Kamal Abu-Deeb in Arabic (كمال أبو ديب) (born 1942 in Safita, Syria) is Chair of Arabic at the University of London. He was a Leverhulme Trust Fellow.[1]
Life
editHe graduated from Damascus University, Trinity College, Oxford, and St John's College, Oxford.[2]
He edited the journal Mawakif with poet Adunis.[2]
Prof. Hisham Sharabi described him as "a leading Syrian structuralist critic."[3]
Works
edit- Issa J. Boullata; Kamal Abdel-Malek; Wael B. Hallaq, eds. (2000). "The Collapse of Totalizing Discourse and the Rise of Marginalized/Minority Discourses". Tradition, Modernity, and Postmodernity in Arabic Literature: Essays in Honor of Professor Issa J. Boullata. BRILL. pp. 335–. ISBN 90-04-11763-6.
- Adhabat al-Mutanabbi fi Suhbat Kamal Abu-Deeb wa al-'Aks bi al-'Aks, Al-Saqi Books, London & Beirut, 1996[4]
References
edit- ^ "Studying Arabic and Islam for a degree at SOAS | University of London".
- ^ a b Mounah Abdallah Khouri (1997). Tradition & Modernity in Arabic Literature (c). University of Arkansas Press. pp. 273–. ISBN 978-1-61075-433-0.
- ^ Sharabi, Hisham. “Cultural Critics of Contemporary Arab Society.” Arab Studies Quarterly 9, no. 1 (1987), 9.
- ^ "Banipal (UK) Magazine of Modern Arab Literature - Contributors - Kamal Abu Deeb".