| Ngugi Wa Thiong’o:
A Profile of a Literary and Social Activist.
Ngugi wa Thiong'o, currently Distinguished Professor
of English and Comparative Literature and Director of the International
Center for Writing and Translation at the University of California,
Irvine, was born in Kenya, in 1938 into a large peasant family.
He was educated at Kamandura, Manguu and Kinyogori primary schools;
Alliance High School, all in Kenya; Makerere University College
(then a campus of London University), Kampala, Uganda; and the
University of Leeds, Britain. He is recipient of seven Honorary
Doctorates viz D Litt (Albright); PhD (Roskilde); D Litt (Leeds);
D Litt &Ph D (Walter Sisulu University); PhD (Carlstate);
D Litt (Dillard) and D Litt (Auckland University). He is also
Honorary Member of American Academy of Letters. A many-sided
intellectual, he is novelist, essayist, playwright, journalist,
editor, academic and social activist.
The Kenya of his birth and youth was a British
settler colony (1895-1963). As an adolescent, he lived through
the Mau Mau War of Independence (1952-1962), the central historical
episode in the making of modern Kenya and a major theme in his
early works.
Ngugi burst onto the literary scene in East Africa
with the performance of his first major play, The Black Hermit,
at the National Theatre in Kampala, Uganda, in 1962, as part
of the celebration of Uganda’s Independence. “Ngugi
Speaks for the Continent,” headlined The Makererian, the
Student newspaper, in a review of the performance by Trevor
Whittock, one of the professors. In a highly productive literary
period, Ngugi wrote additionally eight short stories, two one
act plays, two novels, and a regular column for the Sunday Nation
under the title, As I See It. One of the novels, Weep Not Child,
was published to critical acclaim in 1964; followed by the second
novel, The River Between (1965). His third, A Grain of Wheat
(1967), was a turning point in the formal and ideological direction
of his works. Multi-narrative lines and multi-viewpoints unfolding
at different times and spaces replace the linear temporal unfolding
of the plot from a single viewpoint. The collective replaces
the individual as the center of history.
In 1967, Ngugi became lecturer in English Literature
at the University of Nairobi. He taught there until 1977 while,
in-between, also serving as Fellow in Creative writing at Makerere
(1969-1970), and as Visiting Associate Professor of English
and African Studies at Northwestern University (1970-1971).
During his tenure at Nairobi, Ngugi was at the center of the
politics of English departments in Africa, championing the change
of name from English to simply Literature to reflect world literature
with African and third world literatures at the center. He,
with Taban Lo Liyong and Awuor Anyumba, authored the polemical
declaration, On the Abolition of the English Department, setting
in motion a continental and global debate and practices that
later became the heart of postcolonial theories. "If there
is need for a 'study of the historic continuity of a single
culture', why can't this be African? Why can't African literature
be at the centre so that we can view other cultures in relationship
to it?" they asked. The text is carried in his first volume
of literary essays, Homecoming, which appeared in print in 1969.
These were to be followed, in later years, by other volumes
including Writers in Politics (1981 and 1997); Decolonising
the Mind (1986); Moving the Center (1994); and Penpoints Gunpoints
and Dreams (1998).
The year 1977 forced dramatic turns in Ngugi’s
life and career. His first novel in ten years, Petals of Blood,
was published in July of that year. The novel painted a harsh
and unsparing picture of life in neo-colonial Kenya. It was
received with even more emphatic critical acclaim in Kenya and
abroad. The Kenya Weekly Review described as “this bomb
shell” and the Sunday Times of London as capturing every
form and shape that power can take. The same year Ngugi’s
controversial play, Ngaahika Ndeenda (I Will Marry When I Want),
written with Ngugi wa Mirii, was performed at Kamirithu Educational
and Cultural Center, Limuru, in an open air theatre, with actors
from the workers and peasants of the village. Sharply critical
of the inequalities and injustices of Kenyan society, publicly
identified with unequivocally championing the cause of ordinary
Kenyans, and committed to communicating with them in the languages
of their daily lives, Ngugi was arrested and imprisoned without
charge at Kamiti Maximum Security Prison at the end of the year,
December 31, 1977. An account of those experiences is to be
found in his memoir, Detained: A Writer’s Prison Diary
(1982). It was at Kamiti Maximum Prison that Ngugi made the
decision to abandon English as his primary language of creative
writing and committed himself to writing in Gikuyu, his mother
tongue. In prison, and following that decision, he wrote, on
toilet paper, the novel, Caitani Mutharabaini (1981) translated
into English as Devil on the Cross, (1982).
After Amnesty International named him a Prisoner
of Conscience, an international campaign secured his release
a year later, December 1978. However, the Moi Dictatorship barred
him from jobs at colleges and university in the country. He
resumed his writing and his activities in the theater and in
so doing, continued to be an uncomfortable voice for the Moi
dictatorship. While Ngugi was in Britain for the launch and
promotion of Devil on the Cross, he learned about the Moi regime’s
plot to eliminate him on his return, or as coded, give a red
carpet welcome on arrival at Jomo Kenyatta Airport. This forced
him into exile, first in Britain (1982 –1989), and then
the U.S. after (1989-2002), during which time, the Moi dictatorship
hounded him trying, unsuccessfully, to get him expelled from
London and from other countries he visited. In 1986, at a conference
in Harare, an assassination squad outside his hotel in Harare
was thwarted by the Zimbwean security. His next Gikuyu novel,
Matigari, was published in 1986. Thinking that the novel’s
main character was a real living person, Dictator Moi issued
an arrest warrant for his arrest but on learning that the character
was fictional, he had the novel “arrested;” instead.
Undercover police went to all the bookshops in the country and
the Publishers warehouse and took the novel away. So, between
1986 and 1996, Matigari could not be sold in Kenyan bookshops.
The dictatorship also had all Ngugi’s books removed from
all educational institutions.
In exile, Ngugi worked with the London based
Committee for the Release of Political Prisoners in Kenya, (1982-1998),
which championed the cause of democratic and human rights in
Kenya. In between, he was Visiting Professor at Byreuth University
(1984); and Writer in Residence, for the Borough of Islington,
London (1985) and took time to study film, at Dramatiska Institute,
Stockholm, Sweden. (1986). After 1988, Ngugi became Visiting
Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Yale (1989-1992)
in between holding The Five Colleges (Amherst, Mount Holyoke,
New Hampshire, Smith, East Massachusetts) Visiting Distinguished
Professor of English and African Literature (Fall 1991). He
then became Professor of Comparative Literature and Performance
Studies at New York University (1992 –2002) where he also
held the Erich Maria Remarque Professor of languages, from where
he moved to his present position at the University of California
Irvine. He remained in exile for the duration of the Moi Dictatorship
1982-2002. When he and his wife, Njeeri, returned to Kenya in
2004 after twenty-two years in exile, they were attacked by
four hired gunmen and narrowly escaped with their lives.
Ngugi has continued to write prolifically,
publishing, in 2006, what some have described as his crowning
achievement, Wizard of the Crow, an English translation of the
Gikuyu language novel, Murogi wa Kagogo. Ngugi’s books
have been translated into more than thirty languages and they
continue to be the subject of books, critical monographs, and
dissertations.
Paralleling his academic and literary
life has been his role in the production of literature, providing,
as an editor, a platform for other people’s voices. He
has edited the following literary journals: Penpoint (1963-64);
Zuka (1965 -1970); Ghala (guest editor for one issue, 1964?);
and Mutiiri (1992-).
He has also continued to speak around
the world at numerous universities and as a distinguished speaker.
These appearances include: the 1984 Robb Lectures at Auckland
University in New Zealand; the1996 Clarendon Lectures in English
at Oxford University; the 1999 Ashby Lecture at Cambridge; and
the 2006 MacMillan Stewart Lectures at Harvard.
He is recipient of many honors including the 2001 Nonino International
Prize for Literature and seven honorary doctorates. |
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