FACTOID # 72: There are 22 countries where more than half the population is illiterate. Fifteen of them are in Africa.
 
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Encyclopedia > Kamau Brathwaite

Edward Kamau Brathwaite (born 1931) is a Barbadian writer, poet and dramatist; his poetry explores the African and Caribbean roots of his country and his people. The "national language" that he proposes is a new type of poetry linked with those themes.


Born in Bridgetown, Barbados, he was born to humble parents, and he attended many schools. He went to Cambridge, England; in 1957, he travelled to Ghana, shortly after independence, where he spent almost five years. Then he stayed in Kingston for producing clubs, one of which was the Caribbean Artists Movement (1966-1970): he was its secretary-general. In 1968, he received a Ph.D. from the University of Sussex, and in 1994, the International Neustadt Prize for Literature.


His travels give him knowledge about the legends of Africa and its pre-colonial identity, which then he decided to use in his poetry.


Brathwaite has been married to Doris Welcome, since 1960; they have one child.


Selected works

  • Four plays for schools (1964)
  • Odale's Choice (1967)
  • Masks (1968)
  • Islands (1969)
  • Folk Cultures in the Slaves in Jamaica (1970)
  • Caribbean Man in Space and Time (1974)
  • Other Exiles (1975)
  • Days & Nights (1975)
  • Black + Blues (1976)
  • Mother Poem (1977)
  • Soweto (1979)
  • Jamaica Poetry (1979)
  • Barbados Poetry (1979)
  • Sun Poem (1982)
  • Third World Poems (1983)
  • Jah Music (1986)
  • X/Self (1987)
  • Shar (1992)
  • Trenchtown Rock (1993)
  • Roots (1993)
  • Dream Stories (1994)

External link

  • http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/brathwa.htm

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