Laleh Khadivi | |
---|---|
Born | 1977 (age 46–47) Isfahan, Iran |
Occupation | Filmmaker Novelist |
Nationality | Iranian |
Citizenship | United States of America |
Alma mater | Reed College Mills College |
Laleh Khadivi (born 1977) is an Iranian American novelist, and filmmaker.
Khadivi was born to a Kurdish [1] family in Esfahan, Iran, in 1977. Shortly after the Iranian Revolution, she emigrated to the United States with her family in 1979, settling in the San Francisco Bay Area. She graduated from Reed College and from Mills College with an MFA. In 2002 she began to research the Kurds, particularly their fate in the southwestern region of Iran under the first Shah. Her first novel, The Age of Orphans, is the story of a Kurdish boy whose father is killed in a battle with the Iranian army in 1921. The boy is captured, becomes a soldier and eventually is turned into an oppressor of his own people. [1]
Khadivi has worked extensively as a documentary filmmaker. [2] She taught at Emory University as the 2007–2009 Fiction Fellow. [3] She also taught creative writing at Santa Clara University during the 2010–2011 school year. She resides in San Francisco, California, where she is a professor in the Writing department at University of San Francisco. Her debut novel, The Age of Orphans, has been translated into Dutch, Hebrew, and Italian. [1] [4]
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