Zakya Daoud (real name Jacqueline Loghlam) is a French journalist. She was born in 1937 in Bernay in France. She was naturalized Moroccan and changed her name in 1959.[1]
Loghlam started her career as a journalist in 1958 for the Moroccan radio and then as a correspondent in Morocco for the weekly Jeune Afrique, which asked her to sign her articles with the pseudonym "Zakya Daoud", a borrowed name under which she continued writing.[1]
In 1966, she became chief editor of Lamalif, a Moroccan magazine until it was stopped from publishing by the Moroccan authorities in 1988. From 1989 to 2001, Daoud contributed articles to several French journals including Maghreb-Machrek, Arabies and Le Monde diplomatique. Since that time, she has published several books in the fields of sociology and history.[1]
References
Abdeslam Kadiri, "Portrait. Les mille vies de Zakya Daoud", Telquel, 13 February 2006
Bibliography
L’État du Maghreb (collected works), la Découverte, 1990.
Féminisme et politique au Maghreb, Éditions Maisonneuve et Larose, 1994
Ferhart Abbas, une utopie algérienne (in collaboration with Benjamin Stora), Éditions Denoël, 1995
Ben Barka (in collaboration with Maati Monjib), Éditions Michalon, 1996
Marocains des deux rives, Éditions L’Atelier, 1997.
Abdelkrim, une épopée d’or et de sang, Éditions Séguier, 1999 ISBN2-84049-144-3
Gibraltar, croisée de mondes et Gibraltar, improbable frontière, Éditions Atlantica-Séguier, 2002
De l’immigration à la citoyenneté, Éditions Mémoire de la Méditerranée, 2003
Zaynab, reine de Marrakech (novel), Éditions L’Aube, 2004
Marocains de l’autre rive, Éditions Paris Méditerranée-Tarik, 2004
Casablanca en mouvement, Éditions Autrement, 2005
Les Années Lamalif: 1958-1988, trente ans de journalisme, Éditions Tarik et Senso Unico, 2007
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