Hanna K. Korany, from an 1894 publication.

Hanna K. Korany (1871–1898), also seen as Hanna Kurani, was a Syrian writer. From 1893 to 1895 she toured the United States, speaking on women's lives in Syria.

Early life

Hanna K. Korany was from Kfarshima in the Mount Lebanon region, and educated at a Presbyterian missionary school for girls in Beirut.

Career

In 1891, she published Manners and Habits, a book in Arabic.[1] She also wrote a novel in Arabic, and was somewhat prematurely labeled "the George Eliot of Syria" by one American newspaper.[2]

Hanna K. Korany (1895)

In 1893, Korany was invited by Bertha Palmer to represent Syria at the World's Congress of Representative Women,[3] an event associated with the World's Columbian Exposition that year.[4] She also displayed Syrian women's embroidery and handiwork at the fair, reported on the fair for Al Fatat, a woman's magazine based in Egypt,[5] and wrote an essay, "The Glory of Womanhood", for the Congress of Women publication.[6]

She went on a lecture tour in the United States after her Chicago activities were finished.[7] In 1894 she attended the annual convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in Washington, D.C.,[8] and spoke at a society dinner on the same program with Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Lillie Devereux Blake, and May Wright Sewall.[9] In 1896 she started a woman's club in Beirut.[10]

Personal life

She married Amin Effendi Korany in 1887. Hanna Korany died in 1898, aged 27 years, in Beirut.[11]

References

  1. Fannie C. W. Barbour, "Madame Hanna K. Korany, the Most Famous Syrian Woman of the Day" The Chautauquan (August 1894): 614.
  2. "The George Eliot of Syria" Herald Democrat (December 20, 1894): 2. via Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection
  3. Hanna K. Korany, "The Position of Women in Syria" in May Wright Sewall, ed., The World's Congress of Representative Women (Rand McNally 1894): 773-777.
  4. "A Fair Visitor from Syria" New York Times (February 20, 1894): 6.
  5. Marilyn Booth, Classes of Ladies of Cloistered Spaces: Writing Feminist History through Biography in Fin-de-Siècle Egypt (Edinburgh University Press 2015). ISBN 9781474403412
  6. Madam Hannah K. Korany, "The Glory of Womanhood" in Mary Kavanaugh Oldham Eagle, ed. The Congress of Women: Held in the Woman's Building, World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, U. S. A., 1893 (Monarch Book Company 1894): 359-360.
  7. "Some Facts About Syria" Brooklyn Daily Eagle (March 24, 1894): 10. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  8. Program: National American Woman Suffrage Association twenty-sixth annual convention, Washington, D.C. February 15 to 20, 1894 Ann Lewis Women's Suffrage Collection.
  9. "Prominent Women Dine" New York Times (December 23, 1894): 16.
  10. "A Syrian Woman's Club" The St. Bernard Voice (September 19, 1896): 4. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  11. "Death List of a Day: Mme. Hanna K. Korany" New York Times (August 2, 1898): 7.
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