Bate Besong

Bate Besong Jacob
Born 8 May 1954
Mamfe
Died 8 March 2007
Occupation Writer, Poet and Teacher
Nationality Cameroonian
Genre Poetry, Drama
Literary movement Postcolonialism, Postmodernism
Website
www.batebesong.com

Bate Besong (1954–2007) was a Cameroonian playwright, poet and critic, who was described by Pierre Fandio as “one of the most representative and regular writers of what might be referred to as the second generation of the emergent Cameroonian literature in English".[1] He died on March 8, 2007 in a car accident on the Douala-Yaounde highway.[2]

Life and career

After obtaining his GCE A Level at St. Bedes Secondary School in Kom, Besong was admitted to the University of Calabar where he published his maiden collection of poems titled Polyphemous Detainee and Other Skulls in 1980 before he graduated. While at the university, Bate Besong and Ba'bila Mutia founded Oracle, a journal of poetry edited by students. Realising that his emerging reputation as a budding writer was giving him recognision as a Nigerian and compromising his Cameroonian identity, Besong returned to Cameroon after completing his MA.[3] He was a lecturer at the University of Buea, where he taught from 1999 right up to his death in 2007.[4]

In 1992, shortly after his play Beasts of No Nation was staged, Besong was kidnapped and tortured by state security agents who took him to an unknown location from where he was later released when news of his kidnapping became public.[5] In 1992 he won the Association of Nigerian Authors’ Prize for Requiem for the Last Kaiser.[6] Besong later obtained a PhD in Literary Studies from Calabar (Nigeria).[7]

Bibliography

Essays and articles

References

  1. "Africultures – Entretien – "La littérature anglophone camerounaise à la croisée des chemins"". Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  2. ""A Baobab Has Fallen": Bate Besong is no More!!! – Dibussi Tande: Scribbles from the Den". Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  3. "Bate Besong". Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  4. "Bate Besong". Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  5. Babila Mutia, Summit Magazine, N0 20,June 2012
  6. Joyce B. Ashuntantang. Landscaping Postcoloniality: the Dissemination of Cameroon Anglophone Literature. Bamenda: Langaa RPCIG, 2009.
  7. Simon Gikandi, ed. Encyclopedia of African Literature. New York: Routledge, 2003.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.