Assadi, Jamal
Jamal Assadi is a lecturer at An-Najah National University, Nablus and chairs the English Department at the College of Sakhnin for Teacher Education. He received his PhD in English literature from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne in England. In addition to numerous articles in professional journals, Dr. Assadi is the author of Acting, Rhetoric, and Interpretation in Selected Novels by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Saul Bellow (2006); A Distant Drummer: Foreign Perspectives on F. Scott Fitzgerald (2007); Mohammad Ali Taha’s «A Rose to Hafeeza’s Eyes» and Other Stories (2008); Father and Son: Selected Short Fiction by Hanna Ibrahim Elias and Mohammad Ali Saeid (2009); Three Voices from the Galilee: Selected Short Stories by Mohammad Nafaa, Zaki Darwish and Naji Daher (2010); Mustafa Murrar: «The Internal Pages» and Other Stories (2010); Loud Sounds from the Holy Land: Short Fiction by Palestinian Women (2011); and The Road to Self-Revival: Sufism, Heritage, Intertextuality and Meta-Poetry in Modern Arabic Poetry (2011).
Jamal Assadi is a lecturer at An-Najah National University, Nablus and chairs the English Department at the College of Sakhnin for Teacher Education. He received his PhD in English literature from the University of Newcastle upon Tyne in England. In addition to numerous articles in professional journals, Dr. Assadi is the author of Acting, Rhetoric, and Interpretation in Selected Novels by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Saul Bellow (2006); A Distant Drummer: Foreign Perspectives on F. Scott Fitzgerald (2007); Mohammad Ali Taha’s «A Rose to Hafeeza’s Eyes» and Other Stories (2008); Father and Son: Selected Short Fiction by Hanna Ibrahim Elias and Mohammad Ali Saeid (2009); Three Voices from the Galilee: Selected Short Stories by Mohammad Nafaa, Zaki Darwish and Naji Daher (2010); Mustafa Murrar: «The Internal Pages» and Other Stories (2010); Loud Sounds from the Holy Land: Short Fiction by Palestinian Women (2011); and The Road to Self-Revival: Sufism, Heritage, Intertextuality and Meta-Poetry in Modern Arabic Poetry (2011).