Gabriel Imomotimi Okara (born 24 April 1921) is a Nigerian poet and novelist who was born in Bumoundi in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, Nigeria. The first Modernist poet of Anglophone Africa, he is best known for his
early experimental novel, The
Voice (1964), and his award-winning poetry, published in The Fisherman's Invocation (1978) and The Dreamer, His Vision (2005).
In both his poems and his prose, Okara draws on African thought, religion, folklore and imagery, and he has been called "the Nigerian Negritudist".According to Brenda Marie Osbey, editor of his Collected Poems, "It is with publication of Gabriel Okara's first poem that Nigerian literature in English and modern African poetry in this language can be said truly to have begun."
Biography
Gabriel Imomotimi Gbaingbain
Okara, the son of an Ijọ chief, was
born in Bomoundi in the Niger Delta in 1921. He was educated at Government College Umuahia, and later
at Yaba Higher College. During World War II,
he attempted to enlist in the British Royal Air Force but did not complete
pilot training, instead he worked for a time for the British Overseas Airway Corporation (later
British Airways).
In 1945 Okara found work as a printer and bookbinder for
colonial Nigeria’s government-owned publishing company. He remained in that
post for nine years, during which he began to write. At first he translated
poetry from Ijaw into English and wrote scripts for government radio.
He
studied journalism at Northwestern University in 1949, and
before the outbreak of the Nigerian Civil War (1967–70) worked as
Information Officer for the Eastern Nigerian Government Service. Together
with Chinua Achebe, Okara was roving ambassador
for Biafra's
cause during part of 1969. From
1972 to 1980 he was director of the Rivers State Publishing
House in Port Harcourt.
No comments:
Post a Comment