Kazi Anis Ahmed (Bengali:কাজী আনিস আহমেদ) is a Bangladeshi writer, publisher and businessman.[1] He is a co-founder[2] and publisher of the English-language daily newspaper Dhaka Tribune, online news portal Bangla Tribune[3] and the literary journal Bengal Lights. Ahmed is the author of three works of fiction. He is a co-director of the annual Bangladeshi literary festival, Dhaka Lit Fest.
Kazi Anis Ahmed | |
---|---|
Born | 1970 (age 53–54) |
Nationality | Bangladeshi |
Father | Kazi Shahid Ahmed |
Relatives | Kazi Nabil Ahmed (sibling) |
Early life and education
K.Anis Ahmed was born in Dhaka, East Pakistan on 26 September 1970. His father, Kazi Shahid Ahmed, was the founder and chairman of the Gemcon Group, and also a writer and novelist in the Bengali language.[4]
K.Anis Ahmed passed secondary school from St. Joseph Higher Secondary School, Dhaka. He went to Brown University for higher education. He has completed his PhD in comparative literature from NYU.
Career
Writings
Ahmed's first collection of short stories, Good Night, Mr. Kissinger, was published by The University Press Limited[5] in Bangladesh and launched at the Hay Festival Dhaka, Bangladesh, in 2012.[6] Ahmed's first novel, The World in My Hands, was published by Random House India in December 2013. The book is a political satire that charts the fate of two friends – a newspaper editor and a successful property developer – whose relationship is bitterly tested when they find themselves on opposite sides of a crisis that upends their country's social order.[7][8] An early work of Ahmed's, Forty Steps (3 novella), has been published in a bi-lingual edition by Bengal Lights. It was translated into Bengali by renowned translator Manabendra Bandyopadhyay.
Business
Ahmed is a Director of the Gemcon Group, which was founded by his father, Kazi Shahed Ahmed, 1979.[9] He has worked among other projects, for the Kazi and Kazi Tea Estate, Ltd. (KKTE).[10] Ahmed steered KKTE to emerge as the first successful organic tea estate in Bangladesh. He is co-founder of the Teatulia[11] brand of Kazi and Kazi Tea, which sells in the USA, UK,[12] Japan, China and other markets.[13][14][15]
He is a co-founder of University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh and the Vice-President of the Board of Trustees of the same university.
Publishing
Ahmed is also publisher of the English-language daily newspaper Dhaka Tribune, the Bengali-language online newspaper Bangla Tribune[3] and the literary journal Bengal Lights.[16] Ahmed contributes to international newspapers and journals such as The New York Times,[17] TIME,[18] The Guardian,[19] Daily Beast, Wall Street Journal,[20] and Nikkei Asian Review,[21] and Politico.[22] He has co-curated special issues on Bangladesh in the literary journals Wasafiri and Granta. He wrote the opening essay for the Puterbaugh essay series in World Literature Today in December 2015[23] and was published in the Journal of Asian Studies in 2018.[24] Kazi Anis Ahmed, a writer and publisher of English daily Dhaka Tribune and online news portal Bangla Tribune, has been elected as the new president of PEN Bangladesh -- an international organization of writers, bloggers and journalists.[25]
Literary works
- Good Night, Mr. Kissinger (Unnamed Press, 2014), ISBN 978-1-939419-04-0
- The World in My Hands (Random House India, 2013)
- Forty Steps
See also
References
External links
Wikiwand in your browser!
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.