Ali Nazem
This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (February 2014) |
Ali Nazem | |
---|---|
Born | 1906 Tabriz, Iran |
Died | 1941 Baku, Azerbaijan |
Occupation | Poet, writer and literary critic |
Ali Nazem (Persian: علی ناظم, Azerbaijani: Əli Nazim) – was an Azerbaijani poet, writer and literary critic of Azerbaijani literature.
Early life[]
Nazem was born on 24 November 1906 in Tabriz. He graduated from the Leningrad Institute of Oriental Studies and later completed his postgraduate studies in Moscow, where he conducted research and teaching.
Writings[]
His writing was first published in 1921 in the newspaper "Ishtirak" ("Communist"). In 1930, Nazem became a member of the Communist party and served as an active Marxist literary critic. He is now considered one of the founders of Marxist criticism in Azerbaijan, known for his work on the history of classical literature (about MFAkhundov, J. Mamedkulizade, MA Sabir, etc.)
In 1937 he was, together with A. Jawad, H. Javid, Mushfig, Musahanly, Yusif Vazir, S. Hussein, Cantemir, Talibli and A. Razi, declared an "agent of the German-Japanese fascism, Trotskyist, Musavat and nationalist deviators." In 1937, he was arrested and died in prison on 23 August 1941. In 1957 Nazem was rehabilitated.
Notes[]
External links[]
- Ali Nazem, Назим / Под ред. Surkov, Alexei Alexandrovich. — Concise Literary Encyclopedia: Great Russian Encyclopedia (published), 1962. — Т. 5. — С. 96.
- Назим / И. К. Луппол, М. М. Розенталь, С. М. Третьяков, С. С. Лесневский. — Первый всесоюзный съезд советских писателей, 1934. Стенографический отчет. Приложения: Советский писатель, 1990. — Т. 2. — С. 56.
- Əli Nazim (1906–1941)- tənqidçi, ədəbiyyatşünas
- Əli Nazimin tənqidçilik sənəti
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- 1906 births
- 1941 deaths
- Azerbaijani literary critics
- Azerbaijani literary theorists
- Iranian Azerbaijani writers
- Iranian Azerbaijani poets
- Azerbaijani poets
- Azerbaijani-language poets
- Azerbaijani-language writers
- 20th-century poets
- Iranian emigrants to the Soviet Union
- Soviet rehabilitations
- Soviet literary historians
- Soviet male writers
- 20th-century male writers
- Poets from Tabriz