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Hayfa Baytar

Hayfa Basil al-Baytar (Arabic: هيفاء باسيل البيطار, ALA-LC: Hayfāʼ Bāsil al-Bayṭār; also transliterated :Haifa Bitar; born 1960) is a Syrian novelist, short story writer and ophthalmologist. She has won the Abi Al Qassem Al Shabbi prize for her collections The Fallen (2000) and The Whore (2003).

Hayfa Baytar
Native name
هيفاء باسيل البيطار
BornHayfa Basil al-Baytar
1960 (age 62–63)
Latakia, Second Syrian Republic
Occupation
  • novelist
  • short story writer
  • journalist
  • ophthalmologist
NationalitySyrian
EducationUniversity of Latakia, Damascus University
Genre
  • Novel
  • short story
  • essays and articles
Literary movementRealism, Feminism
Years active1992
Notable worksThe Fallen (2000)
The Whore (2003)
A Woman of this Modern Age (2004)

Biography and career Edit

Early years Edit

Hayfa Basil al-Baytar was born in 1960 Latakia under Second Syrian Republic, and raised there, the principal port city of Syria.[1] She finished her primary, middle and high school studies at her hometown, then studied at the Faculty of Medicine at University of Latakia, and graduated in 1982. She continued her postgraduate studies at Al-Mowasat Hospital of Damascus University, where she specialized in ophthalmology, and graduated in 1986. After graduating in Damascus, she returned to her hometown to work as an ophthalmologist in Lattakia Governmental Hospital and her private clinic for many years.[2][3]

After that, she traveled for a year to Paris to study, and also prepared many studies on the causes of blindness and other diseases in her field of specialization.[4] She also attended courtesy of the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs at the US Department of State.[5]

Literary career Edit

Her literary career began in the early 1990s, and she has become known as a feminist writer as well as a realist.[6][7] Her works are also categorized under Arabic and Syrian Feminist and Psychological fiction.[8]

Her first literary work, titled Wurūd lan tamūt, is a collection of stories, published in 1992, and she published another collection titled Qiṣaṣ muhāǧirah in 1993. Her first novel Yawmiyat miṭalaqah was published in 1994.[4][2] She entered journalism, and wrote social, literary and critical essays published in a number of Syrian and Arab newspapers, magazines, websites and periodicals such as Al-Thawra and As-Safir. Because of her criticism of corruption, she faced problems including censorship of her works in her country.[9] She participated in the first and second conferences, which were held in 2001 and 2002 at Georgetown University in Washington D.C, lectured about the form of women in contemporary Arab literature.[2] She joined the Arab Writers Union in 1994 and was honored by the union officials during The Damascus Spring.[10]

She is known for her social reality style. A Jouhina Magazine journalist described her as a humanist and realist who presents socially-reflected reality in all its aspects, writing, "Her work in medicine has helped her to live with many human cases, and present them in a distinguished manner and literary sense."[11] She is considered to be "a writer who enjoys a style dominated by the spirit of rebellion and daring in her weaving of stories from our contemporary reality." She stated in July 2021 that she likes "to present my truth or my soul honestly to my readers and to the whole world".[12]

At the beginning of the third decade of her literary career, she expressed she was influenced by Dostoevsky, who "I consider him not only the greatest novelist, but the founder of psychology, because he is more important than Freud in my opinion." and loves the writings of "Balzac, Kundera, Henry Miller, Mario Llosa, and others, and among the Arab writers, I love the writings of Tahar Ben Jelloun, Amin Maalouf, Sonallah Ibrahim, Jamal Naji, Abdullah Bin Bakheet and others."[13]

She has been described as an "outspoken" novelist in The New Yorker[14] and has participated in public discussion forums about a variety of topics.[15]

Critical reception Edit

According to Abir Hamdar, writing in The Female Suffering Body: Illness and Disability in Modern Arabic Literature (2014), her work "repeatedly seeks to offer an insight into the gritty reality of women's lives in the Arab world", and her novels and short stories "focus on tragic female characters who suffer social and psychological injury either at the hands of men or because of their own misplaced ideals and aspirations."[16]: 113  Her 2004 novel Imraʾa min Hadtha al-ʿAsr features the protagonist Maryam and her experience with breast cancer, with her unsuccessful relationships with men in the background, and became the subject of wide criticism for its inclusion of taboo subjects, including female sexuality.[16]: 114 

Her novel A Woman of Fifty has a middle-aged protagonist who engages a lover, whom according to Samira Aghacy, writing in Ageing in the Modern Arabic Novel, "despises older women" and has an attitude that "reveals the 'double standard of ageing' since society is permissive of sexual activity in older men, but more severe and fanatical when it comes to the older women's sexuality."[17]: 75  Her 2002 short story The Din of the Body (Dhajeej al-Jasad) focuses on Indou, a Sri Lankan maid subject to a variety of abuses by her female employer.[18]

According to Lovisa Berg, writing in Masculinity and Syrian Fiction: Gender, Society and the Female Gaze, Bitar is one of several writers of her era who "create male characters who perform masculinities perceived by the other characters as one, or a mixture of, the following: weak, oppressive, traditionalist (meant in a negative way), aggressive, feminized, misogynistic or idealistic."[19]: 78  Her novel One-Winged Eagle has a male protagonist, a doctor named Karim with financial difficulties despite his profession, which according to Berg, "contrasts the pressure Karim puts on himself with the demands his sister places on men in general to provide for her."[19]: 96  In her novel The Abbaseen Basement (1995), the protagonist is the daughter Khulud, who "decides to take revenge on all men because of what her father has done to her mother."[19]: 79, 81, 85  Her novel Small Joys - Final Joys (1998) follows the protagonist Hiyam as she lives with a Syrian man in Paris while they both attend graduate school, and after they are married, with a focus on the changing moral views of her husband over time.[19]: 79, 87 

Honors and awards Edit

  • Abi Al Qassem Al Shabbi prize in Tunisia for her collection The Fallen (2000)[20]
  • Abi Al Qassem Al Shabbi prize in Tunisia for her collection The Whore (2003)[21][22][2][23]

Bibliography Edit

An Abjjad list of her works:[24]

Short stories Edit

  • Arabic: ورود لن تموت, romanizedWurūd lan tamūt, 1992
  • Arabic: قصص مهاجرة, romanizedQiṣaṣ muhāǧirah, 1993
  • Arabic: ضجيج الجسد, romanizedḌajīj al-jasad, lit.'The Din of the Body', 1993 & 2006, ISBN 9786144210260
  • Arabic: غروب وكتابة, romanizedGhurūb wa-Kitābah, lit.'Dusk and Writing', 1994, ISBN 9786144210277, ISBN 9789953879161
  • Arabic: خواطر في مقهى رصيف, romanizedKhawāṭir fī maqhá raṣīf, 1995
  • Arabic: فضاء كالقفص, romanizedFaḍāʼ ka-al-qafaṣ, 1995, ISBN 9781855164598
  • Arabic: كومبارس, romanizedKūmbārs, 1996 & 2007, ISBN 1855167182
  • Arabic: ظل أسود حي, romanizedẒill aswad ḥayy, 1997
  • Arabic: موت البجعة, romanizedMawt al-bajʻah, 1997
  • Arabic: الساقطة, romanizedal-Sāqiṭah, lit.'The Fallen' also translated as "The Whore", 2000, ISBN 9786144214886, ISBN 9789953879437 [21]
  • Arabic: عطر الحب, romanizedʻIṭr al-ḥubb, 2002, translated as Love Struck by Hannah Benninger, 2014 [22]
  • Arabic: يكفي أن يحبك قلب واحد لتعيش, romanizedYakfī an yuḥibbuk qalb wāḥid li-ta‘īsh, 2008
  • Arabic: مهزومة بصداقتك, romanizedMahzūmah bi-ṣadāqatik, lit.'Defeated by your friendship', 2008
  • Arabic: مطر جاف, romanizedMaṭar jāff, lit.'Dry Rain', 2008, ISBN 9786144214725, ISBN 9789953873978
  • Arabic: صندوق الضمير الأزرق, romanizedṢundūq al-ḍamīr al-azraq, 2009, ISBN 9786144214725
  • Arabic: S.M.S., 2010, ISBN 9781855166585
  • Arabic: طفل التفاح, romanizedṬifl al-tuffāḥ, 2016, ISBN 9786140227408, ISBN 9786140118515

Novels Edit

Non-fiction Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Haifa' Bitar". Words Without Borders. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d Al-Munjid, Salah al-Din (26 January 2012). . eSyria (in Arabic). Archived from the original on 26 January 2012. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  3. ^ "Haifa BITAR | The International Writing Program". iwp.uiowa.edu. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
  4. ^ a b . aljarmaqcenter (in Arabic). Archived from the original on 19 July 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  5. ^ "Haifa Bitar". The International Writing Program - The University of Iowa. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  6. ^ Ashur, Radwa (2004). Dhākirah lil-mustaqbal: mawsūʻat al-kātibah al-ʻArabīyah ذاكرة للمستقبل: موسوعة الكاتبة العربية، 1873-1999 [Dhākirah lil-mustaqbal: Encyclopedia of Arab women writers, 1873-1999] (in Arabic). Vol. 1 (first ed.). Cairo, Egypt: Majlis al-Aʻlá lil-Thaqāfah. p. 305.
  7. ^ Al-Faisal, Samar Ruhi (1996). Muʻjam al-Qāsāt wal-Riwāʻyiāt al-ʻArabiyāt معجم القاصات والروائيات العربيات [Dictionary of Arab women storytellers and novelists] (in Arabic) (first ed.). Tripoli, Lebanon: Jarrus Press. p. 138.
  8. ^ . Kitabat (in Arabic). 23 June 2017. Archived from the original on 19 July 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  9. ^ . Alraafed. 21 March 2018. Archived from the original on 19 July 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  10. ^ . esyria.sy (in Arabic). 30 May 2008. Archived from the original on 19 July 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  11. ^ . Jouhina (in Arabic). 2 April 2009. Archived from the original on 19 July 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  12. ^ . Harmoon (in Arabic). 8 July 2021. Archived from the original on 19 July 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  13. ^ . esyria (in Arabic). 15 November 2011. Archived from the original on 19 July 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  14. ^ Habib, Shahnaz (February 17, 2009). "The Gulf". The New Yorker. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  15. ^ Al Lawati, Abbas (February 27, 2009). "Internet globalises Arabic literature". Gulf News. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  16. ^ a b Hamdar, Abir (2014). The Female Suffering Body: Illness and Disability in Modern Arabic Literature. Syracuse University Press. pp. 113–120. ISBN 9780815652908. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  17. ^ Aghacy, Samira (2020). Ageing in the Modern Arabic Novel. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9781474466783. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  18. ^ Ray Jureidini (2014). "Sexuality and the Servant: An Exploration of Arab Images of the Sexuality of Domestic Maids Living In the Household". In Gagnon, John; Khalaf, Samir (eds.). Sexuality in the Arab World. Saqi. ISBN 9780863564871. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d Berg, Lovisa (2021). Masculinity and Syrian Fiction Gender, Society and the Female Gaze. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9780755637638. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  20. ^ "9 Short Stories by Syrian Women, in Translation". ArabLit. 2021. Retrieved 27 April 2022 – via Gale.
  21. ^ a b "Haifa BITAR | The International Writing Program". iwp.uiowa.edu. Retrieved 2022-04-19.
  22. ^ a b Bitar, Haifa (April 1, 2014). "Love Struck". Guernica. Retrieved 21 April 2022. translated from the Arabic by Hannah Benninger
  23. ^ "Haifa Bitar". etccmena. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  24. ^ "هيفاء بيطار". Abjad. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  25. ^ The Arabic Classroom: Context, Text and Learners. (2019). United Kingdom: Taylor & Francis. p117
  26. ^ مصرية (Adel), إيمان عادل-صحافية (Eman) (2020-07-05). "When I Booked a Seat in the Divorced Women's Club | Daraj". daraj.com. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
  27. ^ "Banipal (UK) Magazine of Modern Arab Literature - Book Reviews - A Woman of This Modern Age". Banipal. Retrieved 2022-04-19.
  28. ^ Aghacy, Samira (May 2016). "Reviews: The Female Suffering Body: Illness and Disability in Modern Arabic Literature". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 48 (2): 390–392. doi:10.1017/S0020743816000167. S2CID 163700471.
  29. ^ Hamdar, Abir (Feb 2019). "Between Representation and Reality: Disabled Bodies in Arabic Literature" (PDF). International Journal of Middle East Studies. 51 (1): 127–130. doi:10.1017/S0020743818001186. S2CID 165520367.

External links Edit

  • 2014 Opinion Piece in The New Arab Syria's pampered coast
  • 2021 writing A Family of Martyrs

hayfa, baytar, hayfa, basil, baytar, arabic, هيفاء, باسيل, البيطار, hayfāʼ, bāsil, bayṭār, also, transliterated, haifa, bitar, born, 1960, syrian, novelist, short, story, writer, ophthalmologist, qassem, shabbi, prize, collections, fallen, 2000, whore, 2003, n. Hayfa Basil al Baytar Arabic هيفاء باسيل البيطار ALA LC Hayfaʼ Basil al Bayṭar also transliterated Haifa Bitar born 1960 is a Syrian novelist short story writer and ophthalmologist She has won the Abi Al Qassem Al Shabbi prize for her collections The Fallen 2000 and The Whore 2003 Hayfa BaytarNative nameهيفاء باسيل البيطارBornHayfa Basil al Baytar1960 age 62 63 Latakia Second Syrian RepublicOccupationnovelist short story writer journalist ophthalmologistNationalitySyrianEducationUniversity of Latakia Damascus UniversityGenreNovel short story essays and articlesLiterary movementRealism FeminismYears active1992Notable worksThe Fallen 2000 The Whore 2003 A Woman of this Modern Age 2004 Contents 1 Biography and career 1 1 Early years 1 2 Literary career 1 3 Critical reception 2 Honors and awards 3 Bibliography 3 1 Short stories 3 2 Novels 3 3 Non fiction 4 References 5 External linksBiography and career EditEarly years Edit Hayfa Basil al Baytar was born in 1960 Latakia under Second Syrian Republic and raised there the principal port city of Syria 1 She finished her primary middle and high school studies at her hometown then studied at the Faculty of Medicine at University of Latakia and graduated in 1982 She continued her postgraduate studies at Al Mowasat Hospital of Damascus University where she specialized in ophthalmology and graduated in 1986 After graduating in Damascus she returned to her hometown to work as an ophthalmologist in Lattakia Governmental Hospital and her private clinic for many years 2 3 After that she traveled for a year to Paris to study and also prepared many studies on the causes of blindness and other diseases in her field of specialization 4 She also attended courtesy of the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs at the US Department of State 5 Literary career Edit Her literary career began in the early 1990s and she has become known as a feminist writer as well as a realist 6 7 Her works are also categorized under Arabic and Syrian Feminist and Psychological fiction 8 Her first literary work titled Wurud lan tamut is a collection of stories published in 1992 and she published another collection titled Qiṣaṣ muhaǧirah in 1993 Her first novel Yawmiyat miṭalaqah was published in 1994 4 2 She entered journalism and wrote social literary and critical essays published in a number of Syrian and Arab newspapers magazines websites and periodicals such as Al Thawra and As Safir Because of her criticism of corruption she faced problems including censorship of her works in her country 9 She participated in the first and second conferences which were held in 2001 and 2002 at Georgetown University in Washington D C lectured about the form of women in contemporary Arab literature 2 She joined the Arab Writers Union in 1994 and was honored by the union officials during The Damascus Spring 10 She is known for her social reality style A Jouhina Magazine journalist described her as a humanist and realist who presents socially reflected reality in all its aspects writing Her work in medicine has helped her to live with many human cases and present them in a distinguished manner and literary sense 11 She is considered to be a writer who enjoys a style dominated by the spirit of rebellion and daring in her weaving of stories from our contemporary reality She stated in July 2021 that she likes to present my truth or my soul honestly to my readers and to the whole world 12 At the beginning of the third decade of her literary career she expressed she was influenced by Dostoevsky who I consider him not only the greatest novelist but the founder of psychology because he is more important than Freud in my opinion and loves the writings of Balzac Kundera Henry Miller Mario Llosa and others and among the Arab writers I love the writings of Tahar Ben Jelloun Amin Maalouf Sonallah Ibrahim Jamal Naji Abdullah Bin Bakheet and others 13 She has been described as an outspoken novelist in The New Yorker 14 and has participated in public discussion forums about a variety of topics 15 Critical reception Edit According to Abir Hamdar writing in The Female Suffering Body Illness and Disability in Modern Arabic Literature 2014 her work repeatedly seeks to offer an insight into the gritty reality of women s lives in the Arab world and her novels and short stories focus on tragic female characters who suffer social and psychological injury either at the hands of men or because of their own misplaced ideals and aspirations 16 113 Her 2004 novel Imraʾa min Hadtha al ʿAsr features the protagonist Maryam and her experience with breast cancer with her unsuccessful relationships with men in the background and became the subject of wide criticism for its inclusion of taboo subjects including female sexuality 16 114 Her novel A Woman of Fifty has a middle aged protagonist who engages a lover whom according to Samira Aghacy writing in Ageing in the Modern Arabic Novel despises older women and has an attitude that reveals the double standard of ageing since society is permissive of sexual activity in older men but more severe and fanatical when it comes to the older women s sexuality 17 75 Her 2002 short story The Din of the Body Dhajeej al Jasad focuses on Indou a Sri Lankan maid subject to a variety of abuses by her female employer 18 According to Lovisa Berg writing in Masculinity and Syrian Fiction Gender Society and the Female Gaze Bitar is one of several writers of her era who create male characters who perform masculinities perceived by the other characters as one or a mixture of the following weak oppressive traditionalist meant in a negative way aggressive feminized misogynistic or idealistic 19 78 Her novel One Winged Eagle has a male protagonist a doctor named Karim with financial difficulties despite his profession which according to Berg contrasts the pressure Karim puts on himself with the demands his sister places on men in general to provide for her 19 96 In her novel The Abbaseen Basement 1995 the protagonist is the daughter Khulud who decides to take revenge on all men because of what her father has done to her mother 19 79 81 85 Her novel Small Joys Final Joys 1998 follows the protagonist Hiyam as she lives with a Syrian man in Paris while they both attend graduate school and after they are married with a focus on the changing moral views of her husband over time 19 79 87 Honors and awards EditAbi Al Qassem Al Shabbi prize in Tunisia for her collection The Fallen 2000 20 Abi Al Qassem Al Shabbi prize in Tunisia for her collection The Whore 2003 21 22 2 23 Bibliography EditAn Abjjad list of her works 24 Short stories Edit Arabic ورود لن تموت romanized Wurud lan tamut 1992 Arabic قصص مهاجرة romanized Qiṣaṣ muhaǧirah 1993 Arabic ضجيج الجسد romanized Ḍajij al jasad lit The Din of the Body 1993 amp 2006 ISBN 9786144210260 Arabic غروب وكتابة romanized Ghurub wa Kitabah lit Dusk and Writing 1994 ISBN 9786144210277 ISBN 9789953879161 Arabic خواطر في مقهى رصيف romanized Khawaṭir fi maqha raṣif 1995 Arabic فضاء كالقفص romanized Faḍaʼ ka al qafaṣ 1995 ISBN 9781855164598 Arabic كومبارس romanized Kumbars 1996 amp 2007 ISBN 1855167182 Arabic ظل أسود حي romanized Ẓill aswad ḥayy 1997 Arabic موت البجعة romanized Mawt al bajʻah 1997 Arabic الساقطة romanized al Saqiṭah lit The Fallen also translated as The Whore 2000 ISBN 9786144214886 ISBN 9789953879437 21 Arabic عطر الحب romanized ʻIṭr al ḥubb 2002 translated as Love Struck by Hannah Benninger 2014 22 Arabic يكفي أن يحبك قلب واحد لتعيش romanized Yakfi an yuḥibbuk qalb waḥid li ta ish 2008 Arabic مهزومة بصداقتك romanized Mahzumah bi ṣadaqatik lit Defeated by your friendship 2008 Arabic مطر جاف romanized Maṭar jaff lit Dry Rain 2008 ISBN 9786144214725 ISBN 9789953873978 Arabic صندوق الضمير الأزرق romanized Ṣunduq al ḍamir al azraq 2009 ISBN 9786144214725 Arabic S M S 2010 ISBN 9781855166585 Arabic طفل التفاح romanized Ṭifl al tuffaḥ 2016 ISBN 9786140227408 ISBN 9786140118515Novels Edit Arabic يوميات مطلقة romanized Yawmiyat miṭalaqah lit Diaries of a Divorcee 1994 ISBN 9786144210307 25 26 Arabic قبو العباسيين romanized Qabw al ʻAbbasiyin 1995 ISBN 9786144210284 ISBN 9789953872971 Arabic أفراح صغيرة أفراح أخيرة romanized Afraḥ ṣaghirah afraḥ akhirah lit Small Celebrations Last Celebrations 1996 ISBN 9789953872780 Arabic نسر بجناح وحيد romanized Nisr bi janaḥ waḥid lit One Winged Eagle 1998 ISBN 9789953879291 Arabic امرأة من طابقين 1999 ISBN 9786144210253 ISBN 9789953296883 Arabic أيقونة بلا وجه romanized Ayqunah bi la wajh 2000 ISBN 9786144258101 Arabic امرأة من هذا العصر romanized Imraʾa min Hadtha al ʿAsr lit A Woman of this Modern Age 2006 ISBN 1855166259 27 28 29 Arabic أبواب مواربة romanized Abwab muwaribah 2002 ISBN 9786144210239 ISBN 9789953870175 Arabic هوى romanized Hawa 2007 ISBN 9786144210291 Arabic نساء بأقفال 2007 ISBN 9786144214763 ISBN 9789953874852 Arabic أحلام نازفة 2009 ISBN 9786144214879 Arabic وجوه من سوريا romanized Wujuh min Suriya 2013 ISBN 9786144257326 Arabic امرأة في الخمسين romanized Imraʼah fi al khamsin lit A Woman of Fifty 2013 ISBN 9786144258057 ISBN 9786144257098 Arabic الشحاذة romanized al Shaḥḥadhah 2018 ISBN 9789178378814Non fiction Edit Arabic نسائم الأفكار نصوص ومقالات 2010 ISBN 9789933431112References Edit Haifa Bitar Words Without Borders Retrieved 21 April 2022 a b c d Al Munjid Salah al Din 26 January 2012 هيفاء بيطار eSyria in Arabic Archived from the original on 26 January 2012 Retrieved 19 July 2022 Haifa BITAR The International Writing Program iwp uiowa edu Retrieved 2022 04 29 a b حوار مع هيفاء بيطار في معنى الشعور بالانتماء aljarmaqcenter in Arabic Archived from the original on 19 July 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 Haifa Bitar The International Writing Program The University of Iowa Retrieved 19 July 2022 Ashur Radwa 2004 Dhakirah lil mustaqbal mawsuʻat al katibah al ʻArabiyah ذاكرة للمستقبل موسوعة الكاتبة العربية 1873 1999 Dhakirah lil mustaqbal Encyclopedia of Arab women writers 1873 1999 in Arabic Vol 1 first ed Cairo Egypt Majlis al Aʻla lil Thaqafah p 305 Al Faisal Samar Ruhi 1996 Muʻjam al Qasat wal Riwaʻyiat al ʻArabiyat معجم القاصات والروائيات العربيات Dictionary of Arab women storytellers and novelists in Arabic first ed Tripoli Lebanon Jarrus Press p 138 هيفاء بيطار ترصد المجتمع ومشاكله في كتابة نسوية عميقة Kitabat in Arabic 23 June 2017 Archived from the original on 19 July 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 صفحة من معاناة المثقفين في سورية الأسد هيفاء بيطار Alraafed 21 March 2018 Archived from the original on 19 July 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 البيطار النصوص التي تشد القارئ حتى النهاية esyria sy in Arabic 30 May 2008 Archived from the original on 19 July 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 الأديبة هيفاء بيطار الكتابة هي فعل الحياة الأكثر كثافة Jouhina in Arabic 2 April 2009 Archived from the original on 19 July 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 هيفاء بيطار لا حرية في سورية على الإطلاق خاص ة في مجال الكتابة والإبداع Harmoon in Arabic 8 July 2021 Archived from the original on 19 July 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 بيطار من يوميات مطلقة إلى امرأة من طابقين esyria in Arabic 15 November 2011 Archived from the original on 19 July 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 Habib Shahnaz February 17 2009 The Gulf The New Yorker Retrieved 21 April 2022 Al Lawati Abbas February 27 2009 Internet globalises Arabic literature Gulf News Retrieved 21 April 2022 a b Hamdar Abir 2014 The Female Suffering Body Illness and Disability in Modern Arabic Literature Syracuse University Press pp 113 120 ISBN 9780815652908 Retrieved 29 April 2022 Aghacy Samira 2020 Ageing in the Modern Arabic Novel Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9781474466783 Retrieved 29 April 2022 Ray Jureidini 2014 Sexuality and the Servant An Exploration of Arab Images of the Sexuality of Domestic Maids Living In the Household In Gagnon John Khalaf Samir eds Sexuality in the Arab World Saqi ISBN 9780863564871 Retrieved 29 April 2022 a b c d Berg Lovisa 2021 Masculinity and Syrian Fiction Gender Society and the Female Gaze Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9780755637638 Retrieved 29 April 2022 9 Short Stories by Syrian Women in Translation ArabLit 2021 Retrieved 27 April 2022 via Gale a b Haifa BITAR The International Writing Program iwp uiowa edu Retrieved 2022 04 19 a b Bitar Haifa April 1 2014 Love Struck Guernica Retrieved 21 April 2022 translated from the Arabic by Hannah Benninger Haifa Bitar etccmena Retrieved 19 July 2022 هيفاء بيطار Abjad Retrieved 19 July 2022 The Arabic Classroom Context Text and Learners 2019 United Kingdom Taylor amp Francis p117 مصرية Adel إيمان عادل صحافية Eman 2020 07 05 When I Booked a Seat in the Divorced Women s Club Daraj daraj com Retrieved 2022 04 29 Banipal UK Magazine of Modern Arab Literature Book Reviews A Woman of This Modern Age Banipal Retrieved 2022 04 19 Aghacy Samira May 2016 Reviews The Female Suffering Body Illness and Disability in Modern Arabic Literature International Journal of Middle East Studies 48 2 390 392 doi 10 1017 S0020743816000167 S2CID 163700471 Hamdar Abir Feb 2019 Between Representation and Reality Disabled Bodies in Arabic Literature PDF International Journal of Middle East Studies 51 1 127 130 doi 10 1017 S0020743818001186 S2CID 165520367 External links Edit2014 Opinion Piece in The New Arab Syria s pampered coast 2021 writing A Family of Martyrs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hayfa Baytar amp oldid 1155592052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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