Mahmoud Hosseini Zad (Persian: محمود حسینیزاد; born 8 April 1946) is an Iranian translator of the contemporary German literature.[1] He is also writer, interpreter, literature jury member and docent.
In April 2015, the Centre Dürrenmatt Neuchâtel organized a reading and a discussion circle with Mahmoud Hosseini Zad as part of the Printemps culturel. He spoke about the Dürrenmatt's popularity in Iran, his own activities as a translator and he read from his translations. He said about the Dürrenmatt's works in an interview with Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen:
Dürrenmatt is really famous and popular as a pessimist philosopher, who has a ironical bitter look to life...the government of Iran has a talent to interpret everything in his own way. In Dürrenmatt, it sees a critic of western capitalism, especially when he writes about the atomic bomb. Dürrenmatt criticize the West. The government and its censorship agency consider Dürrenmatt's works as a criticism of the west, as a criticism of capitalism.... These wicked and fighting the wicked. These are Dürrenmatt's themes. Humans and history and the philosophy. These are in the Dürrenmatt's works, but we iranians are mostly fascinated by the Dürrenmatt's philosophical aspect. Iranians love philosophy
The limits of censorship are not clear in Iran. We have unfortunately censorship agency or control agency. They give us no catalogs or lists at all about what we as translators are allowed and what we are not allowed. they have themselves no control on these controls... When you bring a book to a control agency, you don't know, whether it will be allowed or will not be allowed to be published. For example the words about sexuality or eroticism. Maybe it seems funny, but these words are in the first priority of censorship, then the political words are in the second priority. After that on the third place come the words about alcohol drinks.
In an interview with Deutschlandfunk Kultur, he said about some sort of censorship lifting in the Rouhani's era:
Well, I can give an example: The publisher, which publishes my translations, had 70 forbidden books in the Ahmadinezhad's era, but according my recent informations the number of forbidden books has been reduced almost to 10 or 13. It is obviously a censorship lifting.
– Mahmoud Hosseini Zad: Deutschlandfunk Kultur
He said about the cultural policy changes after Ahmadinejad:
There are already movements. A simple example is that the publisher of my translations in the Ahmadinejad's regime had 17 totally forbidden works. These works didn't receive any publish permissions but nowadays there are some freedom and hope, but there is also a gap and we hope it will be removed soon.
Dürrenmatt, Friedrich: Das Versprechen, translation: Ghol, Tehran, 2008
Timm, Uwe: Am Beispiel meines Bruders, translation: Massalan baradaram, Tehran, 2008
Hermann, Judith, short stories from: Sommerhaus später and Nichts als Gespenster, translation: In souy-e roudkhaneOder (This Side of the Oder), Tehran, 2007
Dürrenmatt, Friedrich: Der Richter und sein Henker, translation: Ghazi o jalladash, Tehran, 1991, revised edition 2006
Dürrenmatt, Friedrich: Der Verdacht, translation: Sou-e zan, Tehran, 2006
Berg, Sibylle; Franck, Julia; Hermann, Judith; Schulze, Ingo: short stories from various works by the writers, translation: Gozaran e rouz (Spending the Day), Tehran, 2005
Brecht, Bertolt: Im Dickicht der Städte, translation: Dar jangal-e shahr, Tehran, 2001
Brecht, Bertolt: Trommeln in der Nacht, translation: Seday-e tabl dar shab, Tehran, 2001
Brecht, Bertolt: Einakter, translation: Tak pardei ha, Tehran, 1979
Gorky, Maxim: Über Kinderliteratur. Aufsätze und Äußerungen, translation: Darbare-ye Adabiyat-e Kudakan, Tehran, 1978
Own works
Bist zakhm e kari (Twenty Mortal Wounds) - novel, Tehran, 2017
Sarash ra gozasht ruy-e Felez-e sard – az koshtan o raftan (He Put His Head on the Cold Metal – From Killing and Abandoning) – short stories, Tehran, 2015
Asseman, kipp-e abr (The Sky, Full of Clouds) – short stories, Tehran, 2013
In barf key amade... (When Did This Snow Fall...?) – short stories, Tehran, 2011
Siahi-ye chasbnak-e shab (The Leaden Darkness of Night) – short stories, Tehran, 2005
Tagarg amad emsal bar san-e marg (This Year the Hail Came Like Death) – play, Tehran, 1997
Nehade sar gharibane be divar (Like a Stranger She Leans Her Head on the Wall) – play, Tehran, 1996
Awards
2013: On 28 August, Hosseini Zad received the Goethe Medal for his services and commitment as a cultural mediator par excellence in literature, theater and film.[9][10]
2013: In a survey among the Iranian authors und critics by the Iranian cultural magazine Tajrobeh, The Sky, Full of Clouds was chosen as the best book of the year – in the category of story.
2012: In a survey among the Iranian authors und critics by the Iranian cultural magazine Tajrobeh, The Wet Sky was chosen as the best book of the year – in the category of translated stories.