Mana Aghaee

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Mana Aghaee
Bornمانا آقایی
24 August 1973
Iranian Studies
Notable worksMarg agar labhā-ye to rā dāsht (2003)
Man 'Isā ebn-e khodam (2007)
Zemestān ma'shuq-e man ast (2012)
SpouseAshk Dahlén
RelativesShirzad Aghaee (father)
Website
iranianpoetry.com

Mana Aghaee (

Iranian Studies
.

Background

Mana Aghaee was born 24 August 1973 into a middle-class family in Bushehr, Iran. In 1987 her family emigrated to Sweden and settled in Stockholm.[2]

She is the daughter of the Iranian literary scholar and poet Shirzad Aghaee of Shiraz. She is married to Ashk Dahlén, Swedish scholar and translator of Persian literature, since 1994.

Career

Mana Aghaee has a M.A. degree in Iranian languages from Uppsala University, Sweden, and is a specialist in modern Persian literature.[3]

She regularly contributes to Persian literary journals and magazines inside and outside of Iran. Her poems have also been translated into several languages, among them, English, Swedish, Turkish, Arabic, Sorani and German.

Mana Aghaee is a pioneer writer in Persian of short form poetry,

Persian poetry, especially poetry from Japan and Korea
, in Persian.

She was the founder and co-producer of Sherophone, the first biweekly

Reception

Mana Aghaee's poems has been well received in Iran and among the Iranian diaspora, and her name stands out together with a few others: "Among other modern Iranian poetesses the names of Parvin Etesami, Forugh Farrokhzad, Simin Behbahani, Mana Aghaee, and Ziba Karbasi, among others, stand out."[5]

Published works

Collections of poetry

  • Dar emtedād-i parvāz, Vällingby, 1991.
  • Marg agar labhā-ye torā dāsht, Bushehr, 2003.
  • Man 'Isā ebn-e khodam, Stockholm, 2007.
  • Zemestān mashugh-e man ast, Stockholm, 2012.

Aghaee's work can be found in the following

anthologies
in English:

  • Rattapallax – Endangered Languages & Poetry, ed. Catherine Feltcher, No 13, New York: Rattapallax Press, 2006.
  • Belonging: New Poetry by Iranians around the World, ed. Niloufar Talebi, Berkeley: North Atlantic Books, 2008.[6]
  • The Poetry of Iranian Women: A Contemporary Anthology, ed. Sheema Kalbasi, Scotts Valley: CreateSpace, 2009.
  • Private - International Review of Photographs and Texts, No 42, Saint-Brisson: Oriano Sportelli Publisher, Autumn 2008.
  • Eminent Poetesses of Persian, ed. S.R.M. Chopra, Kolkata: Iran Society, 2010.
  • The Mirror of My Heart: A Thousand Years of Persian Poetry By Women, ed. Dick Davis, Washington D.C.: Mage Publishers, 2020.
  • Song of the Ground Jay: Poems by Iranian Women, 1960–2022, ed. Mojdeh Bahar, Washington D.C.: Mage Publishers, 2023.

Literary Translations

  • Havāpeymā-i be ārāmi-ye sanjāqak (contemporary East Asian poetry), Tehran, 2014. (Persian)
  • Docharkhe-ye bāldār (150 Swedish haiku), Ahvaz, 2018. (Persian)

Bibliographical Works

  • Lexikon över iranska författare i Sverige (A Bibliography of Iranian Writers in Sweden), Uppsala, 2002. (Swedish)
  • Ketabshenāsi-ye she'r-e zanān-e irān (A Bibliography of Iranian Women Poets), Stockholm, 2007. (Persian)

Academic Articles

  • "Den persiska litteraturen i Sverige (Persian Literature in Sweden)", Litteraturens gränsland. Invandrar- och minoritetslitteratur i nordiskt perspektiv, ed. S. Gröndahl, Uppsala: Uppsala University Press, 2002. (Swedish)
  • "Inledning", Mosaikens turkosa eko: persisk modern poesi (Introduction to Modern Persian Poetry), Stockholm, 2002. (Swedish)

See also

References

  1. ^ Immigrant Writers in Sweden – Mana Aghaee
  2. ^ Niloufar Talebi (ed.), Belonging: New Poetry by Iranians Around the World, Berkeley: North Atlantic Books, 2008, p. 213.
  3. ^ Sheema Kalbasi, The Poetry of Iranian Women: A Contemporary Anthology, with foreword by Desi Di Nardo, Scotts Valley: CreateSpace, 2009.
  4. ^ Sherophone – Mana Aghaee
  5. ^ Anu Dhawan, Persian Influence on Art, Architecture, Philosophy and Culture of Indian Subcontinent, New Delhi: Anuradha Prakashan, 2023, p. 64-65.
  6. . Retrieved 20 February 2012.

External links