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  2. List of African poets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_African_poets

    Contemporary Africa has a range of important poets across many different genres and cultures. Poetry in Africa details more on the history and context of contemporary poetry on the continent. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.

  3. Poetry in Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poetry_in_Africa

    African poetry encompasses a wide variety of traditions arising from Africa's 55 countries and from evolving trends within different literary genres.The field is complex, primarily because of Africa's original linguistic and cultural diversity and partly because of the effects of slavery and colonisation, the believe in religion and social life which resulted in English, Portuguese and French ...

  4. South African poetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_African_poetry

    Chris van Wyk (1957 – 2014) was a South African children's book author, novelist and poet. Van Wyk is famous for his poem "In Detention" on the suspicious deaths that befell South African political prisoners during Apartheid. In 1976 he published a volume of poetry, It Is Time to Go Home (1979), that won the 1980 Olive Schreiner Prize.

  5. African literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_literature

    Storytellers in Africa sometimes use call-and-response techniques to tell their stories. Poetry describes a narrative poem based upon a short and a ribald anecdote and is often sung, through: narrative epic, occupational verse, ritual verse, praise poems of rulers and other prominent people.

  6. Heinemann African Writers Series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinemann_African_Writers...

    "Kofi Awoonor's Until the Morning After: Collected Poems 1963-1985 was to have been AWS number 260, but was apparently withdrawn by the author and instead published by Greenfield Review Press, New York, in 1987." [20] 261: Anyidoho, Kofi: 1984 Poetry: A Harvest of our Dreams, with Elegy for the Revolution: poems. 262: Nagenda, John: 1986

  7. Nana Asmaʼu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nana_Asmaʼu

    Her poems of guidance became tools for teaching the founding principles of the Caliphate. [9] Asmaʾu also collaborated closely with Muhammed Bello , the second Caliph. [ citation needed ] Her works include and expand upon the dan Fodio's strong emphasis on women leaders and women's rights within the community ideals of the Sunnah and Islamic law .

  8. Es'kia Mphahlele - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Es'kia_Mphahlele

    Es'kia Mphahlele was born in Pretoria, in the Union of South Africa, in 1919.From the age of five, he lived with his paternal grandmother in Maupaneng Village, in GaMphahlele (now in Lepelle-Nkumpi Municipality), Limpopo Province, where he herded cattle and goats.

  9. David Wright (poet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Wright_(poet)

    Selected poems : Thomas Hardy, edited with an introduction and notes by David Wright, Penguin (1978) Under the Greenwood Tree, Thomas Hardy, David Wright ed., Penguin Books (1979) Selected poems and prose / Edward Thomas, edited with an introduction by David Wright, Harmondsworth : Penguin (1981) An Anthology from X, Oxford University Press (1988)