Shahnon Ahmad
Shahnon Ahmad | |
---|---|
Native name | شاهنون أحمد |
Born | Banggol-Derdap, Sik, Kedah, Malaysia | January 13, 1933
Died | December 26, 2017[1] KPJ Hospital, Kajang. Selangor, Malaysia | (aged 84)
Occupation | Prose writer, essayist, politician |
Language | Malay |
Nationality | Malaysian |
Citizenship | Malaysia |
Alma mater | Australian National University |
Period | 1968–1971 |
Years active | 1950s–2017 |
Notable awards | Mastera Laureate (2010, 2011) |
Shahnon Ahmad | |
---|---|
Member of the Malaysian Parliament for Sik | |
In office 1999–2004 | |
Preceded by | Abdul Hamid Othman (BN–UMNO) |
Succeeded by | Wan Azmi Wan Ariffin (BN–UMNO) |
Majority | 335 (1999) |
Personal details | |
Political party | Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) |
Dato' Haji Shahnon bin Ahmad (January 13, 1933 – December 26, 2017) was a Malaysian writer, a National Laureate, and a Member of Parliament. He was awarded with the National Literary Award in 1982. He was also a Professor Emeritus at Universiti Sains Malaysia in Penang.
Brief biography
[edit]Shahnon was born on 13 January 1933 as the youngest child to a peasant family in Banggol-Derdap, Sik, Kedah; his father Ahmad Abu Bakar hailed from Medan in the Dutch East Indies while Kelsum Mohd Saman was a Pattani native whose father came to settle in Malaya from Kampong Poseng in southern Thailand in the late 19th century.[2] Shahnon's father had been previously working as a staff at the surveyor department, then a postman until the Second World War when the British forces hired him as a clandestine spy.[2]
He and one sibling of his were able to attend their studies at the Sultan Abdul Hamid College in Alor Setar through financial aid provided by the intelligence services as a reward to their father for his services - amidst common fears by most villagers that their children might embrace Christianity if they were educated in such schools at that time.[2] After graduating from the school in 1954, he worked as a teacher in an English school in Kuala Terengganu. He served in the army from 1955 to 1956. After the stint, he worked as a teacher in various schools until 1967. In 1968 to 1971, he studied at the Australian National University, Canberra.
After his graduation there, he taught at the Sultan Idris Education University in Tanjung Malim, Perak until 1975. From that time to his death, he was connected with the University of Science, Malaysia in Penang which included being a professor of literature starting in 1982.
Shahnon was also a member of opposition political party Parti Islam Se-Malaysia. In the 1999 general election, he contested in the Parliamentary constituency of Sik (P.13) in which he won. He did not contest in the 2004 general election which saw PAS losing that seat to Barisan Nasional.[3]
Literary career
[edit]The first works were published in 1950s - he began his writing as an interpreter and a writer of short stories. In 1965, he made his debut as a novelist, releasing the novel Rentong ("Till Ashes"), a drama of characters taking place in a Malay village. The different types of attitude to reality are revealed and demonstrated by its narrative and main characters.[4]
Shahnon published several highly topical "urban" novels since. "Minister" (1967) paid tribute to Malay nationalism.[5] His next novel, one of his most famous ones, Ranjau Sepanjang Jalan ("No Harvest but a Thorn", 1966) tells about a peasant family fighting not for life, but for death with nature in the struggle for existence; Srengenge (1973)—which won the Malaysian Novel of the Year in 1974—portrays a village enthusiast and reformer defeated by the ancient, pagan-based feelings and sentiments of his fellow countrymen; "Seluang Menodak Baung” (How the smalls defeated an elephant, 1978), reveals the complex process of peasant consciousness awakening in the course of the struggle for land distinguished by a sharp social orientation, psychological reliability and a wonderful style; and the "Lamunan Puitis" ("Poetic Thinking", 2003) trilogy[6] among others.
Some of his works were inspired by religious motives, and several novels are written in the genre of caustic satire on the leadership of the country: Shit (1998); Maha Maha ("Great Worlds", 1999); Muntah ("Nausea", 2000).[7] He wrote not only novels, but also stories (the collection "Anjing-anjing - "Dogs", 1964), plays and essays.
Adaptations
[edit]Ranjau Sepanjang Jalan (1966) was adapted into a 1983 Malaysian film of the same name directed by Jamil Sulong[8] and a 1994 Cambodian film called Rice People directed by Rithy Panh, while Srengenge (1973) was adapted into a television film by Radio Televisyen Malaysia in May 2017.[9]
Death
[edit]He died from pneumonia at 8 a.m on 26 December 2017 at the age of 84 in the KPJ Hospital in Kajang, Selangor;[10] leaving behind his wife Wan Fatimah (aged 82), four children between the ages of 54 to 58, 14 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.[11] His remains were laid to rest at the Bandar Baru Bangi Muslim Cemetery the next day.[11]
Awards
[edit]- Literary Prize of Malaysia (1972)
- Award "The Champion of Literature" (1976)
- Order of Loyalty to the Royal House of Kedah by the Sultan of Kedah in 1980, giving him the title "Datuk"
- State Literary Prize and Title "National Laureate" (1982)
- ASEAN Literary Prize (1990)
- Mastera Literary Award (2010, 2011)
References
[edit]- ^ National laureate Shahnon Ahmad dies at 84
- ^ a b c Alan Teh Leam Seng (6 January 2018). "Remembering a literary giant". New Straits Times. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
- ^ General Election Malaysia: Kedah Archived 6 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Literature. - Malaysia. Reference Book. Moscow: Nauka Publishers, 1987, p. 316
- ^ Victor A Pogadaev. Shahnon penulis dikagumi dunia // Berita Harian 1-January-2018
- ^ Shahnon Ahmad. - Pogadaev, V. A. Malaysia. Pocket encyclopedia. Moscow: Publishing house "Muravei-Gide", 2000, p. 332-333
- ^ Shahnon Ahmad. - Pogadaev, VA. Malay World (Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore). Lingvostranovedchesky Dictionary, M .: Vostochnaya Kniga, 2012, p. 596
- ^ Ranjau Sepanjang Jalan. (February 1983). Variafilem. pp . 48—49
- ^ "Srengenge". My Klik - Radio Televisyen Malaysia. Archived from the original on 24 August 2017. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
- ^ "Sasterawan Negara, Shahnon Ahmad meninggal dunia". Berita Harian (in Malay). 26 December 2017. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
- ^ a b Hasnoor Hussain (27 December 2017). "Perjalanan akhir Shahnon Ahmad, sasterawan rakyat" [The final journey of Shahnon Ahmad, the people's laureate]. The Malaysian Insight (in Malay). Retrieved 28 December 2017.
Bibliography
[edit]- Shahnon Ahmad (2006). Perjalanan Sejauh Ini: Sebuah Autobiografi (Such a long way: an autobiography). Sungai Petani: Yusran Publishing House (reprinted in 2012).
- Pemikiran Sasterawan Negara Shahnon Ahmad (Thinking of the National Writer Shahnon Ahmad). Kuala Lumpur: DBP, 2012.
- Anwar Ridhwan. Pemikiran kritis Shahnon Ahmad dalam novel-novel pilihan (Shahnon Ahmad's critical thinking in selected novels). - Seminar Pemikiran Sasterawan Negara Shahnon Ahmad (Materials of the seminar on the thinking of the National Writer Shahnon Ahmad). Kuala Lumpur, 13–14 November 2007.
- Mohd. Yusof Hasan (2009). Pemikiran Global Sasterawan Negara Shahnon Ahmad (Global thinking of the National writer Shakhnon Ahmad). Tanjung Malim: Penerbit UPSI. ISBN 978-983-3759-45-3
External links
[edit]Media related to Shahnon Ahmad at Wikimedia Commons
- 1933 births
- 2017 deaths
- Malaysian writers
- Malaysian people of Malay descent
- Malaysian Muslims
- People from Kedah
- Malaysian Islamic Party politicians
- Members of the Dewan Rakyat
- Malaysian literature
- Academic staff of Universiti Sains Malaysia
- Malaysian essayists
- Malaysian male writers
- Malaysian National Laureates