Information we gathered disclose that Prof Chinua Achebe is dead.
He died at 82, late last night at Boston Hospital, United State, Massachusetts.
He has been ill and has since been hospitalized at a hospital in Boston.
Until his death, Prof Achebe was the David and Marianna Fisher University Professor and Professor of Africana Studies at Brown.
“Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe is known the world over for having
played a seminal role in the founding and development of African
literature. He continues to be considered among the most significant
world writers. He is most well known for the groundbreaking 1958
novel Things Fall Apart, a novel still considered to be required reading
the world over. It has sold over twelve million copies and has been
translated into more than fifty languages.
“Achebe’s global significance lies not only in his talent and
recognition as a writer, but also as a critical thinker and essayist who
has written extensively on questions of the role of culture in Africa
and the social and political significance of aesthetics and analysis of
the postcolonial state in Africa. He is renowned, for example, for “An
Image of Africa,” his trenchant and famous critique of Joseph
Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. Today, this critique is recognized as one of
the most generative interventions on Conrad; and one that opened the
social study of literary texts, particularly the impact of power
relations on 20th century literary imagination.
“In addition, Achebe is distinguished in his substantial and weighty
investment in the building of literary arts institutions. His work as
the founding editor of the Heinemann African Writers Series led to his
editing over one hundred titles in it. Achebe also edited the University
of Nsukka journal Nsukkascope, founded Okike: A Nigerian Journal of New
Writingand assisted in the founding of a publishing house, Nwamife
Books–an organization responsible for publishing other groundbreaking
work by award-winning writers. He continues his long-standing work on
the development of institutional spaces where writers can be published
and develop creative and intellectual community.”
R.I.P
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