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Bijan Najdi | |
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Native name | بیژن نجدی |
Born | 15 November 1941 Khash, Pahlavi Iran |
Died | 25 August 1997 Lahijan, Iran[1][2][3] | (aged 55)
Occupation | Poet, writer |
Nationality | Iranian |
Notable works | The Leopards Who Have Run with Me |
Spouse | Parvaneh Mohseni Azad[4] |
Children | Nathanael , Yuhanna[5] |
Bijan Najdi (Persian: بیژن نجدی, pronounced [biːˈʒæn nædʒˈdiː];[6] 15 November 1941 – 25 August 1997) was an Iranian writer and poet. Najdi is most famous for his 1994 short story collection The Leopards Who Have Run with me.
Bijan Najdi was born in Khash, a county in Sistan and Baluchestan province, Iran. His parents were from Gilan. When he was four, he lost his father in a murder incident.[5] He got his basic education in Rasht. He got his M.A in Mathematics and was one of the first writers to go to the front in Iran-Iraq war. He started writing when he was young, and published his notable book "The leopards who have run with me" in 1994, three years before his death. This book received a Gardoun award as one of the best short story collections ever written in Iran.[7]
Najdi uses Persian literature's figures of speech to make his style unique. Considering Najdi's works through linguistic point of view, in some of his stories what we have is actually poetry. Language is a base for Praise and poetry and it is the language that forms a poem for its poet and a story for its writer.
Language in Najdi's work is more poetic rather than a social reality. Each language consists of linguistic elements which are regularly put together. Combination of phonemes forms words and words make sentences or phrases. But this is not the only feature of linguistic elements; they can replace each other. Combination and replacement of linguistic elements, forms metonymy. Metaphor is one of these functions which is extensively used in literary works.[8]
Among Najdi's works are poems and short stories. He published The Leopards Who Have Run with Me while alive; his other works were published posthumously by his wife.[9]
Sepideh Farsi made a film based on four of his short stories.[10]
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