Ali Ashraf Darvishian

1941 - 2017
movement:  realism
genre:  short storynovel
country of citizenship:  Iran
languages spoken, written or signed:  PersianKurdish
educated at:  University of Tehran

Ali Ashraf Darvishian (Persian: علی‌اشرف درویشیان‎; 25 August 1941–26 October 2017) was an Iranian story writer and scholar of Kurdish descent. After finishing teacher-training college, he would teach at the poverty-stricken villages of Gilan-e-Gharb and Shah Abad (now called Islam Abad). This atmosphere is featured in most of his stories. His own life situation, as well as the experiences that he had from his teaching in those poor areas, was the inspiration for his literary works and also made him a critic of the political and social situation of Iran. Later, he moved to Tehran and continued his studies in Persian literature. In 2006, Ali Ashraf Darvishian was in Australia as a guest of the Iranian Centre for Democracy and presented a number of lectures on a broad range of social and cultural issues. Marjane Satrapi, an Iranian-French author, mentions Darvishian in her graphic novel Persepolis. She considers him her favorite childhood author, recalls going to his clandestine book signing, and describes him as "a kind of local Charles Dickens".Ali Ashraf Darvishian died at Karaj, on 26 October 2017 and was buried at Behesht-e Sakineh cemetery. Source: Wikipedia (en)

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