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...How Many Of The Greatest Books By Women Have You Read?...
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Edited by seribulan at 4-4-2017 08:02 AM
https://www.buzzfeed.com/arianna ... ZbPR4W1#.ar44pg30jk
How Many Of The Greatest Books By Women Have You Read?
You read 13 out of 102 books
- Maybe you haven’t fully explored the world of books written by women, but the good news is you now have SO MANY WONDERFUL BOOKS TO READ. Very exciting.
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daripada senarai tu, baru baca empat ni je.
“Wuthering Heights” by Emily Brontë
“To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee
“The Time Traveler’s Wife” by Audrey Niffenegger
“A Tale For The Time Being” by Ruth Ozeki
ini pulak teringin nak baca cuma entah bila.
"The Bell Jar” by Sylvia Plath
“The Color Purple” by Alice Walker |
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kategori- Not Much kot...
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Harry potter dgn hunger game jah i tau
2/102
Bnyk habiskn masa dgn wattpad je bm bi semua sapu |
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Edited by samisfar at 10-3-2017 10:42 PM
Wow....of cos Emily Bronte my fav!Sylvia plath Alice Walker Gillian Flyn...and takde listed Agatha Christie my crime novelist writer yng also my fav and i think shes a legend!The time travelers wife Audrey Niffenegger also good..the movie also best |
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Pride n prejudice
Little women
To kill a mockingbird (baca 2x tp still x faham kenapa buku ni famous)
Like water for chocolate (best. dh baca a few times)
The time traveler's wife (best. dh baca a few times)
The historian (x best) |
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Mak pernah baca yg jk rowling seperti di atas je. Huhu |
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Tp mak baca kebanyakkan siri penyiasatan dr sue grafton and Catherine coulter |
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http://www.powells.com/25-women-to-read-before-you-die
Adrienne Rich How often, among literature lovers, are poems from Adrienne Rich's The Dream of a Common Language quoted? ("I choose not to suffer uselessly // ...I choose to love this time for once / with all my intelligence," from "Splittings.") This collection, especially the middle sequence, "Twenty-One Love Poems," contains some of the most beautiful and arresting love poetry written this century. Adrienne Rich is a feminist giant, and these poems, written in 1974, map and delineate the territory of women's love for women (sexual and otherwise) and the struggle of selfhood, consciousness, history, and art with strength, creativity, and fierce empathy. Even if you think you're not a fan of poetry, Rich's work — her "common language" — will move you. – Jill
Alison Bechdel Bechdel first became well-known as a cartoonist for her long-running series Dykes to Watch Out For (1983-2008). When Fun Home was published in 2006, it was clear her work had taken a much different direction. She says that Fun Home is about how she learned to be an artist from her father. "Fun Home" was what she and her brothers called the funeral home that her father ran part-time. Bechdel narrates her childhood through diary entries that catapult the reader back in time, clever juxtapositions of literary classics, and artwork with a slightly gothic feel. The subtitle is "A Family Tragicomic," and Fun Home is exactly that, but so much more: the story of Bechdel's coming out, her relationship with her father, her father's death, and his own sexuality. – Mary Jo
Amy Hempel Hempel used to be in that category known as a "writer's writer" — critically praised, loved devotedly by fellow authors, and often taught (particularly her near-perfect story, "In the Cemetery Where Al Jolson Is Buried") but not widely read. In fact, several of her early collections of stories were out of print and difficult to find. But with the publication of her Collected Stories a few years ago, there's now no excuse for not reading her. Hempel is one of the best story writers in America today, hands-down — her incredible, sharp-edged prose, her precise minimalist style, her devastating and often absurd humor and poignancy have made her a touchstone and influence for other contemporary writers. Hempel's Collected Stories is an abundance that will reward readers again and again. – Jill
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Adichie's ability to write with compassionate, brilliant prose about topics such as civil war, political strife, immigration issues, race, cultural differences, and love has earned her well-deserved critical acclaim and many awards, including a MacArthur "Genius Grant" in 2008. Adichie's most recent novel, Americanah, parallels some of her own experience as a Nigerian coming to America for the first time to attend college. Alternating between the present and past, Ifemelu tries to adjust to her new temporary home, learning what it really means to be black in America. Although now "settled" and with a successful career, Ifemelu longs to return to Nigeria and leave everything behind, including shutting down a popular blog about her notable American observations. A poignant, funny, sometimes scathing look at the reality of being a new immigrant in the United States — especially from an African perspective — Americanah is an unforgettable work of literature not to be missed. – Jen C.
Clarice Lispector Lispector, a Jewish, Ukraine-born Brazilian author and journalist, is much-beloved throughout the world, but is sadly under-read in the United States. Her last (and most popular) work, The Hour of the Star, was originally published mere months before her death in 1977. Lispector's novel offers the story of Macabéa, a poor, unattractive, and malnourished — yet curious (if not a little naïve) — Rio-based typist, as well as that of the book's narrator, Rodrigo S.M., and his mounting hardships in conveying the tale of young Macabéa. Exquisite and singular, the often-woeful novel is magnificent as much for its story as for the uncommon approach by which it's told. Lispector's gifted prose frequently shimmers with an innocent beauty, and so many of her passages nearly radiate from the page. Lispector may well be one of the most brilliant writers you haven't yet had the honor of reading. – Jeremy
Donna Tartt There's no living writer like Donna Tartt. Not since reading the Greek and Russian greats in college have I encountered a writer so gifted in weaving the melodramatic, even the supernatural, into the everyday; nor have I read prose so finely calibrated and opulent that the story's atmosphere quickly supplants my own. All of Tartt's novels — each a decade in the making — involve eccentric characters who find themselves in increasingly outlandish, dangerous situations. Her excellent debut novel, the literary thriller The Secret History, follows a cult-like group of classics students at a prestigious college who begin committing murders, possibly under the direction of Dionysus, Greek god of ritual madness. A spellbinding and darkly humorous drama of privilege and desire, The Secret History is the type of book you read through the night and think about long after you've finished. – Rhianna
Edwidge Danticat Haitian-born Edwidge Danticat's themes of mother-daughter relationships have exotic rhythms that feel as magical as they do earthy. There is honesty in her storytelling of the Haitian diaspora, of divided families; revealing love, loss, and longing. Her novels and short stories are of bittersweet memories and quick, violent societal injustices. Danticat's award-winning writing (National Book Critics Circle, American Book Award, etc.) embodies the spice of the cooking pot, the vibrant colors of Haiti, and a sisterhood of women. In Breath, Eyes, Memory, a Haitian daughter is removed from the world she knows and understands to be sent to New York for a reunion with a mother she doesn't recall. They do their best to accommodate each other's love, but adherence to generational tradition endangers their delicate trust. Danticat's writing is alluring, almost tribal. Simple and complex, crushing and beautiful, Breathe, Eyes, Memory will linger long in your own memory. – Tracey T.
Elizabeth Kolbert In her Pulitzer Prize–winning book, The Sixth Extinction, New Yorker staff writer Elizabeth Kolbert confronts what may well be the most compelling, portentous, and defining characteristic of our modernity: the nearly inconceivable and irretrievable loss of earth's biodiversity at the hands of our own species. Although earth has endured five mass extinctions over the last half-billion years — during which "the planet has undergone change so wrenching that the diversity of life has plummeted" — we now have the distinct and dubious honor of not only "witnessing one of the rarest events in life's history, [but] also causing it." Incisive, imperative, and full of shrewd reporting, Kolbert's The Sixth Extinction is a most significant and substantial work — one that foresees the calamity of our future and aims to forestall the most ignominious bequest imaginable. – Jeremy
George Eliot Eliot is an author most people know from school or because they see her books on lists of "important literature." But reading Middlemarch, her extraordinary monument to early-19th-century provincial England, is far from a stodgy, academic experience. With a touch of satire and an incredible grasp on the intricacies of human nature, Eliot illustrates the patterns — and peculiarities — of the people inhabiting her fictional town of Middlemarch. Flawed and conflicted, her characters stumble along as we all do, navigating mistakes and misfortunes with varying levels of success. This is not a book of classic character arcs or happy endings, but it is a true masterpiece, something to be enjoyed for its intrigue, savored for its razor-sharp prose, and admired for its timelessness. – Renee P.
Isabel Wilkerson From 1915 to 1970, almost six million African Americans left the South in search of better economic opportunities and a higher quality of life. It was one of the largest internal migrations in history and had a profound effect on the culture and politics of this country. To better understand this monumental yet underdocumented event, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Isabel Wilkerson spent 15 years and interviewed more than 1,000 people researching and writing The Warmth of Other Suns. In this masterpiece of narrative nonfiction, Wilkerson gives the epic scale of the Great Migration a human angle by focusing on three individuals to represent each of the three main migratory routes. The Warmth of Other Suns is an illuminating and riveting account, filled with stories that are finely crafted, meticulously researched, and immensely readable. – Shawn
Jane Jacobs Jacobs was a writer, activist, and visionary whose work had a profound effect on the way we look at the urban areas around us. She was considered an outcast in the male-dominated world of urban planning, yet her book, The Death and Life of Great American Cities, remains a seminal text in this field. One of the great joys of this book is that Jacobs is not an academic, but rather a committed city dweller who obliviously derives much pleasure from living in an urban landscape. Her writing is insightful, honest, unpretentious, and eye-opening. The enthusiasm Jacobs feels for our cities is contagious and shines through on every page of this classic. – Shawn
Joan Didion Didion is a true original. Her spare, no-nonsense style and acute observational skills completely changed the way we view literary nonfiction, and the influence she's had on generations of authors is immeasurable. Though often grouped together with Tom Wolfe, Norman Mailer, and others in the New Journalism movement, her work has endured in ways theirs has not. It's been nearly 50 years since the first essays in Slouching towards Bethlehem were written, yet her unblinking portrait of America in general and California in particular remains as vibrant and relevant as ever. – Shawn
Karen Armstrong Armstrong's career began when she wrote and presented a documentary on the life of St. Paul, which aired on BBC's Channel Four. A former nun and one of the foremost authors writing on comparative religion, Armstrong has published over 20 titles. A History of God discusses the origins of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam and explains how our concept of God has changed throughout the course of history. It is fascinating to learn how politics, philosophy, and various schools of thought have changed the way we think about monotheism. Most of us don't spend much time considering where our ideas about God came from. In A History of God, Armstrong gives the reader a wealth of information in order to better understand the big picture. It's a meaty book, full of big ideas and well worth the read. – Mary Jo
Lionel Shriver Shriver sent the manuscript of We Need to Talk about Kevin to her agent just after 9/11. Her agent found the book thoroughly distasteful and suggested an extensive rewrite. Shriver eventually found a new agent and published the book to great success. Twelve years later, We Need to Talk about Kevin continues to be a timely and necessary examination of evil in our society and what happens when that evil is under your own roof. It's a compelling and grim read that has a train-wreck quality to it; you can't seem to look away from the characters. Are they despicable, or well-meaning people floundering in a situation beyond their control? – Mary Jo
Louise Erdrich Erdrich's writing runs deep with 14 acclaimed novels, including The Round House (winner of the National Book Award) and The Plague of Doves (a Pulitzer finalist). While it's likely you've read her more recent titles, to get the keenest sense of Erdrich and her heritage, it's well worth it to return to the first novel of her Native American series, Love Medicine. Winner of the 1984 National Book Critics Circle Award, Love Medicine is heartbreaking, raw, and mesmerizing. The story exposes the heart and soul of the Kashpaw and Lamartine families living on a North Dakota reservation, across generations. Erdrich's writing is colorful and melodic throughout, with breathtaking passages like her depiction of Grandpa Kashpaw: "Elusive, pregnant with history, his thoughts finned off and vanished. The same color as water." Fans and readers new to Erdrich alike should not miss this classic. – Kim S.
Lydia Davis It can be hard to pinpoint what makes Lydia Davis's writing so magnetic. Her precise, no-nonsense language combined with her liberal definition of the short story? Her attention to the overlooked, the mundane, the clutter in our lives that holds so much meaning? Her understated sense of humor, so deeply ingrained in her observations about the absurdities of life? Whatever it is, you'll find it in spades in her Collected Stories, which compiles all of Davis's short fiction from her seminal Break It Down (1986) through Varieties of Disturbance (2007). Few writers' work lends itself so well to a compilation. Whether you pick stories at random or start at the beginning and work your way through the collection (highly recommended), this is a book that feels like the best gift: fun, poignant, and endlessly rewarding.
– Renee P.
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continue....
Margaret Atwood Atwood is a master at conveying the inner landscape of her characters, and her novels are frequently peppered with sharp and incisive social commentary. Adored by both readers and critics, she has published over 40 works, including many books of poetry, and has won countless accolades, including the Booker Prize and the Arthur C. Clarke Award. Cat's Eye, written in 1988, is the story of Elaine, a famous painter who returns to the city where she grew up for a retrospective exhibit of her work. Long flashbacks take the reader back to Elaine's childhood where she endured much emotional torment from her group of friends. Cat's Eye is an uncanny portrayal of how cruel children can be to their peers, the toll it can take on the victims, and how that cruelty echoes on in the mind for years. Atwood brings Elaine's world alive for the reader in vivid and incandescent detail. – Mary Jo
Mary Shelley In her short 53 years, Mary Shelley wrote novels, plays, short stories, essays, biographies, and travel books, but it's not surprising that she is best known for her novel Frankenstein. It's hard to separate the idea of Frankenstein's monster from the popular icon he's become, but everyone should read the original novel. Shelley's gothic masterpiece, first published when she was only 20 years old, is far richer than the legacy it brought to life, a work of elegance and depth, more tragedy than monster story, exploring the dangers of hubris, the nature of so-called evil, the sorrows that lead us to our crimes, and the possibility that rejection and remorse are far greater horrors than any monster. – Gigi
Patricia Highsmith Highsmith is a master of stark, poetic prose, acclaimed for her relentless themes of murder and psychological torment. She is best known for her series of five Tom Ripley novels, popularly referred to as the Ripliad. Like the Ripley stories, Highsmith's debut book, Strangers on a Train, is most remembered for its adaptation to the screen. Its hypnotic plot revolves around a moment between two strangers and one very out-of-the-ordinary proposition: "…what an idea! We murder for each other, see? I kill your wife and you kill my father!" Yes, Hitchcock made that famous movie, but Highsmith's original novel is more complex and far darker. More than just a gripping thriller, this fascinating character study asks the question: What is the dividing line between sanity and madness, between the hunted and the hunter?
– Gigi
Rebecca Solnit Solnit is one of the most eloquent, urgent, and intelligent voices writing nonfiction today; from Men Explain Things to Me to Storming the Gates of Paradise, anything she's written is well worth reading. But her marvelous book of essays A Field Guide to Getting Lost might be her most poetic, ecstatic work. Field Guide is about the spaces between stability and risk, solitude, and the occasional claustrophobia of ordinary life. With dreamlike transitions, Solnit considers a variety of examples which contrast created wildness with natural wilderness, including Passover, punk music, and suburban youth, the early death of a friend from an overdose, movie-making in the ruins of a mental hospital, and her affair with a hermit in the Southwestern desert. She explores the mysterious without puncturing the mystery, and that is a remarkable achievement indeed. – Jill
Susan Sontag Sontag was good at pretty much everything related to language — she wrote novels, stories, plays, and memoirs. But the best of her efforts were her essays and critical writings. It's difficult to narrow down a single collection to represent her nonfiction work, which ranged from horror movies to encapsulating "camp" to exploring illness as metaphor. On Photography is one of her seminal works, wherein she redefines and examines ways of seeing, representation, and reality. As Sontag writes in the first essay, "In Plato's Cave," "To collect photographs is to collect the world," and On Photography radically expands our consciousness of what it is to live in such a place. – Jill
Toni Morrison If the only book you've read by Toni Morrison is her Pulitzer Prize–winning novel Beloved, you're missing out. Known for her powerfully evocative prose, her grand mystical tales steeped in black history, her haunting (and haunted) characters, Morrison is an author whose body of work demands attention. Her third novel, Song of Solomon — Barack Obama's self-proclaimed favorite book — is a magnificent, epic story following Macon "Milkman" Dead, along with an assortment of characters whose lives touch, and at times endanger, his own. Violence and a palpable fear of injustice pervades the people of this book, set in Michigan in the '30s through the '60s. But moreover, as the many characters emerge in full color for both Milkman and the reader, Song of Solomon is a book of awakenings, and a tale of one man's journey from defiance to action. – Renee P.
Valeria Luiselli As sinuous a novel as Valeria Luiselli's Faces in the Crowd is, it is all the more remarkable on account of it being a debut — and a most assured one at that. The Mexican novelist and essayist's first fiction entwines multiple narratives and perspectives, shifting between them with the ease and gracefulness of a writer far beyond her years ( Faces in the Crowd was published when Luiselli was 28). The metafictional scaffolding of Luiselli's novel is seamlessly constructed, and its bibliocentric façade entrenches it within a rich tradition of referential Latin American literature. Faces in the Crowd, beyond its gorgeous writing and superb composition, is modest yet striking, measured yet salient. Last fall, the National Book Foundation named Luiselli one of 2014's "5 under 35," and given the evident range of her myriad literary talents, it's no great wonder why. – Jeremy
Virginia Woolf Reading Virginia Woolf is like stepping out onto a veranda, where the entire world unfurls before you in dazzling detail. Her unparalleled ability to paint a scene so exquisitely, and to inhabit her characters with such clarity and intensity, makes for an experience that is both awe-inspiring and deeply moving. To the Lighthouse, set in a weathered vacation home on the edge of a Scottish isle, depicts lives shaped by the temperament of the environment and the ancient myths of the sea. People's moods change at whim, perspective passes fluidly from body to body, and the grandeur of the landscape beckons the characters to embark on a journey that proves epic voyages don't always involve great distances. It doesn't get more beautiful than this. – Renee P.
Wisława Szymborska One of only 13 women to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature (out of 111 total laureates), Polish poet Wisława Szymborska (pronounced vees-WAH-vah shim-BOR-ska) was awarded the world's highest literary honor in 1996. A career-spanning work that features poems from eight separate collections, Poems New and Collected offers some four decades of the poet's finest verse. Despite having published only a few hundred poems during her lifetime, Szymborska was regarded as one of the century's finest European Poets. Described as the "Mozart of Poetry," Szymborska was recognized by the Nobel committee "for poetry that with ironic precision allows the historical and biological context to come to light in fragments of human reality." With rich imagery and a wide stylistic range, the profundity of Szymborska's poetry makes it personal, timeless, and universally relevant. – Jeremy
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You read 4 out of 102 books.
oooppsss sedihnya.. banyak baca buku2 fiction dari Nora Roberts/J.D Robb, Agatha Christie, Barbara Cartland dan yg sewaktu dengannya je yg tak masuk dlm list di atas |
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PENULIS/PENYAIR WANITA DI MALAYSIA
saya ada menjalankan sedikit kajian tentang penglibatan wanita dalam penulisan puisi. Berikut ialah rencana yang pernah disiarkan dlm Dewan Sastera awal 2014.
WANITA TAMAN PUISI
Oleh Zurinah Hassan
Tulisanini menyingkap penglibatan penyair wanita di dalam lapangan puisi tanah air.Tumpuan rencana ialah kepada penyair wanita yang lahir dan berkarya selepastahun 1990han hingga ke tahun 2013 dengan tujuan mengemaskini maklumat yangada.
Catatanterawal puisi yang ditulis oleh wanita ialah sebuah sajak Hasnah Brahim dalam Lidah Benar, 22 April 1930. (Lim Swee Tin,2002:117). Seterusnya padatahun 1936 seorang penyair wanita yang bernama Zainun Nasir menyiarkan puisinyayang bertajuk “Perempuan Mesti Bangun” dalam majalah Al-Hikmah, 7 Mei 1936. Setelah itu nama-nama yang dapat dikesanialah Perawan Kampung dengan sajak “Bunga Terpedaya” (Warta Ahad, 3 Mac 1940),Kalthum Awang dan Wok Jamilah.
Kehadiranpenyair wanita lebih dirasai selepas zaman pendudukan Jepun dan selepas eraMalayan Union dengan kemunculan sajak-sajak yang ditulis oleh Mariam AbdulGhani, Fatimah Othman, Wanita Kampung, Hafsah Perak, Siti Aishah, KamariahJohor dan Normah Kamarudin. Nama yang penting seterusnya ialah Ibu Zain, SalmiManja. diikuti oleh Anis Sabirin.
Salmi Manja dan Anis Sabirinmuncul sebagai penyair wanita yang aktif berkarya seiring dengan pengarang-pengarang ASAS 50. Puisi-puisi SalmiManja dan Anis Sabirin turut dimuatkan di dalam antologi Puisi Baharu Melayu (1942-1960) selenggaraan Ali Haji Ahmad, 1966,bersama penyair-penyair yang dianggap penting pada masa itu termasuk MasuriS.N., Tongkat Warrant, A.Samad Said, Noor S.I., M.Ghazali, A.S.Amin, KassimAhmad, Suhaimi Haji Muhammad, Nahmar Jamil dan Jihati Abadi.
Pada pertengahan tahun enampuluhan taman puisi diserikan oleh sederetan nama-nama seperti Maimoonah Haji Omar, Rahimah M.Y,Noraini Shahrin, Azizah Shahrin, Halimah Haji Ahmad, Aina M, Maznah Ali.Nama-nama ini sering menghiasi ruanganpuisi akhbar-akhbar mingguan seperti Utusan Zaman, Mingguan Malaysiadan Berita Minggu dan majalah-majalah bulanan seperti Mastika danDewan Masyarakat.
Namunbegitu karya penyair-penyair wanita ini boleh dikatakan kurang mendapat perhatian. Hampir tidak ada rencana, kritikan,resensi atau esei yang mengkaji secara mendalam hasil karya penyair wanitalebih lebih lagi di majalah atau jurnal yang berprestij seperti Dewan Bahasa. Pengkaji dan pengkritikpuisi lebih menumpukan perhatian kepada penyair-penyairlelaki seperti Usman Awang, A. Latiff Mohidin atau A. Samad Said. Kalau ada pun nama penulis wanita disebutialah di dalam rencana-rencana yanglebih bersifat popular (malah hampir berunsur sensasi ) menyentuhperkara-perkara di luar karya itu sendiri. Segala pandangan itu bolehdirumuskan sebagai berikut:
1. Karyapenulis wanita tidak setanding atau kurang bermutu jika dibandingkan denganpenulis lelaki.
2. Penulis-penuliswanita tidak kekal lama, mereka akan hilang setelah berumah tangga.
3. Penuliswanita tidak menulis tentang isu-isu yang penting atau isu-isu dunia dankemasyarakatan. Tulisan mereka hanya berlegar di sekitar hal-hal rumah tangga(membuktikan bahawa isu rumah tangga dianggap perkara yang remeh temeh)
Publicopinion (Pendapat umum) tentang kerendahan mutukarya-karya penulis wanita mula berubah pada awal tahun 1970-an. Perubahan inidibawa oleh Hadiah Sastera Malaysia yang mula diwujudkan pada tahun 1971. Duniasastera seolah-olah terkejut apabila beberapa orang penulis wanita tersenaraisebagai pemenang. Ini membuka mata bahawa penulis wanita tidak boleh dipandangringan.
Penyair wanita dan karyayang menang pada tahun 1971 iaitu tahun pertama Hadiah Sastera Malaysiadiwujudkan ialah Halimah Haji Ahmad (Di Kamar Sewaan), Nor Aini Muhammad(Mengerti), Hanum Ain (Bujang Tua), AinaM (Entah Mengapa), Zurinah Hassan (1971 dan Bahawa Aku Pernah Hidup) . Tahun 1972menyaksikan kemanangan Zanariah W.A.Rahman melalui sajak Gunung Payung Nama Lagunyadan pada tahun 1973, Zaihasra muncul dengan sajak Lautan Di Waktu Subuh.
Sejak itu karya karyapenyair wanita mula dibicarakan dengan lebih mendalam, terutama karya yangmemenangi Hadiah Sastera. Misalnya, AbdullahTahir mengulas sajak ‘Mengerti’ karya Nor Aini Muhammad. Mengikut AbdullahTahir (1977: 73) “ada usaha penyair menggunakan atau menterapkan suatu filsafatbaru dalam sajak ini” Baris-baris puisinya harus direnung dan diteliti untukmenghayati pemikirannya yang tajam.
Lelaki itu
Adalah kekasih yang paling kau kasihi
Adalah musuh yang paling kau benci.
Padatahun 1982, Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (dbp) memberi penghargaan denganmenerbitkan sebuah kumpulan khas sajak-sajak penyair wanita. Antologi yangdimaksudkan ialah Kembang Melati yang diselenggarakan oleh Suhaimi Haji Muhamaddan Pyan Husein. Ia memuatkan karya tujuh orang penyair wanita iaitu SalmiManja, Anis Sabirin, Maimoonah HajiOmar, Zurinah Hassan, Nor Aini Muhammad, Siti Zainon Ismail dan Zaihasra. KembangMelati merupakan satu-satunya kumpulan puisi penyair wanita yang pernahditerbitkan oleh dbp. Selepas itu terbit kumpulan MustikaDiri (dbp 1994) kelolaan Ahmad KamalAbdullah dan Siti Aisah Murad. Walau bagaimanapun Mustika Diri tidak terhad kepada puisi. Ia melibatkan penulisandalam semua genre iaitui puisi, cerpen, drama dan esei sastera. Penulis puisiwanita dan bilangan sajak yang terdapat di dalam Mustika Diri ialah HabsahHassan (6), Hasnah Ibrahim,(3), Khadijah Hashim, (1), Mahaya Mohd Yassin (10),Maimon Rahman ( 2), Mariam Omar (3),Maznah Ali (4),Norzeha Kasbi (6), Radziah M.Zin (3), Ratnawati Jamil ( 3),Rogayah A.Hamid (2), Sairah Haji Antin (2), Salmi Manja (3), Salmiah Ismail ( 2),Siti Zainon Ismail (2), Siti Zaleha M.Hashim (5), Sitti Hadiah Haji Abd Mutalib(20, Zaiton Ajamain (6), Zakiah Bahari (2), Zanariah Wan Abdul Rahmadn (2),Zurinah Hassan (5).
Malangnya,selepas Kembang Melati tidak ada lagiusaha yang dijalankan untukmenerbit antologi puisi wanita sedangkanterdapat antologi yang menghimpunkan cerpen dari penulis wanita iaitu Hawa, dbp, 1984.dan Bunga Gunung, BeritaPublishing,1982.
Setakatini enam orang penulis wanita telah diangkat untuk menerima SEA Write AwardTetapi hanya Siti Zainon dan Zurinah Hassan menerima untuk penulisan puisi.Yang lain, iaitu Adibah Amin, Zaharah Nawawi, Khadijah Hashim, Azmah Nordinadalah penulis novel dan cerpen.
Penyair Wanita Generasi Baru
Bagaimana kedudukan wanitadi dalam taman puisi pada tahun tahun terakhir ini?. Seperti yang dapat dilihat beberapa nama yang mengisi Kembang Melati dan Mustika Diri sudah lenyap atau jarang ditemui lagi di persada puisitanah air. Akhir akhir ini telah timbul persoalan tentang kurangnya wanita yang menulis puisi ataumenjadikan puisi sebagai genrenya yang utama. Persoalan itu menjadi topikperbincangan di dalam beberapa forum. AkhbarBerita Harian, 12 Mach 2013 membicarakan isu bahawa wanita tidak lagi menulis puisi.didalam rencana berjudul “Wanita dan Puisi”.
Mengikut rencana tersebut tidak adalagi nama wanita yang serius menulis puisi selepas tahun 2000., Katanya, ''genre puisiseolah-olah tidak mempunyai daya tarikan berbanding novel. tidak sekuat tahun70-an yang melahirkan Zurinah Hassan,Siti Zainon Ismail dan AllahyarhamahZaihasra. Kebanyakan kertas kerja jugatidakmenyebutkehadiran penyairwanita,berbanding penulis wanita yang menulis dalam genre cerpen dan novel''.
Mengikutrencana itu lagi, kekurangan ini, antara lain, disebabkan wanita lebihcenderung untuk menulis novel terutama novel remaja dan popular yang mendatangkan pendapatan lumayan. Mengikut laporan Berita Harian, 3 Februari2011, pengarang wanita terutama pengarang angkatan baru mendominasi novel remaja dan novel popular .Puisi adalah satu lapangan yang tidak memberi faedah kewangan. Semakin kurangorang yang mahu bersungguh-sungguh di dalam puisi. Jika demikian bagaimanakah masa depan puisiitu sendiri? Hal ini agak membimbangkan kerana tiada pelapis yang meneruskankesinambungan penulisan puisi,
Tiadakahlagi penyair wanita yang menjadikan puisi sebagai tulisan utama mereka selepas SitiZainon, Zurinah Hassan, Zaihasra, Zaiton Ajmain, Salmiah Ismail dan Siti ZalehaM Hashim. Kali terakhir situasi inidiberi tumpuan ialah pada Hari Puisi Nasional, ke 14, anjuran Gapena yangberlangsung di Seremban , 1999, yang bertemakan “Puisi, Kewanitaan dan AlafBaru”. Antara kertaskerja yang dibentangialah “Penyair penyair Wanita Malaysia” oleh Rahman Shaari dan “Penyair WanitaGenerasi Baru” oleh Lim Swee Tin. Lim SweeTin memberikan nama-nama penyair wanita baru dan mengangkat beberapa nama termasuk RaihaniMohamed Saaid sebagai penyair wanita yang berpotensi.
Daripadarekod dan maklumat yang diperolehi terdapat beberapa penyair wanita yang telah muncul pada tahuntahun 1980han, 1990han dan selepas tahun2000 walaupun sebahagian besar daripada mereka tidak begitu aktif menulis. Nama-nama yang dapat dikumpul ialah:
1980-han
AmaruzatiNoor Rahim
AsmiraSuhadis
AnismasAR
HaryatieAb.Rahman
RafflesiaDarlina
NorazimahAbu Bakar
RosmiatyShaari
RositahIbrahim hsku 2011.
RosnaniAhmad
RosaniHiplee
1990-han
AzridahPs Abadi
HazamaHarun
KathirinaSusanna Tati
NorgadisLabuan
AfliezaArshad
RaihaniMohd.Saaid.
NorZaiton Hanafi
ZaitonAhmad
ShashaShakierah
ZalehaAhmat
Selepas tahun 2000
DayanaChacooo
RajaRajeswari Seetha Raman
DayangkuMastura
HaniSalwa
Nissa’Yusof
AinunlMuaiyanah Sulaiman.
RabiatulAdawiyah Abdul Samad
TerataiAbadi
Penglibatanwanita di bidang puisi dapat ditinjau dengan melihat beberapa aspek iaituPenerbitan antologi perseorangan serta hadiah dan anugerah penulisan yang telahdimenangi.
Antologi Perseorangan
Didalam rekod yang ada, antologi perseorangan penyair wanita tidak terbitsehingga 1974, iaitu Sesayup Jalan(Zurinah Hassan). Anis Sabirin yang muncullebih awal tidak menerbitkan antologi sajak walaupun telah muncul denganantologi cerpen Dari Bayang ke Bayang(1966), manakala Salmi Manja lebih terkenal dengan beberapa buah novel. Antaraantologi puisi penyair wanita Malaysia yang diterbitkan oleh Dewan Bahasa danPustaka nya ialah Nyanyian Malam(SitiZainon Ismail, dbp 1996), BagaiLayang-layang (Zaiton Ajamain,dbp 1990), Dalam Pelarian I (Zaihasra, dbp 1977, Kepada Sahabat (Salmiah Ismail dbp 1993), Perjalanan Mencari Kekasih, (Nor Aini Muhammad dbp 1997), Suara Hati (Mahaya Mohd Yassin, dbp1993),
Antologi Perseorangan Selepastahun 2000 (tidak mengambilkira antologi puisi kanak-kanak dan remaja)
1. SitiZaleha M Hashim, Kristal di Laut Bulan. Hadiah kategori buku.2006/2007
2. RosaniHiplee, Sari Rahsia Terindah, dbp 2007 ,
3. RosaniHiplee, Cinta Perempuan yang Cantik, dbp 2011,
4. Rosmiaty Shaari, DariHitam Putih Menjadi Zarah, Iman Creative, KL 2011.
5. Raihani Mohd Saaid, Terminus A Quo, Rumah Buku Rania,2011.
6. Siti Zaleha M. Hashim, Kapal Kertas Dan Lautan Api , ITBM 2012
7. Ida Munira Abu Bakar, Kumpulan Puisi Cenderahati Kasih.ITBM 2013
8. Rositah Ibrahim, Bunga Di Atas Meja ITBM 2013
9. Noor Ainna Abd. Hamid , SyairPuteri, ITBM 2013
10. Norjana Mohd Adnan, Mahagar , ITBM ITBM 2013
11. Rosmiaty Shaari Kembali Kepada Fitrah ITBM 2013
12. Ramlah Bt Abd Rasid Perahu ITBM 2012
13. Raihani Mohd Saaid, Sidang Kultus, ITBM 2013
14. Hani Salwah Bt Yaakup, Tentang Pertanyaan ITBM 2013
Hadiah dan Anugerah
Kedudukanpenyair wanita juga boleh diukur daripada hadiah atau anugerah yang diterima di bidangpenulisan. Hadiah paling berprestij (selepas Anugerah Sastera Negara) ialah Hadiah Sastera Perdana Malaysia (HSPM). Hadiahyang juga menjadi impian penulis ialah Hadiah Sastera Kumpulan Utusan. Disamping itu dunia sastera turut diwarnai oleh hadiah-hadiah negeri, yang palingaktif ialah Johor (Hadiah Sastera Darul Takzim), Sabah (Hadiah Sastera Sabahdan Terengganu (Hadiah Sastera Darul Iman). Malangnya tidak ada negeri2 lainyang menganjurkan anugerah secara konsisten.
Hadiah Sastera PerdanaMalaysia (HSPM).
Darisenarai panjang pemenang-pemenang HSPM sejak tahun 2000 terdapat pencapaianwanita yang membanggakan.
1. HadiahKategori Buku:
SitiZaleha M Hashim, Kristal di Laut Bulan. Hadiah kategori buku.2006/2007
Hadiah Puisi Eceran
2. Mahaya Mohd Yassin “Jati Diri"2000-2001.
3. RaihaniMohd Saaid, “Malam Terakhir Nadim”, 2002/2005
4. Siti ZainonIsmail “Cebisan NotaAkhir Laila, Malam Tanpa Bulan di Bukit Gombak”, 2004/2005
5. RaihaniMohd Saaid “Selepas Menonton Puteri Gunung Ledang”, 2004/2005
6. ZaitonAjamain “Catatan Panjang Tentang Suami Skizo Dan Wanita Skizofernik”, 2006/2007.
7. Raja Rajeswari Seetha Raman, 2006-2007.
8. Mahaya Mohd Yassin "Wanita danLaut" 2006-2007.
9. RaihaniMohd Saaid “Negeri itu Antonius” 2008/2009
10. Rosani Hiplee, “Perempuan Cahaya” 2008/2009
11. Raihani Mohd Saaid “ Pidato Itu Brutus” 2012
12. AinunlMuaiyanah Sulaiman “Mimipi dari Sebuah Lukisan Ilusi”
Hadiah Sastera KumpulanUtusan.
SelainHSPM terdapat Hadiah Sastera Kumpulan Utusan yang meriah dengan kemenanganwanita di bidang novel remaja dan cerpen. Sesekali terdapat nama-nama wanitayang meraih hadiah di bidang puisi. Mereka termasuklah Raihani Mohd Saaiddengan puisi “Sajak Anum Kepada Jebat” 2007, dan “Terminus A Quo, 2011. Di sampingitu nama yang membanggakan ialah Rositah Ibrahim yang meraih HSKU 2011 melaluisajaknya “Kembali ke Gema Dikir”,
KembalikeGemaDikir
Usia telah membawa
Kau kembali ke daerahlama
Mencarijejak-jejakpurba
Terhapus oleh jalarkota
Menyirati desa.
Angin kampungmu telahkehilangan
Irama masasilam
Kaurindu
Pada malam gempita
Oleh dikir laba
Berembun dini
Dipukau asyik
Pak yongmelentikjemari.
Usiatelahmengaliharah
Membawakaukedaerahpusaka
RositahIbrahim
Hadiah Puisi Numera.
RosmiatyShaari ‘Risalah Melayu” Hadiah Utama Numera 2014
Sayembara Menulis Novel,Cerpen dan Puisi ITBM,PENA,BERITA HARIAN
Tigapuluh karya telah dipilih menerima hadiah. Di antaranya terdapat tiga kumpulanpuisi penyair wanita iaitu Tentang Tanyaoleh Hani Salwa, Sidang Kultus olehRaihani Mohd Saaid dan Perahu karya RamlahAbdul Rashid.
Selaindari itu, satu sayembara yang wajar disebut di sini ialah Hadiah PuisiKebangsaan Esso-Gapena yang dianjurkan dalam usaha Gapena untuk mencarisajak-sajak yang sesuai dibaca di dalam Sayembara Deklamasi Puisi HariKebangsaan yang telah diadakan sejak tahun 1984.Sayembara tersebut turutmenyaksikan keunggulan penyair-penyairwanita termasuk Amaruszati Noor Rahim yang muncul dengan sajaknya “NazamKecintaan”’ Hasidah Disan (Di Wajahmu, Bonda), Jariah Taha (Di Tanah Merdekadan Pada Malam Kemenangan Ini), Raihani Mohd. Saaid (Istana Kemerdekaan danKota Anak Generasi), Sairah Haji Antin (Epilog Sang Pemimpin).
Melihatsituasi penerbitan buku dan anugerah yang diadakan , maka bolehlah dirumuskanbahawa terdapat beberapa orang penyair wanita generasi muda yang aktif danmemperlihatkan potensi di dalam persada puisi tanah air. Beberapa orang yangdapat dicatatkan di sini ialah:
.
Rosani Hiplee,
Anak kelahiran Kuching,Sarawak. Penerima Hadiah Karyawan Harapan Negeri Sarawak tahun 2000, HadiahPenghargaan Penulis Sarawak tahun 1996 (puisi), 2007 (puisi) dan 2010 (puisi& esei kritikan sastera), dan Hadiah Sastera Perdana Malaysia 2009/2010(puisi eceran).
Karya-karya beliau pernahdisiarkan di akhbar dan majalah tempatan dan nasional seperti Utusan Sarawak, Utusan Borneo, BeritaMinggu, Berita Harian, Dewan Siswa, Dewan Sastera, Tunas Cipta, Karya, DewanBahasa, Dewan Budaya, Pelita Bahasa, Dewan Masyarakat, Tamadun Islam, JendelaSarawak dan penerbitan berkala lain malah banyak juga yang sudahdiantologikan.Sari Rahsia Terindah(2006) dan Cinta Perempuan yang Cantik(2011), merupakan dua buah kumpulan puisi beliau yang sudah diterbitkan olehDewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
Rosmiaty Shaari,
Rosmiaty telahmenerbitkan antologi perseorangan KembaliKepada Fitrah ITBM, 2013
Dari Hitamputih Menjadi Zarah, Iman Creative, KL 2011. Beliau memenangi Hadiah Utama Puisi Numera,2014.. kumpulan Dari Hitamputih MenjadiZarah telah dilancarkan dan dibicarakan di Pusat Dokumentasi HB Jassin,
Hani Salwah Yaakup
Hani Salwah adalah mantan Minggu Penulis Remaja (MPR)2001 anjuran Dewan Bahasa & Pustaka (DBP). Mula menulis dalam genre cerpen.Karya beliau pernah disiarkan di dalam antologi Tunas Karyawan 3, Edusystem Sdn Bhd, Antologi 12!, Kelab Alumni MPR, Antologi Gema Membelah Gema, BAHASA Sabah, Karyawan 2011, Persatuan Penulis Nasional (PENA), Tunas Cipta, Mingguan Malaysia dan BeritaMinggu. Berpengalaman menulis lirik, puisi, artikel, skrip untuk rancanganradio.
AINUNL MUAIYANAHSULAIMAN
Karya beliau seperti cerpen danpuisi pernah disiarkan dalam akhbar dan majalah seperti Berita Harian, Mingguan Malaysia, Harian Metro Tunas Cipta, DewanSastera, Dewan Bahasa, Dewan Siswa, Fokus, URTV, Mutiara Minda dan Pentas. Puisinya dimuatkan dalamantologi Takah Lima Puluh (PENA,2011), Karya Sasterawan 2011 (PENA,2011), Koleksi Puisi (Balai SeniVisual Negara, 2012). Sebuah cerpennya dipilih untuk Antologi Cerpen Indonesia-Malaysia (ITBM, 2013). Buku pertamanyaberjudul Sepetang di Kafe Biblioholicditerbitkan oleh JS Adiwarna, 2013. Puisinya "Mimpi dari Sebuah LukisanIlusi" pernah memenangi Hadiah Sastera Perdana Malaysia 2012 dalamkategori puisi eceran.
RAIHANI MOHD SAAID
Penulisini dinamakan oleh Lim Swee Tin sebagai penyair wanita generasi baru yang terpenting, dalam kertaskerjanya “Penyair Wanita Generasi Baru” (dibentangkan diHari Puisi, 1999 di Seremban). Beliau adalah peserta MPR 1997. Sajaknya tersiar di Berita Minggu, Dewan Sastera, Mingguan Malaysia, Dewan Budaya, TunasCipta.
Antarapencapaiannya dalam puisi ialah : memenangiSayembara Puisi Esso-Gapena, 1994. HSPM2004/2005, 2008/2009 , 2012, HSKU 2007, 2011 danSayembara ITBM,PENA, BERITA HARIAN 2013.
penutup
Semogataman puisi kita terus berbunga mekar dengan penyertaan penyair-penyair wanitabaru bagi meneruskan perjuangan yang telah direntas oleh generasi sebelumnya.
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wow, love some of the books listed.
Agatha Christie? My all time favourite!
Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, Little Women, Rebecca etc..have be adapted into movies.
I suka tgk filem Little Women versi Elizabeth Taylor(1949) and Winona Ryder(1994).Best sangat.
Filem Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier pun sangat best.
Siri Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery pun not bad.
Frances Hodgsen Burnett's The Secret Garden and The Little Princess (lakonan Shirley Temple)
Cuba la tengok movie2 classic ni.. Tak mengecewakan.
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Category: Belia & Informasi
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