- Djebar, Assia,
Djebar, Assia, 1936-2015 (Nombre personal)
- Cabecera anterior: Djebar, Assia, 1936-
- Djebbar, Assia, 1936-2015
- Jabbār, Āsiyā, 1936-2015
Déjeux, J. Assia Djebar, 1984: t.p. (Assia Djebar; romancière algérienne, cinéaste arabe)
LC data base 9-6-84 (hdg.: Djebar, Assia, 1936- )
Her Rouge l'aube, 1969: t.p. (Assia Djebbar) errata slip (Assia Djebar)
Biog. info. from LSU files, May 10, 2001 (Djebar, Assia, pseud. of Fatima-Zohra Imalayène, b. 1936, Algerian novelist, historian, and film-maker, b. in Cherchell)
LSU today, Dec. 8, 2000 (Assia Djebar, LSU Foundation Distinguished Professor of French Studies and creative director of the LSU Center for French and Francophone Studies; b. Fatima-Zohra Imalayene)
Le roman maghrébin francophone, 1998?: t.p. (Fatma-Zohra Imalhayene)
NLC database, May 23, 2001 (hdg.: Imalhayene, Fatma-Zohra, 1936- )
Iḥmirār al-fajr, 1969: t.p. (Āsiyā Jabbār)
New York Times, Assia Djebar, novelist who wrote about oppression of Arab women, dies at 78, Feb. 13, 2015 (b. June 30, 1936; d. Feb. 7 in Paris; first Algerian student and first Muslim woman accepted to the École Normale Supérieure, France; first writer from North Africa elected to the Académie Française; appointed director, Center for French and Francophone Studies, Louisiana State University, 1995; professor of French and francophone studies at New York University, since 2001; wrote in French, the language of colonizers but also of liberty, because it allowed her to educate herself)
Wikipedia, September 21, 2016 (Assia Djebar; Assia Djebar was the pen name of Fatima-Zohra Imalayen (30 June 1936-6 February 2015), an Algerian novelist, translator and filmmaker; most of her works deal with obstacles faced by women, and she is noted for her feminist stance; Djebar is considered to be one of North Africa's pre-eminent and most influential writers; she was elected to the Académie française on 16 June 2005, the first writer from the Maghreb to achieve such recognition; for the entire body of her work she was awarded the 1996 Neustadt International Prize for Literature; she was often named as a contender for the Nobel Prize for Literature)
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