Salmi Manja
Salmi Manja | |
---|---|
Born |
Saleha binti Abdul Rashid 24 July 1937 Singapore |
Pen name |
Salmi Manja Melati Desa Rashidah Salleh |
Occupation | novelist, poet, journalist |
Language | Malay |
Ethnicity | Malay |
Notable works |
Hari Mana Bulan Mana Sayang Ustazah Sayang |
Saleha binti Abdul Rashid (born 24 July 1937), better known by her pen name Salmi Manja, is a Malaysian novelist, poet, and journalist. She was among the first Malaysian professional women writers and best known for her 1960 novel Hari Mana Bulan Mana (What Day What Month).[1] Femininity, women's issues, and Islam are recurring themes in her work.
Early life and education
Salmi went to Darul Maarif Arab-language school and Tong Chai English School in Singapore. In 1956, Salmi attended a writing course offered by the Malay writer Harun Aminurrashid and became a member of the ASAS 50 group along with Usman Awang.
Career
Before her career as a journalist and writer, Salmi worked as a religious teacher in her former school Darul Maarif during which time she contributed works of poetry to a number of local magazines. Salmi later became a journalist for Semenanjung and Berita Harian.[2]
In April 1958, Salmi married the noted novelist and poet A. Samad Said and moved from Singapore to join him in Kuala Lumpur.[3] Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, she published five other novels and two anthologies of short stories and poems. She continued her career as a journalist, working with Cahaya Lembaga and the Selangor Islamic Women's Association.[1]
Bibliography
Novels
- Hari Mana Bulan Mana (What Day What Month, 1960)
- Sayang Ustazah Sayang (A Pity, Ustazah, a Pity)
Collection of short stories
- Daun-daun Berguguran (Fallen Leaves)
Other literary Malaysian women
- Adibah Amin
- Anis Sabirin
- Azmah Nordin
- Dina Zaman
- Fatimah Busu
- Khadijah Hashim
- Rosmini Shaari
- Siti Zainon Ismail
- Zaharah Nawawi
References
- 1 2 Hooker, Virginia Matheson (2000). Writing A New Society: Social Change Through the Novel in Malay. Honolulu: Allen & Unwin and University of Hawaii Press. p. 388 (appendix).
- ↑ Campbell, Christine (2004). Contrary Visions: Women and Work in Malay Novels Written by Women. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
- ↑ "Latar belakang Salmi Manja". Wanita ini Salmi Manja. 17 February 2010. Retrieved 8 July 2014.