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Abdelhak Serhane (born in Sefrou in 1950) is a Moroccan novelist writing in French. Serhane grew up in the Middle Atlas region of Morocco, in the village Azrou, he studied psychology at the University of Toulouse II and taught at the University Ibn Tofail in Kénitra, Morocco before he went to Canada to escape from the political oppression of the Moroccan government. Since that time he has split his time between Morocco, Canada and the United States where he teaches French literature at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.〔Salim Jay, ''Dictionnaire des écrivans marocains'', 2005 p. 323〕〔James Gaasch, ''Anthologie de la nouvelle maghrébine'', EDDIF, 1996, p. 193〕 Serhane has been a vociferous critic of the regime of Hassan II and has denounced the violent and oppressive nature of the government at that time in novels like ''Mesouda'' and ''Le Soleil des obscurs''.〔Achour Cheurfi, ''L'encyclopédie maghrébine'', Casbah éditions, 2007, p. 977〕 He has taken position against the impunity of those who have enriched themselves thanks to the corruption of the Moroccan political system.〔Khalid Zekri, ''Itinéraires et contact de cultures'', Harmattan, 2006 p. 124 "Abdelhak Serhane: une écriture de l 'engagement"〕 In 1993 he received the ''Prix français du monde arabe'', and in 1999 the ''Prix Francophonie, Afrique méditerranéenne''.〔R.C. Njoku, ''Culture And Customs of Morocco'', Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006, p. 40〕 ==Novels== * ''Messaouda'', Paris, Seuil, 1983. (Prix Littéraire des Radios Libres, 1984) * ''Les Enfants des rues étroites'', Paris, Seuil, 1986. * ''Le Soleil des obscurs'', Paris, Seuil, 1992. (Prix Français du Monde Arabe, 1993). * ''Le Deuil des chiens'', Paris, Seuil, 1998. * ''Temps noirs'', Paris, Seuil, 2002. * ''L'homme qui descend des montagnes'', Paris, Seuil, 2009. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Abdelhak Serhane」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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