Malika Moustadraf

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Malika Moustadraf (Arabic: مليكة مستظرف; June 20, 1969 – September 9, 2006) was a Moroccan Arabic-language writer. She is best known for her pioneering short stories and women's rights activism, which set her squarely in Morocco's feminist vanguard. Before her early death at age 37, she published a novel, Jirah al-ruh wa-l-jasad, and the story collection Trente-Six.

Malika Moustadraf was born in 1969 into a Muslim family in Casablanca, Morocco, where she lived throughout her life.[1][2] In her teenage years she developed kidney disease, which prevented her from completing university.[1]

Career

Moustadraf published her first book, the novel Jirah al-ruh wa-l-jasad ("Wounds of the Soul and the Body"), in 1999.[1][3][4] This early work, which was self-published, is considered less sophisticated than her later writing. It deals with the traumas that women and girls face under the patriarchy and how women come to support each other through it; the researcher Alice Guthrie identified a "strong yet delicate and understated queer sensibility" in the text.[1]

Her first and only short story collection, Trente-Six, was published in 2004.[1][3] It was released with the support of the University of Hassan II Casablanca's Moroccan Short Story Research Group.[1]

Moustadraf also published short stories and articles in periodicals.[1] Her short stories are considered forerunners of the genre in Morocco.[3] She wrote in Arabic, and increasingly incorporated elements of vernacular Maghrebi Arabic as she progressed as a writer.[1][5][6] She has been described as a "maverick" and a "feminist icon in contemporary Moroccan literature."[7][8] Moustadraf's role as a feminist writer and activist placed her within the country's feminist vanguard, drawing both support and backlash for her work.[1][9] Her story "Just Different" is also thought to be one of the first examples of Arabic-language literary fiction to center an intersex or transgender character.[1][10]

Death and legacy

Selected works

References

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