While preparing for her PhD, Ashour was remarked as the first doctoral candidate in English who studied the literature of the African-American | She married Palestinian poet in 1970 |
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, Newsclick, 6 April 2010• I Saw the Date Palms, short stories, 1989• Ashour died on 30 November 2014 after months of long-term health problems | In 1994, Granada Trilogy won the year award of the• org Add to applications Intellectual property is reserved for the authors mentioned on the books and the library is not responsible for the ideas of the authors Old and forgotten books that have become past to preserve Arab and Islamic heritage are published, and books that their authors are accepted to published |
Translations of Ashour's Work [ ]• In 1995, Granada Trilogy won the prize of The First Arab Woman Book Fair in.
21In 1972, she received her MA in Comprehensive Literature from the same university | The Journey: Memoirs of an Egyptian Student in America, 1983• , Arab Literature, 19 March 2011 |
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, Al Ahram, Youssef Rakha, 27 January — 2 February 2000• She gave birth to her son, poet , in 1977 | Granada Trilogy was translated into and• In 2007, Ashour won Constantine Prize for Literature• In that same year, Ashour's husband, Mourid Barghouthi was deported from Egypt to Hungary |
Life [ ] Ashour was born in to Mustafa Ashour, a lawyer and literature enthusiast, and Mai Azzam, a poet and an artist.