Muṣṭafā Luṭfī al-Manfalūṭī (born Dec. 30, 1876, Manfalūṭ, Egypt—died July 25, 1924, Cairo) was an essayist, short-story writer, and pioneer of modern Arabic prose.
Al-Manfalūṭī was born of a half-Turkish, half-Arab family claiming descent from Ḥusayn, grandson of the Prophet Muhammad. He received the traditional Muslim theological education at al-Azhar University but was deeply influenced by pan-Islamism, Egyptian nationalism, and the Syrian school of writers, who introduced him to Western, particularly French, learning.
It is uncertain whether he learned French, but his collected essays (Al-Naẓarāt, 3 vol., 1902–10), poems (Mukhtārāt, 1912), and short stories (Al-ʿAbarāt, 1946) were largely adapted or translated from French and other European sources. He also published Arabic versions of several French works, including Edmond Rostand’s Cyrano de Bergerac (1921) and Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre’s Paul et Virginie (1923). Al-Manfalūṭī’s easy, flowing Arabic style, free from the then-fashionable ornamentation of rhymed prose (sajʿ), had a lustre not found in journalistic jargon; it formed the basis of the more accomplished modern Arabic narrative of succeeding generations of writers.