Middle East

"Abu Dhabi Arabic Language" Announces long lists of program applicants "Research grants"

ABU DHABI, 17th May / WAM / The Abu Dhabi Arabic Language Center of the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi revealed the long list of works submitted to its research grants program in its fourth session 2024.

The program stimulates researchers in the field of the Arabic language and encourages them to present qualitative research projects that contribute to enhancing the status of the Arabic language, raise the awareness and thought of readers, and advance the fields of scientific research.

The research grants program highlights creative works in various fields of the Arabic language and allows serious researchers to present inspiring and qualitative research projects that enrich the Arabic language and enhance its status as a fundamental pillar of thought and cultural identity.

The number of nominations participating in this year’s session reached 270 nominations from 31 countries, and the highest percentage of participation came from Egypt, followed by Morocco, then Syria, then Jordan.

The long list included 33 nominated works, distributed across four fields of knowledge: literature and criticism (19 entries), editing manuscripts (7 entries), the Arabic dictionary (5 entries), and teaching Arabic to speakers of other languages ​​(two entries).

The long list in the field of literature and criticism included 19 works: “The Character of the Other and Its Representations in Modern Arab Feminist Poetry” by researcher Iyad Abdel Majeed Ibrahim, with the participation of researcher Ali Haddad Hussein Al-Saray, and “Building Al-Azjal and Al-Balikat in the Two Era: Andalusian and Mamluk, (A Balancing Study)” by researcher Ahmed Atta. With the participation of researchers Muhammad Adel and Ahmed Makkawi, and “The Popular History of Arab Leaders in the Modern Era: (Prince Abdel Qader Al-Jazairi, Saad Zaghloul, King Faisal, Sheikh Zayed)” by researcher Khaled Abu Al-Lail.

It also included “The Rhetoric of Ideas and Surplus of Meaning: A Civilized Approach to the Cognitive Identity of the Discourse of Ancient Arabic Poetry” by the researcher Abdel Fattah Youssef, and “The Semiotics of the Narrative Text: The Precious Things of Relations in the Exploits of Lovers by Ibn Hamama al-Maghribi as a Model” by the researcher Imad Hamdi Abdullah Ali, and the Nabati Sayings by the researcher Qaddoura Al-Ajni and Translation and Power Differences: Approaches in Theory and Practice” by researcher Nahid Raheel and “Environmental Sustainability in the Arabic Novel” by researchers Nasr Al-Najjar and Muhammad Abdullah.

It also included “The Discourse of Educational Narratives and the Consolidation of the Sciences of Understanding: Research into the Pragmatic Function of Rhythm” by researcher Mahdi Laraj, “The Ego and its Shadows: The Autobiographical in Modern Arabic Poetry” by researcher Abdul Latif Al-Warari, “The Collection of Poetic Puzzles” by researcher Anas Abdul Hadi Abu Hilal, and “Dreams of Sand: Poetics.” “Water in the Pre-Islamic Poem” by researcher Dargham Arif Al-Saeed and “The Poetic Journey of the Howdah: Phenomenological Reflections” by researcher Rania bint Muhammad Sharif bin Saleh Al-Ardawi.

The works also included “The Sacred in Pre-Islamic Poetry – A Thematic Study” by researcher Abdullah Al-Baradi, “Writing and Identity: Manifestations of Feminist Discourse in Autobiographical Literature: A Critical Approach” by researcher Abbas Abdel Halim Abbas, and “The Illness Blog in Arabic Literature, a Cultural Approach” by researcher Fatima Youssef Al-Qur’an. “The aesthetics of the image in the poetry of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, an aesthetic analytical study” by researcher Aisha Ali Al-Ghais.

The works also included “The Interaction between the Art of Interior Architecture and the Art of the Short Story” by researcher Fatima Ibrahim Al Ameri and “Questioning Modernity and Beyond in Emirati Poetry” by researcher Maryam Al Hashemi.

The long list of manuscript editing included seven works: “Explanation of the Diwan of Enthusiasm, by Abu Tammam, Explanation of Abu al-Futuh al-Jurjani, Thabit bin Muhammad al-Adawi al-Andalusi” by the researcher Ahmed Muhammad Attiya Abd al-Hadi, and “Description of Blindness: A Study in Narratives of Popular Literature and an Investigation of an Anonymous Copy of One Thousand and One Nights.” By researcher Faraj Al-Fakharani.

It also included “Biographies of Women in the Completion of Ibn al-Abar in the Rabat Manuscript” by researcher Mona Rabie with the participation of researcher Susan Nashaat, “The Book of Illusion – by Al-Harith Al-Muhasibi” by researcher Aisha Ammor, and the book “Al-Muammarun wa Al-Wasayat by Abu Hatim Al-Sijistani (d. 255 AH)” by researcher Muhammad bin Abdul-Sater Zakaria. “The Diwan of the Poet Suleiman Bin Musa Al-Kala’i Al-Andalusi (634 AH): Collection and Verification” by researcher Rawan Sukkar, and “Maqamat Ibn Al-Haddad: Investigation, Explanation and Study” by researcher Ibrahim Khalil Jaris.

The long list in the field of Arabic dictionaries included five works: “Bakhit’s Dictionary of Verbal Collocations, Arabic-English” by researcher Ramadan Muhammad Muhammad Ahmed Bakhit and “Making a Dictionary of Modernity: The Arabization of Sciences and the Conflict over the Modernization of Arabic in Egypt 1918-1970” by researcher Khaled Abu Hurairah Ahmed and “Dictionary of Food and Eating” by researcher Tayseer Khalaf, “Dictionary of Medicinal Terms in Ancient Arabic Dictionaries” by researcher Kholoud Saleh Al-Saleh, and “The Lexical Commons between Arabic and the Languages ​​of the Southern Levant Before Islam: From the Fourth Century BC to the Sixth Century” by researcher Omar Abdul Qadir Al-Ghoul.

While the long list for the field of teaching Arabic to speakers of other languages ​​included two entries: “Integrating 21st Century Skills in Teaching Arabic to Speakers of Other Languages: Theoretical Foundations and Applied Strategies” by researcher Khaled Abu Amsha, and “Arabic Literature for Speakers of Other Languages ​​in Light of Text Linguistics” by researchers Muhammad Dawoud and Israa Al-Hajj.

The Abu Dhabi Arabic Language Center published the winning works of the third cycle of the Research Grants Programme, as part of the Insights Series for Research and Studies, during the activities of the 33rd session of the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair, which was held from April 29 to May 5, 2024.

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