Minoo Moshiri
Native name
مینو مشیری
BornTehran, Pahlavi Iran
Occupationessayist, literary translator, film-critic and journalist
LanguagePersian
Alma materUniversity of Exeter

Minoo Moshiri (Persian: مینو مشیری) also known as Minou Moshiri, is an essayist, literary translator, film-critic and journalist.

Early life and education

Minoo Moshiri was born in Tehran, Iran. She attended primary and secondary school in the French Ecole Jeanne d’Arc of Tehran. She then left for England to attend the well-known finishing school "Queenwood Ladies' College" in Eastbourne.

She attended the University of Exeter for six years to receive an M.A. Honours Degree in French and English Literature. For her M.A. thesis she chose Diderot and the 18th century and studied with the famous Diderotiste, the late Geneva-born Professor Emeritus Robert Niklaus.

Career

Upon returning home to Tehran, she became an essayist, literary translator, film-critic and journalist and continues to be active as such. She contributes essays, literary-criticisms and other articles as well as film-reviews in Persian, English and French to some dozen literary journals and film-magazines and newspapers.

Her translation of Jose Saramago’s Blindness into Persian is in its 25th edition (2021).

Awards

In 2006, she won Iran’s First Prize in Journalism for Social Satire.

She is a regular at Locarno, Rome, Thessaloniki and Nyon international film festivals. She was a member of the Jury at Locarno’s Critics’ Week in 2006, in Switzerland.

She was a FIPRESCI jury member at Thessaloniki International Film Festival in 2010 in Greece.

She was a FIPRESCI jury member at Thessaloniki International Documentary Festival in 2011.

She was a FIPRESCI jury member at Locarno's International Film Festival in 2013.

Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres de la Republique francaise.2017

Translations


From English or French into Persian:

Jose Saramago with a copy of Minou Moshiri's translation of "Blindness" in San Sebastian International Film Festival in September 2006
From Persian into English or French
  • If I had my life again (collected essays) 2023

References

  • About the Translator (The Life and Times of Michael K) (in Persian). Tehran: Farhang Nashr-e-no. 2006.
  • Dehbashi, Ali (2005). Prize in Social Satire (in Persian). Tehran: Bukhara Magazine.
  • Farokhzad, Pooran (2002). Anthology of Active Iranian Women of Iran (in Persian). Tehran: Ghatreh Publication.
  • Golmakani, Hushang (October 2005). Prizes and Juries in Locarno (in Persian). Tehran: Film Monthly.
  • Thessaloniki International Film Festival (2010). Tehran: Iran News. December 4, 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.