Suheir Hammad Explained

Suheir Hammad
Birth Date:25 October 1973
Birth Place:Amman, Jordan

Suheir Hammad (Arabic: سهير حماد) (born October 25, 1973) is an American poet, author, and political activist.

Biography

She was born in Amman, Jordan. Her parents were Palestinian refugees who immigrated along with their daughter to Brooklyn, New York City when she was five years old. Her parents later moved to Staten Island.[1]

As an adolescent growing up in Brooklyn, Hammad was heavily influenced by Brooklyn's vibrant hip-hop scene. She had also absorbed the stories from her parents and grandparents of life in their hometown of Lydda, before the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight, and of the suffering they endured afterward, first in the Gaza Strip and then in Jordan. From these disparate influences Hammad was able to weave into her work a common narrative of dispossession, not only in her capacity as an immigrant, a Palestinian and a Muslim, but as a woman struggling against society's inherent sexism and as a poet in her own right.

When hip-hop entrepreneur Russell Simmons came across her piece entitled "First Writing Since",[2] a poem describing her reaction to the September 11 attacks, he signed her to a deal with HBO's Def Poetry Jam.[3] She recited original works on tour for the following two years. In 2008, she was cast in her first fiction role in cinema, the Palestinian film Salt of this Sea (2008) by Annemarie Jacir, which premiered as an official selection in the Un Certain Regard competition of the Cannes Film Festival.[4] She is now working on her third publication which will be a book of prose.She took part in the Bush Theatre's 2011 project Sixty Six Books, for which she wrote a piece based upon the Book of Haggai in the King James Bible.[5]

Film and video

Produced plays

Awards

Works

Periodicals

Anthologies

Additional resources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Feb 22: Suheir Hammad . Poetry for the People . https://web.archive.org/web/20060820171847/http://poetryforthepeople.org/feb-22-suheir-hammad/ . August 20, 2006 .
  2. Web site: First Writing Since . In Motion Magazine . 2001-11-07 . 3 June 2024.
  3. News: Out of the Ashes, Drops of Meaning: The Poetic Success of Suheir Hammad. Hopinson. Natalie. 13 October 2002. The Washington Post. 29 April 2017.
  4. News: Un Certain Regard: "Salt of This Sea" by Annemarie Jacir. 2008-05-16. Festival de Cannes 2016. 2017-04-29. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20180915230007/http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/69-editions/retrospective/2008/actualites/articles/un-certain-regard-salt-of-this-sea-by-annemarie-jacir . 15 September 2018.
  5. Web site: Sixty-Six Books.
  6. Web site: American Booksellers Association . The American Book Awards / Before Columbus Foundation [1980–2012] ]. 2013 . BookWeb . 2009 […] Suheir Hammad, Breaking Poems (Cypher Books) . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130313174235/http://bookweb.org/btw/awards/The-American-Book-Awards---Before-Columbus-Foundation.html . March 13, 2013 . September 25, 2013.