EDUCATION

Tanzanian Gurnah Emerges 2021 Winner Of Nobel Prize In Literature

<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Tanzanian Gurnah Emerges 2021 Winner<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;openlife&period;ng&sol;">OpenLife Nigeria<&sol;a><&sol;strong> reports that Abdulrazak Gurnah&comma; a <strong>Tanzanian<&sol;strong> novelist&comma; who writes in English and is based in the United Kingdom&comma; has emerged as the 2021 Winner Of the Nobel Prize In Literature&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;This is coming 35 years after Professor Wole Soyinka from Nigeria won it in 1986&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;The 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature was been awarded to the novelist Abdulrazak Gurnah on Thursday in a release signed by Anders Olsson&comma; Chairman of the Nobel Committee&comma; <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;punchng&period;com&sol;">The Swedish Academy<&sol;a>&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Abdulrazak Gurnah was born in 1948 in Zanzibar and became active in England&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;He was awarded&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;for his uncompromising and compassionate penetration of the effects of colonialism and the fate of the refugee in the gulf between cultures and continents&period;”<br &sol;>&NewLine;Abdulrazak Gurnah grew up on the island of Zanzibar in the Indian Ocean but arrived in England as a refugee in the end of the 1960’s&period; After the peaceful liberation from British colonial rule in December 1963 Zanzibar went through a revolution which&comma; under President Abeid Karume’s regime&comma; led to oppression and persecution of citizens of Arab origin&semi; massacres occurred&period; Gurnah belonged to the victimised ethnic group and after finishing school was forced to leave his family and flee the country&comma; by then the newly formed Republic of Tanzania&period; He was eighteen years old&period; Not until 1984 was it possible for him to return to Zanzibar&comma; allowing him to see his father shortly before the father’s death&period; Gurnah has until his recent retirement been Professor of English and Postcolonial Literatures at the University of Kent in Canterbury&comma; focusing principally on writers such as Wole Soyinka&comma; Ng&utilde;g&itilde; wa Thiong’o and Salman Rushdie&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Gurnah has published ten novels and a number of short stories&period; The theme of the refugee’s disruption runs throughout his work&period; He began writing as a 21-year-old in English exile&comma; and even though Swahili was his first language&comma; English became his literary tool&period; He has said that in Zanzibar&comma; his access to literature in Swahili was virtually nil and his earliest writing could not strictly be counted as literature&period; Arabic and Persian poetry&comma; especially &OpenCurlyQuote;The Arabian Nights’&comma; were an early and significant wellspring for him&comma; as were the Quran’s surahs&period; But the English-language tradition&comma; from Shakespeare to V&period; S&period; Naipaul&comma; would especially mark his work&period; That said&comma; it must be stressed that he consciously breaks with convention&comma; upending the colonial perspective to highlight that of the indigenous populations&period; Thus&comma; his novel &OpenCurlyQuote;Desertion’ &lpar;2005&rpar; about a love affair becomes a blunt contradiction to what he has called &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;the imperial romance”&comma; where a conventionally European hero returns home from romantic escapades abroad&comma; upon which the story reaches its inevitable&comma; tragic resolution&period; In Gurnah&comma; the tale continues on African soil and never actually ends&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Gurnah’s writing is from his time in exile but pertains to his relationship with the place he had left&comma; which means that memory is of vital importance for the genesis of his work&period; His debut novel&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;Memory of Departure’&comma; from 1987&comma; is about a failed uprising and keeps us on the African continent&period; The gifted young protagonist attempts to disengage from the social blight of the coast&comma; hoping to be taken under the wing of a prosperous uncle in Nairobi&period; Instead he is humiliated and returned to his broken family&comma; the alcoholic and violent father and a sister forced into prostitution&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Gurnah often allows his carefully constructed narratives to lead up to a hard-won insight&period; A good example is the third novel&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;Dottie’ &lpar;1990&rpar;&comma; a portrait of a Black woman of immigrant background growing up in harsh conditions in racially charged 1950’s England&comma; and because of her mother’s silence lacking connection with her own family history&period; At the same time&comma; she feels rootless in England&comma; the country she was born and grew up in&period; The novel’s protagonist attempts to create her own space and identity through books and stories&semi; reading gives her a chance to reconstruct herself&period; Not least names and name changes play a central role in a novel that shows Gurnah’s deep compassion and psychological adroitness&comma; completely without sentimentality&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;In Gurnah’s treatment of the refugee experience&comma; focus is on identity and self-image&comma; apparent not least in &OpenCurlyQuote;Admiring Silence’ &lpar;1996&rpar; and &OpenCurlyQuote;By the Sea’ &lpar;2001&rpar;&period; In both these first-person novels silence is presented as the refugee’s strategy to shield his identity from racism and prejudice&comma; but also as a means of avoiding a collision between past and present&comma; producing disappointment and disastrous self-deception&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Gurnah’s dedication to truth and his aversion to simplification are striking&period; This can make him bleak and uncompromising&comma; at the same time as he follows the fates of individuals with great compassion and unbending commitment&period; His novels recoil from stereotypical descriptions and open our gaze to a culturally diversified East Africa unfamiliar to many in other parts of the world&period; In Gurnah’s literary universe&comma; everything is shifting – memories&comma; names&comma; identities&period; This is probably because his project cannot reach completion in any definitive sense&period; An unending exploration driven by intellectual passion is present in all his books&comma; and equally prominent now&comma; in &OpenCurlyQuote;Afterlives’ &lpar;2020&rpar;&comma; as when he began writing as a 21-year-old refugee&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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