Iftikhar Arif

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Iftikhar Arif

Hilal-e-Imtiaz
(2005)

Iftikhar Hussain Arif (

Sitara-e-Imtiaz and Presidential Pride of Performance awards, the highest literary awards given by the Government of Pakistan.[3]

Early life and career

Arif attended the University of Lucknow, then studied journalism at New York University.[4] He then migrated to Karachi, Pakistan, where he was a newscaster for Radio Pakistan.[4] He then joined the Pakistan Television Corporation (Karachi Center) where he teamed up with Obaidullah Baig for the PTV program Kasauti.[1]

He spent the next thirteen years in England, until 1990, working for Urdu Markaz there.[5]

Achievements

A couplet by Iftikhar Arif}

Arif has published three poetry collections: Mehr-i-Doneem (1984), Harf-i-Baryab (1994)[5][1][6] and Jahan-e-Maloom.

Oxford University Press has published an anthology of his translated poetry, Written in the Season of Fear, with an introduction by Harris Khalique, a poet who writes in English, Urdu and Punjabi.[7]

Awards

Bibliography

  • Mehr-i-Doneem (1984)[5]
  • Harf-i-Baryab (1994)
  • Jahan-e-Maloom (2005)[5]
  • Shehr-e-Ilm ke derwazay per (2006)
  • Written in the Season of Fear (English translation)
  • The Twelfth Man (translation of Barhwan Khilari by Brenda Walker, 1989)
  • Kitab-e-Dil-o-Dunya (2009)[5]
  • Modern Poetry of Pakistan (2011)[10]

References

  1. ^ a b c Ashfaque Naqvi (24 May 2003). "A word about Iftikhar Arif (scroll down to read the second column)". Dawn (newspaper). Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  2. ^ "Cultural Pursuits: Urdu poet laments the decline of the language". The Express Tribune (newspaper). 23 December 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b "معروف و ممتاز شاعر افتخار عارف". akhbar-e-jehan.com.
  4. ^ a b c d e Rauf Parekh (6 December 2016). "Literary Notes: Persian translation of Iftikhar Arif's poetry: beautiful and faithful". Dawn (newspaper). Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  5. .
  6. .
  7. ^ Profile of Iftikhar Arif on rekhta.org website Retrieved 15 April 2019
  8. ^ a b Iftikhar Arif interview on Samaa TV website 17 November 2018, Retrieved 15 April 2019
  9. ^ Modern Poetry of Pakistan written by Iftikhar Arif, a book review on GoogleBooks website Retrieved 15 April 2019

External links