April 22, 200705:00 PM ยป Lecture: Nazari-ye-ha-ye Sonnat, Tajaddod, va Post-Moderniteh dar Sher-i Moaaser-i FarsiNazari-ye-ha-ye Sonnat, Tajaddod, va Post-Moderniteh dar Sher-i Moaaser-i Farsi
He is the author of more than sixty books of poetry, fiction, literary criticism, literary translations and social Issues. Four of his novels have been translated into French and published by Fayard, the prominent French publisher. He has won numerous awards in literature, journalism and human rights. Vintage, Random House has published Baraheni's The Crowned Cannibals, forwarded by E.L.Doctorow, and Indiana University Press has published his collection of prison poems under the title of God's Shadow. Baraheni has written for the New York Times, the New York Review of Books, the Nation and many other prominent papers and periodicals. The reviews of his books have been published in some of the most outstanding papers of the world, such as Le Figaro Litteraire, Le Monde, Liberation, the Figaro Magazine, the New York Times, the Washington Post and many others around the world. Adaptation and performance of his fiction into plays in France have gained him in that country the name of a major experimental playwright, with performances in Avignon, Annecy, Dijon and many other festivals and cities, including Paris. Dozens of special issues have been published on Baraheni's works in Iran, Sweden, Canada, France, and books of his poetry have been translated into half a dozen European languages. Baraheni has taught in many American, Canadian and Iranian universities, and has been a Fellow of many prominent universities, including Oxford, England. During the last nine years, he has has been professor of exilic and postmodernist literatures at the Centre for Comparative Literature of the University of Toronto. But he has always said that the best period of his teaching career belongs to the time after his his release from the Khomeini prison and expulsion from the University of Tehran in the eighties, when he started the training of young men and women of the new generation of Iranian writers first at the homes of his students and later in his Basement Workshop in his apartment. He feels proud that most of these young men and women have grown to hold outstanding positions in Contemporary Iranian literature, with more awards to their names than any other group of writers in the country. Baraheni is the winner of numerous literary and human rights awards from the U.S., Canada, Iran and other parts of the world. He was the President of PEN Canada from 2000-2002. He initiated during his presidency a fundamental change in the Charter of the International PEN which had been untouched since 1948. This lecture is part of the Center's Persian Lecture Series.
Time: 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM Dodd Hall 121 Cost: Free Special Instructions
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