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| name = Ali Douagi
| name = Ali Douagi
| image = Douagi.jpg
| image = Douagi.jpg
| native_name = علي الدوعاجي
| native_name = {{lang|aeb|علي الدوعاجي}}
| occupation = Sketch artist, Songwriter, Playwright, and journalist
| occupation = {{plainlist|
*sketch artist
| birth_place = {{Flagicon|Tunisia}} [[Tunis]], [[Tunisia]]
*songwriter
*playwright
*journalist}}
| birth_place = [[Tunis]], [[Tunisia]]
| birth_date = {{birth date|1909|1|4}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1909|1|4}}
| death_place = [[Tunis]]
| death_place = Tunis, Tunisia
| death_date = {{death date and age|1949|05|27|1909|1|4}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1949|05|27|1909|1|4}}
}}
}}


'''Ali Douagi''', or '''Ali el-Du'aji''', ({{lang-aeb|علي الدوعاجي}}) (January 4, 1909 &ndash; May 27, 1949) was a [[Tunisia]]n literary and cultural icon who is considered to be one of the pioneers of modern [[Tunisian literature]]. He is best remembered as "the father of the modern Tunisian short story".<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=79">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=79}}.</ref><ref name=ToutelaTunisie>{{cite web|author=Toute la Tunisie|title=Ali Douagi|url=http://toutelatunisie.com/doc.php?docid=526&artid=435|accessdate=2012-04-17|archive-url=https://archive.is/20120717223025/http://toutelatunisie.com/doc.php?docid=526&artid=435|archive-date=2012-07-17|url-status=dead}}</ref> Douagi was also known for his versatility as a sketch artist, songwriter, playwright, and journalist.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/>
'''Ali Douagi''' or '''Ali ed-Du'aji''' ({{langx|aeb|علي الدوعاجي}}; January 4, 1909 &ndash; May 27, 1949) was a [[Tunisians|Tunisian]] literary and cultural icon who is considered to be one of the pioneers of modern [[Tunisian literature]]. He is best remembered as "the father of the modern Tunisian short story".<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=79">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=79}}.</ref><ref name=ToutelaTunisie>{{cite web|author=Toute la Tunisie|title=Ali Douagi|url=http://toutelatunisie.com/doc.php?docid=526&artid=435|access-date=2012-04-17|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120717223025/http://toutelatunisie.com/doc.php?docid=526&artid=435|archive-date=2012-07-17|url-status=dead}}</ref> Douagi was also known for his versatility as a sketch artist, songwriter, playwright, and journalist.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/>


==Biography==
==Biography==
Douagi was born to a wealthy family of [[Turkish people|Turkish]] origin in the city of [[Tunis]] in 1909.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=79"/><ref name=ToutelaTunisie/> His father, al-Hajj Muhammad al-Du'aji who was a wealthy merchant and landowner, died when Douagi was four years old; he bequeathed to his wife and children a sizeable trust fund from which the family was able to live comfortably. His mother, Nuzhat Bint Shaqshuq, gave birth to three daughters and two sons, Douagi being the only survivor of the two sons. Thus, growing up without his father and being the only son, in part, explains why his works had come to be heavily populated by women characters.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=79"/> Douagi received his primary education in a neighbourhood school where he learned both [[French language|French]] and [[Arabic language|Arabic]]. Upon completing his primary education, Douagi enrolled in a local [[Quran school]] ([[kuttab]]) but soon discovered that this did not fulfill his interests.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=79"/> His mother encouraged him to pursue a career in business, and for a brief period he worked as an apprentice for a local successful merchant.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=80}}.</ref> However, Douagi decided to embark upon a project to educate himself by reading [[French literature]] and culture. When he made the acquaintance of Ali al-Jandubi, a prominent literary scholar, he discovered the medieval and modern Arabic history, literature and cultural studies.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/>
Douagi was born to a wealthy family of [[Turkish people|Turkish]] origin in the city of [[Tunis]] in 1909.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=79"/><ref name=ToutelaTunisie/> His father, el-Hajj Muhammad ed-Du'aji who was a wealthy merchant and landowner, died when Douagi was four years old; he bequeathed to his wife and children a sizeable trust fund from which the family was able to live comfortably. His mother, Nuzhat Bint Shaqshuq, gave birth to three daughters and two sons, Douagi being the only survivor of the two sons. Thus, growing up without his father and being the only son, in part, explains why his works had come to be heavily populated by women characters.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=79"/> Douagi received his primary education in a neighbourhood school where he learned both [[French language|French]] and [[Arabic language|Arabic]]. Upon completing his primary education, Douagi enrolled in a local [[Quran school]] ([[kuttab]]) but soon discovered that this did not fulfill his interests.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=79"/> His mother encouraged him to pursue a career in business, and for a brief period he worked as an apprentice for a local successful merchant.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=80}}.</ref> However, Douagi decided to embark upon a project to educate himself by reading [[French literature]] and culture. When he made the acquaintance of Ali el-Jandubi, a prominent literary scholar, he discovered the medieval and modern Arabic history, literature and cultural studies.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/>


When the colonial governments eased upon [[censorship]] in [[journalism]] in 1936, Douagi started up his own periodical, "''al-Surur''", though it only lasted a mere six weeks due to his lack of discipline.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/> Nonetheless, Douagi came to be associated with a group of artists and intellectuals, known as the "Jama’at taht al-sur" ("The Beneath-the-Wall Group"), who congregated nightly in the cafes of the [[Bab Souika]] neighbourhood of the old madina in [[Tunisia]] to exchange ideas and argue politics. The group were committed to creating a modern [[Tunisian literature]] and [[culture]] that would denounce [[European colonialism]] and the cause of social justice and economic and social equality.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/> Douagi was also experimental and especially known for his versatility as a sketch artist, songwriter, playwright, and short story writer.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/>
When the colonial governments eased upon [[censorship]] in [[journalism]] in 1936, Douagi started up his own periodical, "''es-Surur''", though it only lasted a mere six weeks due to his lack of discipline.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/> Nonetheless, Douagi came to be associated with a group of artists and intellectuals, known as the "Jma’a teht es-sur" ("The Beneath-the-Wall Group"), who congregated nightly in the cafes of the [[Bab Souika]] neighbourhood of the old madina in [[Tunisia]] to exchange ideas and argue politics. The group were committed to creating a modern [[Tunisian literature]] and [[culture]] that would denounce [[European colonialism]] and the cause of social justice and economic and social equality.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/> Douagi was also experimental and especially known for his versatility as a sketch artist, songwriter, playwright, and short story writer.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=80"/>


His Turkish roots and his mastery of the French language, as well as his [[bourgeois]] background and financial security, all played a part in crafting a vision of himself and his work.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=81">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=81}}.</ref> Douagi often depicted and fantasised romanticised strokes of eastern-western encounters. Hence, his stories depicted a peaceful coexistence in which differing cultures and religions coexist; this philosophical stance regarding east–west encounters dominated from his earliest writings.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=81"/> A prominent figure that strongly influenced Douagi was Mahmud al-Bayram al-Tunisi (1893–1961);.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=83">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=83}}.</ref> the personal and professional relationship between them was one that embraced a vast spectrum of contemporary politics, arts, and ideological currents that electrified the cultural scene in Tunisia during the 1930s. They shared a passion for journalism, for the freedom of the press to lash out at social injustices, religious hypocrisy, and economic inequalities.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=83"/>
His Turkish roots and his mastery of the French language, as well as his [[bourgeois]] background and financial security, all played a part in crafting a vision of himself and his work.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=81">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=81}}.</ref> Douagi often depicted and fantasised romanticised strokes of eastern-western encounters. Hence, his stories depicted a peaceful coexistence in which differing cultures and religions coexist; this philosophical stance regarding east–west encounters dominated from his earliest writings.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=81"/> A prominent figure that strongly influenced Douagi was Mahmud el-Bayram et-Tunsi (1893–1961);.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=83">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=83}}.</ref> the personal and professional relationship between them was one that embraced a vast spectrum of contemporary politics, arts, and ideological currents that electrified the cultural scene in Tunisia during the 1930s. They shared a passion for journalism, for the freedom of the press to lash out at social injustices, religious hypocrisy, and economic inequalities.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=83"/>


Douagi's most lasting contribution to Tunisian literature, as well as pan-Arabic literature, are his short stories that were collated and published in 1969, twenty years after his death, into a single [[anthology]] entitled "''Sahirtu minhu al-layali''" ("Sleepless Nights, 2000").<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=84">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=84}}.</ref> On May 27, 1949, Douagi died of [[tuberculosis]].<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=85">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=85}}.</ref> According to many accounts, he was abandoned by many of his friends and harboured bitter disappointment for not being recognised for his work.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=85"/> However, on the tenth anniversary of his death, Zin al-Abidin al-Sanusi published an article entitle "al’Du’aji’s Legacy" which resurrected critical inquiry and public interest in his work. Al-Sanusi reported that Douagi had written in his 163 radio sketches, and that his heirs discovered 60 more among his affects. He also wrote 15 plays and composed nearly 500 songs and poems.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=86">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=86}}.</ref>
Douagi's most lasting contribution to Tunisian literature, as well as pan-Arabic literature, are his short stories that were collated and published in 1969, twenty years after his death, into a single [[anthology]] entitled "''Shirtu minhu el-lyeli''" ("Sleepless Nights, 2000").<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=84">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=84}}.</ref> On May 27, 1949, Douagi died of [[tuberculosis]].<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=85">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=85}}.</ref> According to many accounts, he was abandoned by many of his friends and harboured bitter disappointment for not being recognised for his work.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=85"/> However, on the tenth anniversary of his death, Zin el-Abidin es-Sanusi published an article entitle "Ed-Du’aji’s Legacy" which resurrected critical inquiry and public interest in his work. Al-Sanusi reported that Douagi had written in his 163 radio sketches, and that his heirs discovered 60 more among his affects. He also wrote 15 plays and composed nearly 500 songs and poems.<ref name="Granara 2010 loc=86">{{Harvnb|Granara|2010|loc=86}}.</ref>

The '''Ali Douagi Prize''' (''Prix Ali Douagi'') for a novel is awarded at the Tunis International Book Festival (''Foire internationale du Livre de Tunis'').<ref name="prize">{{cite web |title=Conférence de presse de la 35e édition de la Foire internationale du Livre de Tunis |url=http://www.misk.art/lire/conference-de-presse-de-la-35e-edition-de-la-foire-internationale-du-livre-de-tunis |website=Misk |access-date=16 March 2021 |date=27 March 2019}}</ref><ref name="cite">{{cite web |title=Foire Internationale du Livre de Tunis |url=http://www.citedelaculture.gov.tn/fr/foire-internationale-du-livre-de-tunis |publisher=Cité de la culture |access-date=16 March 2021 |archive-date=21 February 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200221155412/http://www.citedelaculture.gov.tn/fr/foire-internationale-du-livre-de-tunis |url-status=dead }}</ref> The [[Derja Association]] also awards an '''Ali Douagi Prize''' for the best work written in [[Tunisian Arabic]] ("''[[Maghrebi Arabic|derja]]''"), in reference to Ali Douagi's use of vernacular in his plays and the dialogues of his short stories.<ref>{{Cite web|title=الكولوك|trans-title=Annual Colloquium|url=http://www.bettounsi.com/kolok1|url-status=live|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Derja Association|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200625200451/http://www.bettounsi.com:80/kolok1 |archive-date=2020-06-25 }}</ref> This has caused confusion and some have criticized the Derja Association for choosing the same name as the more prominent prize.<ref>{{Cite news|last=خلف الله|first=نجم الدين|date=2021-03-11|title=في الاستيلاء على الدوعاجي.. تنويع تونسيّ على سجال الفصحى والعامّية|trans-title=Co-opting Ali Douagi: Tunisia rehashes the Standard–Vernacular debate|work=Al-Arabi Al-Jadid العربي الجديد|url=https://www.alaraby.co.uk/culture/%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%B3%D8%AA%D9%8A%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%A1-%D8%B9%D9%84%D9%89-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AF%D9%88%D8%B9%D8%A7%D8%AC%D9%8A-%D8%AA%D9%86%D9%88%D9%8A%D8%B9-%D8%AA%D9%88%D9%86%D8%B3%D9%8A%D9%91-%D8%B9%D9%84%D9%89-%D8%B3%D8%AC%D8%A7%D9%84-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%81%D8%B5%D8%AD%D9%89-%D9%88%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B9%D8%A7%D9%85%D9%91%D9%8A%D8%A9}}</ref>


==Selected works==
==Selected works==
* ''Sahirtu minhu al-layali'' (''Sleepless Nights'')
* ''Shirtu minhu el-lyeli'' (''Sleepless Nights'')
* ''Jarati'' (''My neighbor'')
* ''Jeri'' (''My neighbour'')
* ''Maotou Al Am Békhir'' (''The death of the Uncle Bekhir'')
* ''Maotou El Am Békhir'' (''The death of the Uncle Bekhir'')
* ''Nozha Raïka'' (''Luxurious walk'')
* ''Nozha Raïka'' (''Luxurious walk'')
* ''Omm Hawwa'' (''Eve's Mother'')
* ''Omm Hawwa'' (''Eve's Mother'')
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==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
{{refbegin|2}}
{{refbegin|2}}
*{{citation |last=Granara|first=William|year=2010|chapter=Ali al-Du'aji (1909-1949)|title=Essays in Arabic Literary Biography: 1850-1950|editor1-last=Allen|editor1-first=Roger|place=|publisher=Otto Harrassowitz Verlag|isbn=3447061413}}.
*{{citation |last=Granara|first=William|year=2010|chapter=Ali al-Du'aji (1909-1949)|title=Essays in Arabic Literary Biography: 1850-1950|editor1-last=Allen|editor1-first=Roger|publisher=Otto Harrassowitz Verlag|isbn=978-3447061414}}.
*Giuliano Mion, ''Notti in bianco'' سهرت منه الليالي, Ulrico Hoepli, Milan, 2012, {{ISBN|9788820351212}}
*Giuliano Mion, ''Notti in bianco'' سهرت منه الليالي, Ulrico Hoepli, Milan, 2012, {{ISBN|9788820351212}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}
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[[Category:Tunisian writers]]
[[Category:Tunisian writers]]
[[Category:Tunisian journalists]]
[[Category:Tunisian journalists]]
[[Category:Tunisian artists]]
[[Category:Tunisian male short story writers]]
[[Category:20th-century Tunisian writers]]
[[Category:20th-century journalists]]

Latest revision as of 14:54, 10 October 2024

Ali Douagi
علي الدوعاجي
Born(1909-01-04)January 4, 1909
DiedMay 27, 1949(1949-05-27) (aged 40)
Tunis, Tunisia
Occupations
  • sketch artist
  • songwriter
  • playwright
  • journalist

Ali Douagi or Ali ed-Du'aji (Tunisian Arabic: علي الدوعاجي; January 4, 1909 – May 27, 1949) was a Tunisian literary and cultural icon who is considered to be one of the pioneers of modern Tunisian literature. He is best remembered as "the father of the modern Tunisian short story".[1][2] Douagi was also known for his versatility as a sketch artist, songwriter, playwright, and journalist.[3]

Biography

[edit]

Douagi was born to a wealthy family of Turkish origin in the city of Tunis in 1909.[1][2] His father, el-Hajj Muhammad ed-Du'aji who was a wealthy merchant and landowner, died when Douagi was four years old; he bequeathed to his wife and children a sizeable trust fund from which the family was able to live comfortably. His mother, Nuzhat Bint Shaqshuq, gave birth to three daughters and two sons, Douagi being the only survivor of the two sons. Thus, growing up without his father and being the only son, in part, explains why his works had come to be heavily populated by women characters.[1] Douagi received his primary education in a neighbourhood school where he learned both French and Arabic. Upon completing his primary education, Douagi enrolled in a local Quran school (kuttab) but soon discovered that this did not fulfill his interests.[1] His mother encouraged him to pursue a career in business, and for a brief period he worked as an apprentice for a local successful merchant.[3] However, Douagi decided to embark upon a project to educate himself by reading French literature and culture. When he made the acquaintance of Ali el-Jandubi, a prominent literary scholar, he discovered the medieval and modern Arabic history, literature and cultural studies.[3]

When the colonial governments eased upon censorship in journalism in 1936, Douagi started up his own periodical, "es-Surur", though it only lasted a mere six weeks due to his lack of discipline.[3] Nonetheless, Douagi came to be associated with a group of artists and intellectuals, known as the "Jma’a teht es-sur" ("The Beneath-the-Wall Group"), who congregated nightly in the cafes of the Bab Souika neighbourhood of the old madina in Tunisia to exchange ideas and argue politics. The group were committed to creating a modern Tunisian literature and culture that would denounce European colonialism and the cause of social justice and economic and social equality.[3] Douagi was also experimental and especially known for his versatility as a sketch artist, songwriter, playwright, and short story writer.[3]

His Turkish roots and his mastery of the French language, as well as his bourgeois background and financial security, all played a part in crafting a vision of himself and his work.[4] Douagi often depicted and fantasised romanticised strokes of eastern-western encounters. Hence, his stories depicted a peaceful coexistence in which differing cultures and religions coexist; this philosophical stance regarding east–west encounters dominated from his earliest writings.[4] A prominent figure that strongly influenced Douagi was Mahmud el-Bayram et-Tunsi (1893–1961);.[5] the personal and professional relationship between them was one that embraced a vast spectrum of contemporary politics, arts, and ideological currents that electrified the cultural scene in Tunisia during the 1930s. They shared a passion for journalism, for the freedom of the press to lash out at social injustices, religious hypocrisy, and economic inequalities.[5]

Douagi's most lasting contribution to Tunisian literature, as well as pan-Arabic literature, are his short stories that were collated and published in 1969, twenty years after his death, into a single anthology entitled "Shirtu minhu el-lyeli" ("Sleepless Nights, 2000").[6] On May 27, 1949, Douagi died of tuberculosis.[7] According to many accounts, he was abandoned by many of his friends and harboured bitter disappointment for not being recognised for his work.[7] However, on the tenth anniversary of his death, Zin el-Abidin es-Sanusi published an article entitle "Ed-Du’aji’s Legacy" which resurrected critical inquiry and public interest in his work. Al-Sanusi reported that Douagi had written in his 163 radio sketches, and that his heirs discovered 60 more among his affects. He also wrote 15 plays and composed nearly 500 songs and poems.[8]

The Ali Douagi Prize (Prix Ali Douagi) for a novel is awarded at the Tunis International Book Festival (Foire internationale du Livre de Tunis).[9][10] The Derja Association also awards an Ali Douagi Prize for the best work written in Tunisian Arabic ("derja"), in reference to Ali Douagi's use of vernacular in his plays and the dialogues of his short stories.[11] This has caused confusion and some have criticized the Derja Association for choosing the same name as the more prominent prize.[12]

Selected works

[edit]
  • Shirtu minhu el-lyeli (Sleepless Nights)
  • Jeri (My neighbour)
  • Maotou El Am Békhir (The death of the Uncle Bekhir)
  • Nozha Raïka (Luxurious walk)
  • Omm Hawwa (Eve's Mother)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Granara 2010, 79.
  2. ^ a b Toute la Tunisie. "Ali Douagi". Archived from the original on 2012-07-17. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Granara 2010, 80.
  4. ^ a b Granara 2010, 81.
  5. ^ a b Granara 2010, 83.
  6. ^ Granara 2010, 84.
  7. ^ a b Granara 2010, 85.
  8. ^ Granara 2010, 86.
  9. ^ "Conférence de presse de la 35e édition de la Foire internationale du Livre de Tunis". Misk. 27 March 2019. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  10. ^ "Foire Internationale du Livre de Tunis". Cité de la culture. Archived from the original on 21 February 2020. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  11. ^ "الكولوك" [Annual Colloquium]. Derja Association. Archived from the original on 2020-06-25. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  12. ^ خلف الله, نجم الدين (2021-03-11). "في الاستيلاء على الدوعاجي.. تنويع تونسيّ على سجال الفصحى والعامّية" [Co-opting Ali Douagi: Tunisia rehashes the Standard–Vernacular debate]. Al-Arabi Al-Jadid العربي الجديد.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Granara, William (2010), "Ali al-Du'aji (1909-1949)", in Allen, Roger (ed.), Essays in Arabic Literary Biography: 1850-1950, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, ISBN 978-3447061414.
  • Giuliano Mion, Notti in bianco سهرت منه الليالي, Ulrico Hoepli, Milan, 2012, ISBN 9788820351212