Choman Hardi Explained

Choman Hardi
Native Name Lang:چۆمان هەردی
Birth Date:29/01/1974
Birth Place:Sulaimaniya, Iraqi Kurdistan
Nationality:Kurdish-Iraqi
Alma Mater:Queen's College, University of Oxford
Known For:Writer, poet

Choman Hardi (Kurdish: چۆمان هەردی),(born 29 January 1974) is a Kurdish poet, translator and painter.[1]

Background

Hardi was born in Sulaymaniyah on January 29th, 1974. The youngest among the 7 children of the famous Kurdish poet Ahmad Hardi.[2]

Hardi fled Iraq along with her family in the late 1980s and was granted asylum in the UK in 1993. She obtained her Bachelor of Arts (BA) at the Queen's College, University of Oxford, her Masters of Arts (MA) at the University College London and PhD at the University of Kent. [3]

She has published three volumes of poetry in Kurdish and two collections of English poems, Life for Us (Bloodaxe Books, 2004) and Considering the Women (Bloodaxe Books, 2015), which was shortlisted for the Forward Prize in 2016. Her articles have appeared in Modern Poetry in Translation[4] [5]

Career

She is a former chairperson of Exiled Writers Ink! and has organized creative writing workshops for the British Council in the UK, Belgium, Czech Republic and India. She is a former poet-in-residence at Moniack Mhor Writers' Centre (Scotland), Villa Hellebosch (Belgium), Hedgebrook Women Writers' Retreat (USA) and The Booth (Shetland). As an academic researcher, she has been a visiting scholar in The Centre for Multiethnic Research (Uppsala University), Zentrum Moderner Orient (Berlin) and The Department of Humanities of the University of Amsterdam. Between 2009 and 2011, she was a Senior Associate Member of St Anthony's College, Oxford. In 2014, she moved back to her home city of Sulaimani to take up a post at the American University of Iraq, becoming chair of the Department of English in 2015.

In 2015, she found Center for Gender and Development Studies (CGDS) at The American University of Iraq, Sulaimani. The center mainly focused on gender studies.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2015-11-02 . Poem of the week: Dibs Camp, the Women's Prison by Choman Hardi . 2023-01-03 . the Guardian . en.
  2. Web site: Choman Hardi . 2023-09-14 . Poetry Archive . en-GB.
  3. Web site: biography. 2024-02-19 . Choman Hardi . en-GB.
  4. Untitled . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928005649/http://www.poetrymagazines.org.uk/magazine/record.asp?id=12478 . 28 September 2007. Modern Poetry in Translation. 0969-3572. 2001. 156–157. 17.
  5. "Kurdish Women Refugees: Obstacles and opportunities", in Forced Migration and Mental Health, pp149–168, 2005.
  6. Web site: 2022-05-25 . "With Education You Can Face Every Struggle": Gendered Higher Education in Iraq and Iraqi Kurdistan - Part Three: The Gender Problem . 2023-01-03 . en-GB.