Nkem
Nwankwo
Born
in Nawfia-Awka, a village near the Igbo city of Onitsha in Nigeria, Nwankwo attended University
College in Ibadan, gaining a BA in 1962. After graduating he took a
teaching job at Ibadan Grammar School, before going on to write for magazines,
including Drum and working for the Nigerian
Broadcasting Corporation.[1]
He
wrote several stories for children that were published in 1963 as Tales Out
of School; More Tales out of School would follow in 1965.
Writer
of short stories and poems, Nwankwo gained significant attention with his first
novel Danda (1964),[2] which was made into a widely performed
musical that was entered in the 1966 World Festival
of Negro Arts in
Dakar, Senegal.[1] During the Nigerian Civil War Nwankwo worked on Biafra's
Arts Council and in 1968, in collaboration with Samuel X. Ifekjika, he wrote Biafra:
The Making of a Nation. After the civil war, he returned to Lagos and
worked on the national newspaper, the Daily Times.[1] His subsequent works included the satire My
Mercedes Is Bigger than Yours.
During
the 1970s, Nwankwo earned a Master's and Ph.D. at Indiana University. He also wrote about
corruption in Nigeria. He spent the latter part
of his life in the US and taught at Michigan State
University
and Tennessee State
University.[3]
He
died in his sleep in Tennessee, from complications from a
heart imbalance that he had been battling for some years.[4]
Books
- The Scapegoat — 1984 (Enugu: Fourth Dimension Publishers)
- My Mercedes Is Bigger than Yours — 1975
- Danda - 1963 (Lagos: African Universities Press; London: Deutsch, 1964)
- Tales Out of School (short stories; 1963)
Short stories
- The Gambler, in: Black Orpheus no. 9[5]
- His Mother, in: Nigeria Magazine no. 80, March 1964
- The Man Who Lost in: Nigeria Magazine no. 84, March 1965
Other
- Sex Has Been Good To Me (reprint of essays), 2004
- Shadow of the Masquerade (autobiography), Nashville, TN: Niger House Publications 1994, pp. 58–61
- A Song for Fela & Other Poems. Nashville, TN: Nigerhouse, 1993
- Theatre reviews in: Nigeria Magazine no. 72, March 1962
References
· Oyekan Owomoyela, The Columbia Guide to West African Literature in English
Since 1945,
Columbia University Press, 2008, pp. 132–33.
· · Lynn, Thomas J., "Tricksters Don't Walk the Dogma: Nkem Nwankwo's
'Danda'", College
Literature, Summer 2005, Vol. 32, Issue 3, p. 1.
5. · Black
Orpheus was an influential literary periodical in Ibadan, founded in 1957
by Ulli Beier, see Bernth Lindfors, Black Orpheus, in: European-language Writing in Sub-Saharan
Africa, Vol. 2, John Benjamins Publishing, 1986, pp. 669–679.
- Akwanya, A. N. The Self in the Mirror: Nkem Nwankwo and the Study of Exhibitionism in: OKIKE 39 (1988) 39-52
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