Khalid Alvi | |
---|---|
Born | Chandpur, Bijnor, Uttar Pradesh | 20 June 1962
Nationality | Indian |
Alma mater | PhD (Delhi University) |
Parent(s) | Late Malik Irfan Ahmad, Late Islama Khatoon |
Khalid Alvi also known as Khalid Mustafa Alvi is a professor at the University of Delhi, critic, and Urdu poet. He has written twelve books and edited the English journal Furtherance and the Urdu monthly Shahkaar. Some of his works have been translated into German, Persian and Uzbek Languages.
Early life and education
Khalid Alvi received his early education in his home town Chandpur, Bijnor, Uttar Pradesh and then he joined the University of Delhi as a Research Scholar. During his stay at University of Delhi as a research scholar he was invited to deliver a series of lecture on Indian literature by Peshawar University, Oriental Institute Tashkent and some other Organisations in various parts of the world.
Career
After Alvi finished his MPhil, he was offered an assistant professorship at the college of Delhi University.
Writing
One of Alvi's books, Angarey, has been the subject of controversy. The book is a collection of Urdu short stories, first published in the 1930s, and then banned in 1933. It was written by Sajjad Zaheer, Rashid Jahan, Mahmud-uz-Zafar and Ahmed Ali[1] Alvi reissued the book in 1993, but, when doing so, had to excise major portions of it.[2] In 2014 he along with Vibha S. Chauhan translated the book in English.[3]
Bibliography
References
- โ Swami, Praveen (7 May 2013). "India's cricket god Dhoni and our crazed god squad". Firstpost World. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
- โ Kumar, Girja (1997). The book on trial: fundamentalism and censorship in India. Har-Anand Publications. p. 124. ISBN 9788124105252.
- โ "The literary forest fire that censors failed to extinguish". www.sunday-guardian.com. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
External links
- Media related to Khalid Alvi (writer) at Wikimedia Commons