The pen-name Adonis, which Ali Ahmad Said began to use in the early 60s, refers to the mythological figures of the Mediterranean which interested Arab poets of the Tammuzi school in that period, the dying gods we know from the archaic mythologies of Egypt, Phoenicia and Greece. Born in 1930, Adonis (Ali Ahmad Said) mastered traditional poetic forms very young as a child in Syria. Later, in Lebanon, he became a pivotal figure in the new poetry which began to appear in the influential magazine Mawâqif, which he edited with Yûsif al-Khâl starting in 1968. By that time he had established himself, through poems like those in Mihyar of Damascus: His Songs, as a writer who was thinking of new possibilities in Arabic poetry. Especially in Aghânî Mihyâr Dimishqî, Mihyar of Damascus: His Songs (1963), Adonis forged a whole new set of possibilities for Arabic poetry, writing in traditional meters but directing them towards a kind of modernism which rethought every possibility of rhythm, style, and conceptual complexity. He is the rare poet whose critical commentary is startling and surprising on a level with his poems.
Press Materials for Adonis
DownloadMihyar of Damascus: His Songs Book Cover [Here]
DownloadMihyar of Damascus: His Songs Press Release [Here]
BOA books by Adonis:
Mihyar of Damascus: His Songs