Naguib Mahfouz

Naguib Mahfouz,
also spelled Najīb Maḥfūẓ (b. Dec. 11, 1911, Cairo,
Egypt—d. Aug. 30, 2006, Cairo), Egyptian novelist
and screenplay writer, who was awarded the Nobel
Prize for Literature in 1988, the first Arabic
writer to be so honoured.
Mahfouz was the son
of a civil servant and grew up in Cairo’s Al-Jamāliyyah
district. He attended Fuʾād I University (now Cairo
University), where in 1934 he received a degree in
philosophy. He worked in the Egyptian civil service
in a variety of positions from 1934 until his
retirement in 1971.
Mahfouz’s earliest
published works were short stories. His early
novels, such as Rādūbīs (1943; “Radobis”), were set
in ancient Egypt, but he had turned to describing
modern Egyptian society by the time he began his
major work, Al-Thulāthiyyah (1956–57), known as The
Cairo Trilogy. Its three novels—Bayn al-qaṣrayn
(1956; Palace Walk), Qaṣr al-shawq (1957; Palace of
Desire), and Al-Sukkariyyah (1957; Sugar
Street)—depict the lives of three generations of
different families in Cairo from World War I until
after the 1952 military coup that overthrew King
Farouk. The trilogy provides a penetrating overview
of 20th-century Egyptian thought, attitudes, and
social change.
In subsequent works
Mahfouz offered critical views of the old Egyptian
monarchy, British colonialism, and contemporary
Egypt. Several of his more notable novels deal with
social issues involving women and political
prisoners. His novel Awlād ḥāratinā (1959; Children
of the Alley) was banned in Egypt for a time because
of its controversial treatment of religion and its
use of characters based on Muhammad, Moses, and
other figures. Islamic militants, partly because of
their outrage over the work, later called for his
death, and in 1994 Mahfouz was stabbed in the neck.
Mahfouz’s other
novels include Al-Liṣṣ wa-al-kilāb (1961; The Thief
and the Dogs), Al-Shaḥḥādh (1965; The Beggar), and
Mīrāmār (1967; Miramar), all of which consider
Egyptian society under Gamal Abdel Nasser’s regime;
Afrāḥ al-qubba (1981; Wedding Song), set among
several characters associated with a Cairo theatre
company; and the structurally experimental Ḥadīth
al-ṣabāḥ wa-al-masāʾ (1987; Morning and Evening
Talk), which strings together in alphabetical order
dozens of character sketches. Together, his novels,
which were among the first to gain widespread
acceptance in the Arabic-speaking world, brought the
genre to maturity within Arabic literature.
Mahfouz’s
achievements as a short-story writer are
demonstrated in such collections as Dunyā Allāh
(1963; God’s World). The Time and the Place, and
Other Stories (1991) and The Seventh Heaven (2005)
are collections of his stories in English
translation. Mahfouz wrote more than 45 novels and
short-story collections, as well as some 30
screenplays and several plays. Aṣdāʾ al-sīrah al-dhātiyyah
(1996; Echoes of an Autobiography) is a collection
of parables and his sayings. In 1996 the Naguib
Mahfouz Medal for Literature was established to
honour Arabic writers.