Saif Ghobash–Banipal Prize for Arabic Literary Translation Announced

    The 2010 Winner: Humphrey Davies for his translation of Yalo by Elias Khoury

    The 2010 Prize for Arabic Literary Translation, the fifth year of the prize, is awarded to Humphrey Davies for his translation of the novel Yalo by Elias Khoury, published by Maclehose Press in the UK.

    Humphrey Davies is also a runner-up this year for his translation of Sunset Oasis by Bahaa Taher, published by Sceptre, UK and recently nominated for the 2011 IMPAC Prize. The Arabic original of Sunset Oasis won the inaugural 2008 International Prize for Arabic Fiction. Both Yalo and Sunset Oasis were long-listed last year for the 2010 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize.

    A further runner-up is Kareem James Abu-Zeid for his translation of Cities without Palms by Tarek Etayeb, published by Arabia Books, UK.

    The 2010 judges were author Margaret Drabble DBE, writer, translator and Professor of Comparative Literature at Warwick University Susan Bassnett, translator of contemporary Arabic literature of Georgetown University Elliott Colla, and on behalf of the Banipal Trust for Arab Literature Yasir Suleiman, Professor of Modern Arabic Studies and Head of the Department of Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Cambridge.

    The Winner

    Humphrey Davies for his translation of Yalo by Elias Khoury

    On being told the news, Humphrey declared: “I’m over the moon. To win the Banipal Prize two-and-a half times in five years is indeed a signal honour.”

    Elias Khoury was equally thrilled and told Banipal: “Congratulations to Humphrey. It is great that he has won the prize twice, and both times I have had the honour of accompanying his achievements with my two novels.”

    Maclehose Press publisher Christopher MacLehose added: “It will give the author as much pleasure as it does his publisher that Humphrey Davies should have been awarded this distinguished prize for his second successive translation of Elias Khoury's work. The award recognises a remarkable partnership and will give a welcome prominence to the fiction of an exceptional writer as also of his invaluable collaborator.”

    Elias Khoury

    In the fifth year of the prize, by coincidence, the names of both the winning translator and the author are the same as those of the first year – Humphrey Davies won the inaugural 2006 prize for his translation of Elias Khoury’s Gate of the Sun (published 2005). In 2000 Humphrey Davies published his first literary translation in Banipal magazine, a short story in Egyptian colloquial, “Rat”, by Sayed Ragab. Then came Thebes at War by Naguib Mahfouz (2003), Alaa Aswany’s best-selling The Yacoubian Building (2004) and his short stories Friendly Fire (2009), Ahmed Alaidy’s Being Abbas el Abd (2006), Gamal al-Ghitani’s Pyramid Texts and Hamdy el-Gazzar’s Black Magic (both 2007), Mohamed Mustagab’s Tales of Dayrut (2008) and Khaled al-Berry’s Life Is More Beautiful Than Paradise (2009), all originally for the pioneering AUC press. He has also edited and translated the Ottoman-era work Brains Confounded by the Ode of Abu Shaduf Expounded by Yusuf al-Shirbini (Leuven: Peeters, 2004 and 2007). Bahaa Taher’s novel Sunset Oasis won the International Prize for Arabic Fiction’s first prize in 2007 and Humphrey Davies was chosen as translator. This year Maclehose Press will publish another novel by the Khoury-Davies team, As Though She Were Sleeping (due May 2011). Also forthcoming translated by Humphrey Davies is the sequel to Mourid Barghouti’s I Saw Ramallah (Bloomsbury 2011), and Naguib Mahfouz’s Midaqq Alley (AUCP 2011).

    US readers who want to read Humphrey Davies's translation of Yalo will probably have to buy it from outside the USA since the US edition, published by Archipelago Press, is translated by Peter Theroux. This edition was shortlisted for the 2009 US Best Translated Book Award.

    Banipal 40 – LIterature from Libya will include reviews of two novels by Elias Khoury in English translation – Yalo and White Masks. Click here for Banipal magazine's home page to join the email listing and receive news of Banipal 40's publication in March.

    Runner-up: Humphrey Davies for his translation of Sunset Oasis by Bahaa Taher

    Runner-up: Kareem James Abu-ZeidKareem James Abu-Zeid for his translation of Cities without Palms by Tarek Etayeb

    On being told the result, Kareem James Abu-Zeid said: “It’s a real honor for me to be selected as one of the runners up, especially since this was the first novel that I have translated.”

    Kareem Abu-Zeid has translated works by poets from Sudan, Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Iraq and is currently translating Eltayeb’s sequel to Cities Without Palms, The Palm House (AUC Press 2011) as well as The Far-Off Call (AUC Press 2012) by Libyan novelist Ibrahim al-Koni.

    Born into an Egyptian American family, Kareem Abu-Zeid has lived an itinerant life around the Middle East, the US, and Europe. He received his BA from Princeton University in 2003 in French and German Literature, and was a Fulbright Research Fellow in Germany as well as a CASA Fellow at the American University in Cairo. He has taught language, literature and philosophy courses in Arabic, French, German, and English at UC Berkeley, the University of Heidelberg, and the University of Mannheim, and is currently doing a PhD on the intersections of modern Arabic poetry, mysticism and continental philosophy at UC Berkeley’s department of comparative literature. He lives in Oakland, CA.

  • Call for Submissions: Voices from the Continent

    Deadline: 29 November 2010

    We invite you to join us as a participant or presenter for our 12th annual Roundtable Conference on African Studies, scheduled for April 7-10, 2011 at Kentucky State University. The theme is " The Search for a Place: Marginalization, Community, and Empowerment in Africa and the African Diaspora." The emphasis is to present practical, usable information in the format of workshops, papers, roundtable discussions, and panel presentations.

    Participants are also encouraged to submit a paper for refereeing and possible submission to Notes and Records: An International Journal of African and African Diaspora Studies: www.kysu.edu/NotesAndRecordsJournal. We, therefore, hope that you will plan now to join us in the 2011 Roundtable in Frankfort, Kentucky.

    Call for papers

    On behalf of Southern Interdisciplinary Roundtable on African Studies (SIRAS), Kentucky State University, and the Editors, we would like to inform you about the launching of a new peer-reviewed journal titled Notes and Records: An International Journal of African and African Diaspora Studies.

    The journal is primarily devoted to publishing original studies related to the linkages and relationships between Africans and the African Diaspora. The journal aims to focus on the varied webs of connections between the Africans and the African Diaspora in an interdisciplinary approach. Studies related to history, politics, culture, literature, gender, music/dance, globalization, war, resistance, and civil rights movements that illustrate the varied experiences of Diasporic people are welcome.

    Submission and review process: Notes and Records is solely a peer-reviewed journal. Manuscripts should be prepared double-spaced, using font size 12 Times New Roman. Our in-house referencing and citation style is the Chicago Manual format.

    Article submissions on topic related to African Studies should be sent electronically to:

    Raphael Chijioke Njoku
    Department of History/Dept. of Pan-African Studies
    University of Louisville
    Louisville Kentucky, USA
    Email: rc.njoku@louisville.edu

    Article submissions on topic related to African Diaspora Studies should be sent electronically to:

    Matt Childs
    Department of History
    University of South Carolina, USA
    Columbia, SC 29208
    Email: childsmd@mailbox.sc.edu

    All book reviews and review articles should be sent electronically to:

    Tiffany F. Jones
    Department of History
    California State University, San Bernardino
    5500 University Parkway, SB335
    San Bernardino, CA 92407-2397, USA
    Email: tjones@csusb.edu

    All correspondence should be addressed to:

    Notes and Records
    Managing Editor
    Division of Behavioral Sciences and Social Sciences, HH 231
    Kentucky State University
    Frankfort, KY 40601
    Email: egbunam.amadife@kysu.edu

    More information here.

  • Call for Poetry: The Journal of Pan African Studies

    Deadline: 30 September 2010

    CALL FOR POETRY

    December 2010 edition of
    The Journal of Pan African Studies (JPAS)
    in honor of Dingane Jose Goncalves, founder, Journal of Black Poetry

    The Journal of Pan African Studies is pleased to announce a special literary arts edition devoted to poetry edited by guest editor Marvin X, poet, playwright, essayist, activist, one of the founders of the Black Arts Movement, called the USA's Rumi (Bob Holman) and the father of Muslim American literature (Dr. Mohja Kahf).

    During the 60s Marvin was an associate editor of the Journal of Black Poetry, Black Dialogue and Black Theatre magazines. His work appeared also in Black Scholar, Black World and Muhammad Speaks.

    All original, previously unpublished poetry will be accepted; however they must be relevant to the Black experience in the U.S., and throughout the world.

    Book reviews of recent and new publications in the domain of poetry are welcomed and encouraged.

    For consideration, send final work in a MS word format as an attachment via e-mail to jmarvinx@yahoo.com before September 30, 2010.

    Poetry in languages other than English will be considered, however they must also be presented in English, and all submissions must include a name, a short biographical statement, and an e-mail address.

    For more information on The Journal of Pan African Studies, visit: www.jpanafrican.com.

    Contact: Marvin X, Guest Editor
    Email: jmarvinx@yahoo.com
    and/or www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com

  • Deadline Extended - Call for Poetry: The Journal of Pan African Studies

    Deadline: 15 October 2010

    October 15, Deadline for Submissions to Journal of Pan African Studies Poetry Issue Guest Editor, Marvin X.

    CALL FOR POETRY

    December 2010 edition of
    The Journal of Pan African Studies (JPAS)
    in honor of Dingane Jose Goncalves, founder, Journal of Black Poetry

    The Journal of Pan African Studies is pleased to announce a special literary arts edition devoted to poetry edited by guest editor Marvin X, poet, playwright, essayist, activist, one of the founders of the Black Arts Movement, called the USA's Rumi (Bob Holman) and the father of Muslim American literature (Dr. Mohja Kahf).

    During the 60s Marvin was an associate editor of the Journal of Black Poetry, Black Dialogue and Black Theatre magazines. His work appeared also in Black Scholar, Black World and Muhammad Speaks.

    All original, previously unpublished poetry will be accepted; however they must be relevant to the Black experience in the U.S., and throughout the world.

    Book reviews of recent and new publications in the domain of poetry are welcomed and encouraged.

    For consideration, send final work in a MS word format as an attachment via e-mail to jmarvinx@yahoo.com on or before October 15, 2010.

    Poetry in languages other than English will be considered, however they must also be presented in English, and all submissions must include a name, a short biographical statement, and an e-mail address.

    For more information on The Journal of Pan African Studies, visit: www.jpanafrican.com.

    Contact: Marvin X, Guest Editor
    Email: jmarvinx@yahoo.com
    and/or www.blackbirdpressnews.blogspot.com

  • Metamorphoses' Special Issue Seeks Translations from Arabic/ Languages from the Arab World

    Deadline: 15 May 2011

    The literary translation journal Metamorphoses welcomes submissions of previously unpublished translations of poetry and prose from Arabic and from other langues of the Arab world, including Berber, Aramaic, etc., French, Spanish, Italian from former colonies and the Diaspora. We cannot for this issue consider translations from Farsi or Turkish. We also welcome essays on issues of language and translation, in film and music as well as in literature.

    All translations must be from the original language. We expect translators to be competent in the language of the original text or to be working closely with someone who is. Consultation wih a native speaker of English is advised when the translator is not a native English speaker. We publish translations of works that have been translated recently and well only if the translation is different from and at least as good as what is already available.

    Only in exceptional circumstances do we publish work that has already appeared elsewhere, for instance if the work is out of print or virtually impossible to find.

    Translators are responsible for securing permissions from all rights holders (copyright, translation rights).

    Please send submissions as electronic attachments or on CD in Word or rtf. We need both the translation and the original text. Submissions should be accompanied by short biographical information about both the source language author and the translator.

    Send all inquires and submissions to guest editor Mohamed El-Sawi Hassan (mhassan@email.smith.edu), B15 Neilson Library, Smith College, Northampton, MA 01063 USA with a copy to Thalia Pandiri (tpandiri@email.smith.edu), editor-in-chief.

  • ACLS African Humanities Program

    Deadline: 1 December 2010

    African Humanities Program
    in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda
    2010-2011

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR APPLICANTS

    Eligibility criteria
    • The proposed project must be in the humanities.
    • It must propose a written scholarly product such as a dissertation or a monograph.
    • Research and writing under terms of the fellowship award must be undertaken in Africa. AHP fellowships may not be used for travel outside the continent.
    • Dissertation applicants must be nationals of a country in sub-Saharan Africa, residing and working in Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania, or Uganda, pursuing a doctorate in one of those countries. They must have begun to write the dissertation before applying and must be able to complete the dissertation during the fellowship year. Applicants pursuing doctorates at a university in South Africa are not eligible.
    • Postdoctoral applicants must be nationals of a country in sub-Saharan Africa, residing and working in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, or Uganda. At the time of the submission, applicants must have defended the dissertation and must be no more than five years past the date of receiving the Ph.D. degree. Postdoctoral applicants may propose either a combination of research and writing, or writing only.

    Fellowship awards
    • The stipend for Dissertation-Completion Fellowships is $9,000.
    • The stipend for Early Career Postdoctoral Fellowships is $16,000.
    • The Residential Allowance is $5,000, and will be paid directly to the selected institute for advanced study hosting the AHP fellowship recipient. A list of residential sites currently available can be downloaded from the ACLS website at www.acls.org/programs/ahp or may be requested from ahp@acls.org . Residencies must be undertaken outside of the country in which the applicant maintains institutional affiliation and must last for a continuous period of not less than two months. No additional support in the form of residential allowance is available to support work at an applicant’s home institution.

    Selection criteria
    • The intrinsic interest and substantive merit of the work proposed
    • The clarity of the intellectual agenda
    • The record of achievement of postdoctoral scholars and the promise of Ph.D. candidates
    • The contribution the work is likely to make to scholarship in the region and internationally
    • The feasibility of the workplan

    Preparing the application
    All applicants should begin preparation early! Applications must be received by the African Humanities Program at the American Council of Learned Societies in New York no later than December 1, 2010 .

    All applications must be typed (no handwriting, please). ACLS encourages the submission of applications via email in either Word (.doc or .docx files) or Acrobat (.pdf files). ACLS cannot application materials submitted in other file formats. Application forms may be downloaded in either Word or Acrobat. Application forms downloaded in Word may be typed on a computer, saved in a Word or Acrobat file and submitted via email attachment to ahp@acls.org . Applicants are asked to observe specifications for font and line-spacing and to maintain the page and space limits represented in the original application form. All applications must be signed and dated, or will be considered incomplete. Applications sent electronically must be named using the following file name format: Surname, Given Name(s).doc/docx/pdf.

    Application forms downloaded in Acrobat or received via Air Mail may be printed, then typed on a typewriter and returned to ACLS via Air Mail or courier service. Applicants are asked to send their materials via Air Mail or courier service only if they are unable to do so via email; it is not necessary to send applications both electronically and on paper.

    Application Elements
    An application form consists of the following numbered elements, which should be submitted in the order specified here and on the application form. Incomplete applications will not be considered.

    I. Applicant information – cover sheet

    II. Personal history: education, research, teaching, and service (as applicable )

    III. List of applicant’s publications [Maximum one page, 11 pt. type]

    IV. Intellectual autobiography [Maximum one page, single spaced, 11 pt. type]
    A description of the applicant’s academic career, detailing the ideas and experiences that have shaped and motivated the applicant’s intellectual work and plans for the future. The autobiography should conclude with a separate paragraph answering the question: “What do I see myself doing five years from now?”

    V. Application essay [Maximum two pages, single spaced, 11 pt. type]

    1. Main Thesis: The main argument or problematic guiding the proposed research and
    writing.
    2. Body: The research problem in more detail and a justification of the research focus and approach. What is already known about the problem and what more needs to be known?
    3. Literature and sources: The proposed topic placed in the context of existing literature and as well as potential new sources. What will be the criteria for determining which sources are relevant? How will the project extend, modify, or challenge existing scholarship?
    4. Methods: A detailed description of the methods to be used. How will they be deployed to address the main thesis or argument of the project?
    5. Significance: An explanation of the importance of the proposed work to central issues in the discipline, to the African humanities, and to humanities scholarship in general.
    6. Workplan: The concluding section of the essay, specifying a plan of work with a timeline for the research and/or writing during the fellowship period . How much has the applicant already accomplished on the project and how much remains to be done? What steps are anticipated during the fellowship period? What is the expected result? The workplan must specify the desired start and end dates for the fellowship period, ensuring that they fall within the period of the fellowship and form a period of work no less than 10 months in duration.

    Letters of recommendation should arrive with applications at ACLS by the deadline, December 1, 2010. Applicants should send the forms to recommenders early, so that there is enough time to complete them. While applicants are responsible for making sure that the completed application has two appropriate recommendations, they must not delay sending all other parts of the application by the deadline, regardless of whether recommenders have sent their materials or not.

    (Late letters of recommendation should be forwarded by the applicant to ACLS as soon as possible, in no case more than one month past the deadline.)

    Submitting the application
    Applicants are asked to follow these instructions carefully. Failure to do so may render an application late, incomplete, or otherwise ineligible for inclusion in the fellowship competition.

    1. Applications may be submitted electronically (via email attachment) or on paper (via Air Mail or courier service) to the AHP/ACLS office in New York.

    2. ACLS can accept only files sent in Word (.doc or .docx) or Acrobat (.pdf) formats. No other file formats are acceptable. Electronic submission is encouraged, with letters of recommendation and the applicant’s signature scanned as .pdf files. Electronic applications must be saved using a file name in the following format: Surname, Given Name(s).doc/docx/pdf.

    3. Applications submitted electronically should be sent to ahp@acls.org, with all application materials included as attachments to one single email. If the files are too large to send in one email, applicants must create a series of smaller numbered files following the same file name format and send them in separate emails, making sure to note the total number of files transmitted.

    The subject line of the email should include the applicant’s surname and the phrase “AHP application.” The body of the email should indicate the number of files attached. Application materials should be submitted only once, unless ACLS requests that and applicant resubmit. “Updated” or “revised” versions of the application will not be accepted once an application has been submitted.

    4. Applications sent by Air Mail or courier service should be addressed to:

    African Humanities Program
    American Council of Learned Societies
    633 Third Avenue, 8th floor
    New York, NY 10017-6795, USA

    5. IMPORTANT: Whether an application is submitted electronically or on paper, all applicants must send a separate email to ahp@acls.org requesting confirmation that the application file has been received and can be opened. Those who do not receive a reply within ten days confirming receipt should resend the confirmation request. Applicants should not resubmit application materials unless requested to do so.

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