Rana al-Tonsi (Arabic: رنا التونسي) is an Egyptian writer and poet.
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Rana al-Tonsi | |
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Born | 27 November 1981 Cairo, Egypt |
Nationality | Egyptian |
Citizenship | Doha, Qatar |
Occupation | Poet |
Al-Tonsi was born on 27 November 1981 in Cairo and attended the American University in Cairo.[1] She started writing when she was young and published her first book before she was 20 years old.[1] Her first collection, The House From Which Music Came was published to critical acclaim.[1]
Al-Tonsi's writing addresses themes of violence, rebellion, motherhood and intimacy.[2]
Since her first publication, works include:
Al-Tonsi is viewed as an important voice in the middle-generation of women poets who have published since the 1980s.[5]
The late Egyptian poet Ahmed Fouad, the star of her third work, "A Homeland Called Desire", said that Rana Al-Tonsi "carries the concerns of an orphan generation rejecting the experience of the fathers who inherited the homeland."[6] Egyptian critic Salah Fadl, says of Rana's Tunisian Poem that it "does not rely on a continuous narrative, for a single story ... but rather composes fragments of spaced parts … It ranges from the outside to the self, from sense to abstract morality ..."[6]
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