George Zinati | |
---|---|
Born | 1935 (age 87–88) Haifa, British Mandate Palestine |
Died | 22 January 2021 85–86) Beirut, Lebanon | (aged
Occupation | Writer, academic, researcher, translator |
Language | Arabic, French, English, Italian |
Citizenship | Lebanon, Palestine |
Education | University of Paris |
Years active | 1964–2020 |
Notable works |
|
Notable awards | Sheikh Zayed Book Award in 2007 in the translation category King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz International Award for Translation in 2011 |
George Zenati or Georges Zenati (Arabic: جورج زيناتي) born in 1935 in Haifa was a Palestinian-Lebanese academic, researcher and translator. He presented a number of philosophical and intellectual works that discussed various topics, in addition to making several translations, perhaps the most important of which are the works of the French thinker Paul Ricoeur, he died on 22 January 2020.[1]
Biography
George was born in the British Mandate Palestinian city of Haifa, from which he was displaced with his family in 1948 to Beirut, where he spent his youthful years, before moving in the late sixties to Paris, to continue his studies, where he obtained a doctorate at the University of Paris in 1972, under the supervision of Paul Ricoeur, then worked as a teacher at the National University of Zaire of Lubumbashi in Congo between 1973 and 1977, before returning to Beirut to work as a professor of modern and contemporary philosophy and graduate studies, in the faculties of education and literature at the Lebanese University.[2][3]
Published works
- Wrote
- 1964: الظمأ الأبدي, Eternal Thirst, Commercial Office for Printing, Distribution and Publishing
- 1993: رحلات داخل الفلسفة الغربية, Journeys into Western Philosophy, University Foundation for Studies, Publishing and Distribution, ISBN 6144780297
- 2002: الفلسفة في مسارها, Philosophy on its way, conditions and times for printing, publishing and distribution, ISBN 9789959296115
- 2018: الحرية والعنف, Freedom and Violence, The Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, ISBN 6144452036
- 2019: فلسفة ابن باجة وأثرها, The Philosophy and Impact of Ibn Bajja, The Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, ISBN 614445263X
- Translations
- 1993: انفعالات النَّفس, "The Passions of the Soul", by René Descartes
- 2005: الذات عينها كآخر, "The Self Same as Other", by Paul Ricoeur
- 2008: تاريخ الكثلكة, "History of Catholicism", by Yves Broglie
- 2008: تاريخ بيزنطة, "History of Byzantium", Jean-Claude Chenet
- 2009: "الذاكرة، "التاريخ، النسيان", “Memory," “History, Oblivion," by Paul Ricoeur
- 2009: الفلسفة الأخلاقية, "Moral Philosophy", by Monique Canto-Sperber and Reuven Ojian
- 2020: ابن رشد المقلق, "Ibn Rushd the Disquieting", Jean-Baptiste Brunet
Awards
His book "The Same Same as Another" (translated from French into Arabic) won the Sheikh Zayed Book Award in 2007, in the translation category.[4] He also received the King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz International Award for Translation in 2011, in the field of "Humanities from Other Languages into Arabic", for his translation of the book "Memory, History, Oblivion" from the French language, the prize is shared equally with Muhammad Badawi, for his translation of the book "The Interpretation of Cultures" from the English language, by Clifford Geertz.[5]
References
- ↑ "رحيل الباحث والمترجم جورج زيناتي, (The death of the researcher and translator George Zenati)". al-akhbar.com (in Arabic). Retrieved 21 July 2022.
- ↑ "رحيل جورج زيناتي.. تلميذ ريكور وقارئ أثر ابن باجة, (George Zenati, a student of Ricoeur and a reader of the impact of Ibn Bajja)". ultrasawt.com (in Arabic). Retrieved 21 July 2022.
- ↑ "رحيل جورج زيناتي: التفكير برفقة ريكور وابن باجة, (George Zenati: Thinking with Ricoeur and Ibn Beja)". alaraby.co.uk (in Arabic). Retrieved 21 July 2022.
- ↑ "د.جورج زيناتي (2021– 1935), (Dr. George Zenati (1935–2021))". zayedaward.ae (in Arabic). Retrieved 21 July 2022.
- ↑ "جائزة خادم الحرمين للترجمة تكرم مصري وصيني أنتجا أكثر من 180 عملاً, (The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Award for Translation honors an Egyptian and a Chinese who produced more than 180 works)". aleqt.com (in Arabic). 7 March 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2022.