Seasons Come to Pass: A Poetry Anthology for Southern African Students

Передня обкладинка
Helen Moffett, Es'kia Mphahlele
Oxford University Press, 1994 - 290 стор.

Зміст

Ho 791817
1
Anonymous fifteenth century
8
Thomas Wyatt 15031542
14
Sir Philip Sidney 15541586
20
William Shakespeare 15641616
25
Ben Jonson 15721637
34
Thomas Carew c 15941640
40
Lady Mary Chudleigh 16561710
48
Claude McKay 18901948
140
Elizabeth Cloete
146
Bertolt Brecht 18981956
150
W H Auden 19071973
163
Gwendolyn Brooks 1917
176
Guy Butler 1918
177
David Wright 19201994
184
Agostinho Neto 19221979
190

Thomas Gray 17161771
55
Robert Burns 17591796
62
Samuel Taylor Coleridge 17721834
68
Elizabeth Barrett Browning 18061861
78
Robert Browning 18121889
92
Emily Brontë 18181848
94
Emily Dickinson 18301886
100
Gerard Manley Hopkins 18441889
108
William Butler Yeats 18651939
114
E A Robinson 18691935
120
Robert Frost 18741963
121
Hilda Doolittle 18861961
129
Thomas Kinsella 1928
197
Ted Hughes 1930
202
Seamus Heaney 1939
222
Mbuyiseni Oswald Mtshali 1940
225
Mutiswayo Shandu
231
Sally Bryer 1947
239
Shabbir Banoobhai 1949
245
Antonio Jacinto
251
Chris van Wyk 1957
264
Index
280
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Про автора (1994)

Born in South Africa, Es'kia Mphahlele left that country in 1957 after the government banned him from teaching because of his active protest against its Bantu education policy. A compassionate and perceptive writer, he was also a respected critic of African literature. Short stories, anthologies, novels, and an autobiography are all part of Mphahlele's repertoire. According to his biographer, Ursula A. Barnett, Mphahlele "has been closely associated with every phase of [contemporary] South African literature and often gave it direction or led the way." Mphahlele came to the forefront of African writers with the publication of his highly acclaimed autobiography, Down Second Avenue (1965), which is also a powerful social commentary on black life in South Africa. Another important work is The African Image (1962), a collection of essays that deals specifically with the attempts of black and white writers alike to explain African and Negro life. Mphahlele's odyssey from Johannesburg took him to several African countries and to Europe before he eventually came to the United States, where he received a Ph.D. from the University of Denver. After teaching for several years at the University of Pennsylvania, he returned to South Africa. Commenting on the problems of writers in exile, he said: "You have this kind of spiritual, mental ghetto you live in. It's crippling.... But you still have the freedom of vision which you would have had in South Africa, and your experiences in exile have also contributed to your growth." Mphahlele taught at the Center for African Studies at Witwatersrand University, Soweto. Although the government has lifted the ban on some of his works, his first novel, The Wanderers (1971), is still on the banned list. Critic Martin Tucker calls the book "a lyric cry of pain for the many rootless black exiles who wander across the African continent searching for a new home." Chirundu, his first major work since he returned to South Africa, focused on the rise and fall of the minister of transportation and public works in an imaginary African country. He died on October 27, 2008 at the age of 88.

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