Najwa Binshatwan Explained

Najwa Bin Shatwan (Arabic: نجوى بن شتوان) is a Libyan academic and novelist, the first Libyan to ever be shortlisted for the International Prize of Arabic Fiction (in 2017). She has authored four novels: Waber Al Ahssina (The Horses’ Hair); Madmum Burtuqali (Orange Content); Zareeb Al-Abeed (The Slave Yards); and Roma Termini, in addition to several collections of short stories, plays and contributions to anthologies. She was chosen as one of the thirty-nine best Arab authors under the age of forty by Hay Festival’s Beirut 39 project (2009). In 2018, she was chosen from hundreds of Arab writers for the 2018 Banipal Writing Fellowship Residency at the University of Durham and in 2020, she was chosen to co-lead a series of creative writing workshops in Sharjah (World Capital of the year book 2019) for Arab writers. Also, she was chosen as a member of jury in various literary awards/grants.

Biography

Najwa Binshatwan was born in Ajdabiya, Libya. She obtained a master's degree in education, after which she worked as a lecturer at Garyounis University. She also completed a doctoral degree in humanities from La Sapienza University in Rome, Italy. Her doctoral research focused on the slave trade in Libya and the repercussions on Libyan society and organization in the Ottoman period (1552-1911). [1]

Works

Bibliography taken from the Beirut39 writers' biographies.[2]

Novels

Translated Books

Short Stories Collection

Plays

Anthologies

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Banipal. Najwa Binshatwan. 31 December 2017.
  2. Web site: Beirut39 writers' biographies. 31 December 2017.