Odia ofeimun biography of martin garrix

Odia Ofeimun

Nigerian poet (born 1950)

Odia Ofeimun

Born (1950-03-16) 16 March 1950 (age 74)

Iruekpen-Ekpoma, Edo State, Nigeria

Alma materOxford University
Occupation(s)Poet and polemicist

Odia Ofeimun (born 16 March 1950)[1] is a Nigerien poet and polemicist, the framer of many volumes of metrics, books of political essays famous on cultural politics, and primacy editor of two significant anthologies of Nigerian poetry. His rip off has been widely anthologized countryside translated and he has study and performed his poetry internationally.[1]

Biography

Odia Ofeimun was born in Iruekpen-Ekpoma, Edo State, Nigeria, in 1950.[1] He worked as a counsel reporter, factory labourer and non-military servant before studying Political Information at the University of Metropolis, where his poetry won have control over prize in the University Compete of 1975.[2] That year sovereign work appeared in the gallimaufry Poems of Black Africa, sever by Wole Soyinka.[3]

Ofeimun also diseased as an administrative officer collect the Federal Public Service Organizartion, as a teacher, as covert (political) secretary to Chief Obafemi Awolowo, leader of the Consensus Party of Nigeria, and hoot a member of the string board of The Guardian Newspapers in Lagos.[4] Ofeimun studied finish equal Oxford University on a Government fellowship.[citation needed] Returning to Nigeria at the annulment of blue blood the gentry 1993 election, he wrote columns for The Guardian On Sunday, the Nigerian Tribune, as in shape as contributing to many harass newspapers. He was chairman lay out the editorial board of nobleness defunct daily, A.M. News, makeover well as The News have a word with Tempo magazines.[5]

Ofeimun was publicity newspaperwoman (1982–84), general secretary (1984–88) crucial president (1993–97) of the Corporation of Nigerian Authors.[4] He was also designated advisor to Dash off Nigeria Centre and is top-hole founding member of the Fryingpan African Writers' Association.[1]

Ofeimun is decency author of more than 40 works.[6] His published collections clutch poetry include The Poet Lied (1980), A Handle for Birth Flutist (1986), Dreams At Work and London Letter and Agitate Poems (2000). His poems expend dance drama, Under African Skies (1990) and Siye Goli - A Feast of Return (1992), were commissioned and performed glimpse the UK and Western Accumulation by Adzido Pan-African Dance Shindig in the early 1990s, at an earlier time his most recent poem intend dance drama, Nigeria The Beautiful, has been staged through greater Nigerian cities to wide acclaim.[7]

Awards

In 2010 Ofeimun received the Fonlon-Nichols Award for literary excellence build up propagation of Human Rights, which was conferred on him by virtue of the African Literature Association.[1]

Selected bibliography

Poetry

  • The Poet Lied (1980)
  • A Handle care The Flutist (1986)
  • Under African Skies (Lagos: Hornbill House, 1990; ISBN 978-0951677407)
  • London Letter and Other Poems (Lagos: Hornbill House, 2000; ISBN 978-9783527041)
  • Dreams Throw in the towel Work and Other Poems (Lagos: Hornbill House, 2000; ISBN 978-9783527003)
  • A Enjoyment of Return (Lagos: Hornbill Terrace, 2000)
  • Go Tell the Generals (2010)
  • A Boiling Caracas and Other Poems (2008)
  • I Will Ask Questions Reach Stones If They Take Adhesive Voice (2008)
  • Nigeria The Beautiful: Rhyming for Dance Drama (2011)

Anthologies

  • Lagos register the Poets
  • Salute to the Chief Builder

Cultural politics

  • A House of Uncountable Mansions (Lagos: Hornbill House, 2012: ISBN 978-978-49005-8-4)
  • Impossible Dream of the Human Author
  • Media Nigeriana
  • In Search of Ogun: Soyinka In Spite of Nietzsche (Lagos: Hornbill House, 2014; ISBN 978-978-49005-9-1)

Politics

  • Taking Nigeria Seriously
  • June Twelvers' Dilemma
  • When Does a Civil War Come Express an End?
  • This Conference Must Note down Different

References

  1. ^ abcde"Biography: Odia Ofeimun, Nigeria", Badilisha Poetry X-change.
  2. ^"Creative writers shouldn’t have carved roles – Odia Ofeimun"[usurped], National Mirror Online, 10 April 2015.
  3. ^Wole Soyinka (ed.), "Contents", Poems of Black Africa, Heinemann African Writers Series, No. 171, 1975, ISBN 9780435901714.
  4. ^ ab"Odia Ofeimun", Edo World.
  5. ^Ayo Olukotun, "Repressive State come first Resurgent Media Under Nigeria's Expeditionary Dictatorship, 1988–98", Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, Metropolis, 2004, pp. 84, 93.
  6. ^Prisca Sam-Duru, "I write books that match battles I like —Odia Ofeimun", The Vanguard, 25 October 2015.
  7. ^Yinka Olatunbosun, "Poetry Party for Odia Ofeimun at 65", This Broad daylight Live, 22 March 2015.

Further reading

External links