Naguib Mahfouz: Egyptian Nobel Laureate

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Naguib Mahfouz: Reading and Writing Egypt

After completing the first Naguib Mahfouz novel that I had ever read, I was immediately struck with the thought that anybody who wants to understand Egypt and Egyptians had to read Mahfouz. It turns out that my hunch was right on the money because the overwhelming majority of Mahfouz's novels have been made into movies and the ones with themes of social and political justice are still popular more than thirty years later.

So, whether you want to understand the real Egypt, just enjoy a fantastic novel, or want to broaden your scope of international literature, please join me on an exploration of the greatest Egyptian writer ever.

Naguib Mahfouz: A Literary Life 

Although four decades separates them, Ali (1951) and Naguib Mahfouz (1911) were both born in el-Gamaleyya, an old quarter of Cairo, and later moved to a newer suburb called el-Abaseyya. I've been lucky enough to have visited both cities and have a much greater understanding of and affection for Mahfouz's work as a result.

Naguib Mahfouz achieved fame as the chronicler of the old neighborhoods of Cairo, and has credited the Cairene world as his inspiration. He was the youngest of seven children, but at 10 years younger than his next-older brother really had no sibling relationship; instead, he emphasized friendships outside of the house. Politics and religion were evidently important topics of conversation in his home, although Mahfouz has remained relatively silent about his family.

Using this historical district as the setting for much of the body of his work, Mahfouz was able to portray the realities of Egyptian life under the British Occupation, the monarchy, the Revolution of 1952, Gamal Abdelnasser's regime, the domestic tyranny of Anwar Sadat, and the puppet-like leadership of Hosni Mubarak.

Read Mahfouz, Read Egypt 

Not all of Mahfouz's canon has been translated into English, but some of his best works have. Here are some of my personal favorites.

Children of the Alley: A Novel

Without a doubt, this is Mahfouz's most controversial work bar none. Begun as a newspaper serial, it was quickly banned in Egypt and only gained readership when it was published in book form outside of the country years later. The novel traces the history of humanity and our propensity for forgetfulness, a problem that causes us to repeat, over and over again, the more negative events of the history that we should have taken to heart the first time around.

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The Journey of Ibn Fattouma

In this pithy, powerful parable, the masterly Naguib Mahfouz explores life's secrets and the mysterious maze of the human heart--a mystical and lyrical Pilgrim's Progress set in a mythical, timeless Middle East.

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Miramar

In Miramar written 15 years after the July 1952 Revolution, Mahfouz presents a historical overview of 20th-century Egypt. He examines life and politics through the eyes of several characters that represent different generations. The novel incorporates stream of consciousness to get at individual perceptions of events. This popular novel was made into an even more popular film.

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Midaq Alley

In this novel, Mahfouz transports the reader to a poor neighborhood in el-Gamaleyya where the inhabitants cling to tradition yet resent its paralyzing power over them as they respond to the combined promise and threat of Western-influenced modernization.

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The Cairo Trilogy: Palace Walk, Palace of Desire, Sugar Street (Everyman's Library)

Mahfouz's most famous work follows three generations of an Egyptian middle-class family from el-Gamaleyya. It covers some very turbulent times in Egypt, 1917-1944. The family is headed by a domineering, corrupt, and hypocritical patriarch who refuses to allow his patiently subservient wife to fulfill her lifelong dream of visiting the mosque just down the street. The scandals, trials, and tribulations surrounding the family are symbolic of the same in Egyptian society. This set of novels is the best way to introduce yourself to Egypt's best writer.

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A Scene from PALACE WALK 

I love this old black and white film of Mahfouz's most famous work.
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Read Mahfouz, Visit Egypt 

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Which Mahfouz novel is your favorite? 

My favorite is The Children of the Alley. What's yours?

Palace Walk (Cairo Trilogy) by Naguib Mahfouz

Palace Walk (Cairo Trilogy) by Naguib Mahfouz

Volume I of the masterful Cairo Trilogy. A nationa more...1 point

Palace of Desire (Cairo Trilogy II) by Naguib Mahfouz

Palace of Desire (Cairo Trilogy II) by Naguib Mahfouz

The second volume of the highly acclaimed Cairo Tr more...0 points

Sugar Street (The Cairo Trilogy, 3) by Naguib Mahfouz

Sugar Street (The Cairo Trilogy, 3) by Naguib Mahfouz

Master storyteller Naguib Mahfouz crowns his best- more...0 points

Arabian Nights and Days: A Novel by Naguib Mahfouz

Arabian Nights and Days: A Novel by Naguib Mahfouz

A renowned Nobel Prize-winning novelist refashions more...0 points

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Whether you're a fan of Mahfouz's work like I am or were just introduced to it through this lens, please leave your mark here. Thanks for stopping by!

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Naguib Mahfouz's Cairo 

Concern with social issues prevails in Mahfouz's realistic novels. His fictional characters come largely from the lower-middle-class stratum of Cairene society and many of them bear clear autobiographical marks. In fact, many of the novels themselves bear the names of the quarters of historical Cairo in which Mahfouz grew up. Many of Mahfouz's plots enact a search for upward mobility in a society severely strained by socio-economic stratification. The quest, however, is seldom successful. Telling familiar stories in ever-changing, freshly nuanced ways is a major characteristic of Mahfouz's works and a key to understanding his widespread popularity in the Arab world. In his novels, the universal is packaged in the concrete details of local color and specific national setting.

Many of Mahfouz's novels were made into movies, films that won the hearts of the Egyptian people and starred such famous actors as Omar Sherif and Faten Hamama. You can find a nice list of the films at the Internet Movie Database. I've even seen some of them available for sale on eBay.

What Others Have Said about Naguib Mahfouz 

Naguib Mahfouz's work has left its mark around the world. He influenced other writers, intrigued critics, and enchanted movie audiences for decades. The following quotations represent just a sample of the comments others have had about the man and his body of work.

"One of the greatest creative talents in the realm of the novel in the world."
-Nadine Gordimer

"As a citizen Naguib Mahfouz sees civility and the continuity of a transnational, abiding, Egyptian personality in his work as perhaps surviving the debilitating processes of conflict and historical degeneration which he, more than anyone else I have read, has so powerfully depicted."
-Edward Said

"He is not only a Hugo and a Dickens, but also a Galsworthy, a Mann, a Zola, and a Jules Romain."
-London Review of Books

"Naguib Mahfouz is the greatest writer in one of the most widely understood languages in the world, a storyteller of the first order in any idiom."
-Vanity Fair

"The alleys, the houses, the palaces and mosques and the people who live among them are evoked as vividly in Mahfouz's work as the streets of London were conjured by Dickens."
-Newsweek

"Throughout Naguib Mahfouz's fiction there is a pervasive sense of metaphor, of a literary artist who is using his fiction to speak directly and unequivocally to the condition of his country. His work is imbued with love for Egypt and its people, but it is also utterly honest and unsentimental."
-Washington Post

"Mahfouz's work is freshly nuanced and hauntingly lyrical. The Nobel Prize acknowledges the universal significance of [his] fiction."
-Los Angeles Times

"Mahfouz presents us with a different concept of the world and makes it real. His genius is not just that he shows us Egyptian colonial society in all its complexity; it is that he makes us look through the vision of his vivid characters and see people and ideas that no longer seem so alien."
-Philadelphia Inquirer

Naguib Mahfouz's Obituaries from Around the World 

Naguib Mahfouz died on August 30, 2006 at the age of 94. Tributes from around the world honored Egypt's greatest writer and Nobel Laureate.
Nobel Prize winner Naguib Mahfouz dies aged 94
UK obituary
Naguib Mahfouz: Nobel prize winning novelist who brought Arabic fiction to the western world
This obituary was written by the man who translated several of Mahfouz's novels into English.
Naguib Mahfouz, a Great Egyptian Writer
An obituary from The Economist.
The Importance of Naguib Mahfouz
Slate Magazine's obituary.
Naguib Mahfouz: An Appreciation
A great article from The Nation.

by Caravansarai

We are Ali and Carleen, the husband and wife team behind Caravan Trading Group, the U.S.'s largest importer of authentic Egyptian hookahs.  We ar... (more)

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