Ngugi Wa Thiongo event

Normalised Abnormality: Post-Colonialism in the World Today

  1. UA not to be missed save the date opportunity!

Join in to discuss and engage with one of the literary greats of Africa –  Professor Ngugi Wa Thiong’o

 

The event is finished.

Date

06 Februari 2023
Expired!

Time

shown in East African Time Zone - please check your local time set out below
10:00 pm

Local Time

  • Timezone: America/New_York
  • Date: 06 Februari 2023
  • Time: 2:00 pm

More Info

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Organizer

Africana Institute for Creation, Recognition, and Elevation (AICRE)
Africana Institute for Creation, Recognition, and Elevation (AICRE)

Speaker

  • Professor Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o
    Professor Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o
    Professor | Co-Principal Investigator

    Novelist and theorist of post-colonial literature, Ngũgĩ is currently a Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Irvine, USA. He was born in Kenya, in 1938 into a large peasant family. He was educated at Kamandura, Manguu and Kinyogori primary schools; Alliance High School, all in Kenya; Makerere University College (then a campus of London University), Kampala, Uganda; and the University of Leeds, Britain.

    The Kenya of his birth and youth was a British settler colony (1895-1963). As an adolescent, he lived through the Mau Mau War of Independence (1952-1962), the central historical episode in the making of modern Kenya and a major theme in his early works.

    Ngũgĩ burst onto the literary scene in East Africa with the performance of his first major play, The Black Hermit, at the National Theatre in Kampala, Uganda, in 1962, as part of the celebration of Uganda’s Independence. “Ngũgĩ Speaks for the Continent,” headlined The Makererian, the Student newspaper, in a review of the performance by Trevor Whittock, one of the professors. In a highly productive literary period, Ngũgĩ wrote additionally eight short stories, two one act plays, two novels, and a regular column for the Sunday Nation under the title, As I See It. One of the novels, Weep Not Child, was published to critical acclaim in 1964; followed by the second novel, The River Between (1965). His third, A Grain of Wheat (1967), was a turning point in the formal and ideological direction of his works. Multi-narrative lines and multi-viewpoints unfolding at different times and spaces replace the linear temporal unfolding of the plot from a single viewpoint. The collective replaces the individual as the center of history.

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