Bobuq Sayed is an Afghan-Australian writer, poet and theatre-maker,[1][2][3] who is the author of A Brief History of Australian Terror. It was recommended by ABC News as a "best new book" in 2024. Their novel No God But Us is due to be published in 2026.

Bobuq Sayed
Alma materUniversity of Miami
San Jose State University
OccupationsWriter, poet, theatre-maker

Early life and education

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Born in Australia to Afghan parents,[4] they are member of the Afghan diaspora and are non-binary.[3] They have a Master of Fine Arts from the University of Miami.[4]

Career

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In 2018, Sayed was a member of the theatre collective Embittered Swish, the group worked to create performances that expanded what was considered trans dramaturgy.[3] This involved moving away, for example, from work related to transition or dysphoria.[3] Sayed's work also featured in the 2018 exhibition The Third Muslim: Queer and Trans* Muslim Narratives of Resistance and Resilience held at SOMArts in San Francisco.[5]

Sayed's writing challenges perceived structural racism within Australian literary communities.[6] They are also a former editor of Archer magazine.[4] Sayed co-edited Nothing to Hide: Voices of Trans and Gender Diverse Australia alongside Sam Elkin, Alex Gallagher and Yves Rees.[7][8] They were a 2022–23 Steinbeck Fellow at San Jose State University.[9] In 2024 they published A Brief History of Australian Terror,[10] which was recommended by ABC News as a "best new book" in 2024.[10] Academic David Coady reviewed the work as an "excellent contribution to an important topic", whilst suggesting that the work leaves many things unsaid especially the conflation of Zionism with ant-Semitism in Western thought.[11] A Kundiman Fellow,[12] their first novel No God But Us is due to be published in 2026.[13]

In 2021, they co-organised a fundraiser to supply mutual aid to LGBTQ+ Afghans in Afghanistan.[14]

References

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  1. Berry, Jess; Kalms, Nicole; Moore, Timothy; Bawden, Gene (2025-03-18). Designing Gender Sensitive Spaces for Consenting Cities: Practices and Provocations. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-040-32891-0.
  2. Pallotta-Chiarolli, Maria (2018-09-24). Living and Loving in Diversity: An anthology of Australian multicultural queer adventures. Wakefield Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-1-74305-595-3.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Troubling the linear: Meet the trans and non-binary artists reimagining the way we tell stories". ABC News. 2018-06-21. Retrieved 2025-11-16.
  4. 1 2 3 Belkacemi, Rim El. "Pushing the boundaries". news.miami.edu. Retrieved 2025-11-16.
  5. Kayvon, Shervin. "Queer Muslim Artists Are Beyond A "Movement"". INTO. Retrieved 2025-11-16.
  6. Quist, Jennifer (2025-05-15). Translingual Creative Writing Theory, Practice, and Pedagogy: Daoism and Decentering Monolingual Workshops. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-350-51062-3.
  7. Elkin, Sam; Gallagher, Alex; Rees, Yves; Sayed, Bobuq (2022-08-30). Nothing to Hide: Voices of Trans and Gender Diverse Australia. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-76118-512-0.
  8. ""I saw gender as pretty arbitrary"". ABC listen. 2022-10-02. Retrieved 2025-11-16.
  9. "Stories by bobuq-sayed on Guernica". Guernica. Retrieved 2025-11-16.
  10. 1 2 "Sex, chess and time travel: Welcome to the best books of 2024". ABC News. 2024-12-13. Retrieved 2025-11-09.
  11. Coady, David (9 December 2024). "Review of A Brief History of Australian Terror, by Bobuq Sayed". Mascara Literary Review (30) via preprint copy.
  12. "Fellows". Kundiman. Retrieved 2025-11-16.
  13. Sayed, Bobuq (2026-05-26). No God But Us. HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 978-0-06-341946-9.
  14. "Organizers Of A GoFundMe To Help Queer And Trans Afghans Say The Platform Won't Allow Them To Access The Money". BuzzFeed News. Archived from the original on 2024-02-29. Retrieved 2025-11-16.
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