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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hélé_BéjiHélé Béji - Wikipedia

    Hélé Béji (Arabic: هالة الباجي; born 1 April 1948) is a Tunisian writer. Biography. The daughter of Tunisian politician Mondher Ben Ammar , she was born in Tunis, passed her Agrégation de lettres modernes and went on to teach literature at the University of Tunis. She later joined UNESCO in Paris.

  2. Hélé Béji (arabe : هالة الباجي), née Hélé Ben Ammar le 1 er avril 1948 à Tunis, est une écrivaine tunisienne. Agrégée de lettres modernes, elle a enseigné la littérature à l'université de Tunis avant de travailler à l'Unesco en tant que fonctionnaire internationale.

  3. www.wise-qatar.org › biography › hele-bejiHélé Beji - WISE

    Chairwoman of International College of Tunis. Hélé Béji was born in the city of Tunis (Tunisia) in 1948. She took the French Literature Agrégation diploma at the University of Paris in 1973. She has been a Professor of French Literature at the University of Tunis and an International Expert at UNESCO.

  4. Jan 13, 2021 · Sans jamais prendre part à la vie politique, Hélé Béji, professeure de littérature à Tunis, auteure de nombreux essais, est devenue une observatrice très attentive de la chose publique. Les efforts de son pays pour se dégager de l’obscurantisme, les relations entre l’islam et l’Occident sont les thèmes de ses essais.

  5. Hélé BÉJI. Auteur de nombreux livres : Désenchantement national, L’Œil du jour, Une force qui demeure et Islam Pride, Derrière le voile), Mme Hélé Béji, Tunisienne d’expression française, a fondé en 1998 le Collège international de Tunis qu’elle préside et dont l’activité est devenue centrale dans la vie intellectuelle du ...

  6. parallels and contrasts about post-colonial and feminist approaches to literature and history that help us understand the complexity of the recent events of the Arab Spring. Béji and Baudrillard on History. Hélé Béji highlighted how a new form of repression had been born in the years that.

  7. A Tunisian author of several essays, books, and articles, Hélé Béji (born Ben Ammar) uses writing to explore some of the problematic circumstances of her country: a nation in the process of politically, socially, and culturally rebuilding itself since its independence from France in 1956.