Sharbari Zohra Ahmed

Sharbari Zohra Ahmed is a Bangladeshi American writer.[1] She is known for being a writer on the ABC thriller Quantico.[2]

Sharbari Zohra Ahmed
BornDhaka 
Alma mater
OccupationWriter, professor 
Employer

Early life

Sharbari Zohra Ahmed was born in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Her family fled Bangladesh when she was three weeks old due to the Bangladesh Liberation War, during which her father was targeted for execution by the Pakistani Army. She went to New York University for her master's degree in creative writing.[3] She lived in Ethiopia for a while, her story "Pepsi" is set in Ethiopia and is about a daughter of a Bangladeshi diplomat trying to fit in the country.[4]

Career

Sharbari Zohra Ahmed was on the writing team for the first season of the ABC show Quantico, making her the first woman of Bangladeshi origin to write for a network show. She wrote a play, Raisins Not Virgins, which was adapted into a short film.[3] Raisins Not Virgins was about being a young female American Muslim trying to make sense of her Islamic identity. She wrote the play in 2003 and adapted it for the stage. She produced the play and acted in it. In 2008 in the Tribeca Film Festival it was selected for the Tribeca All Access programme. Her book, The Ocean of Mrs. Nagai, was released at the Hay Festival Dhaka in 2013. She is on the faculty of the MFA program at Manhattanville College.[4] She defended India actor, Soha Ali Khan, after she was criticised by Muslim extremists for wearing a Sari, which the extremist deemed un-Islamic.[5] She presented in the AWP conference on Post Colonial literature in Bangladesh in 2016.[6] She is working on a new project called The Line with Ikhtisad Ahmed.[7] Her fiction has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies including The Gettysburg Review, Painted Bride Quarterly and the Asian Pacific American Journal. In 2017, she adapted Rickshaw Girl by Mitali Bose Perkins (Scholastic) for the screen. The film is produced by Sleeperwave Films and directed by Amitabh Reza Chowdhury.

Bibliography

  • The Ocean of Mrs. Nagai[3]
  • The New Anthem: A Subcontinent in its Own Words[4]
  • Lifelines[4]
gollark: Newton's flaming laser sword is great, I agree.
gollark: Not that "reality" is well-defined.
gollark: Let me go further and say that the processing is irrelevant; even if we had conscious access to all the inputs directly it would not be possible to prove that they actually corresponded to reality.
gollark: Which would be a cool effect. I wonder how genetically engineerable it would be.
gollark: I assume they'd just assume it was fluorescent if the eyes looked glowy/overly bright.

References

  1. "A conversation with Muslim neighbors, hosted by Darien's St. Luke's Parish is Tuesday". Darien Times. 27 March 2017. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  2. Ahmed, Sharbari Zohra. "How I went from being a novelist to a writer on Priyanka Chopra's 'Quantico'". Scroll.in. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  3. "'Quantico' Writer Sharbari Ahmed On Perseverance, Identity, and Life in the Writers Room". NBC News. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  4. "A writing sensation". The Daily Star. 22 March 2014. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  5. "It's irrational to call Soha 'un-Islamic' because of her sari post, says author Abul Bashar". The Times of India. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  6. Ahmed, Sharbari Zohra. "Searching for a home in the world: Why Bangladesh's fiction writers are isolated". Scroll.in. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  7. "A sneak peek into the life of Quantico's Bangladeshi writer". Dhaka Tribune. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.