Musaemura Zimunya

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Musaemura Bonas Zimunya (born November 14, 1949) is one of Zimbabwe's most important contemporary writers.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Zimunya was born in Umtali, Rhodesia (now Mutare, Zimbabwe), to Mandiera Watch and Kufera Zimunya. He graduated with honours at the University of Kent, Canterbury, UK, with a Bachelor's degree in 1978. The following year he was awarded a Master's degree, also by the University of Kent. In 1980, he returned to newly independent Zimbabwe where he settled and married Viola Catherine, and took a University of Zimbabwe position as a professor of English that he kept since.[1]

Zimunya's poetry is lyrical in its love of both the natural environment and humankind, but much of his work is also highly political. He writes bitingly of the 'Benzocrats' who enriched themselves in the name of Independence, carried by the people they claimed to be liberating. Most of his published work is in English, but he also writes in Shona.

[edit] Works

[edit] Poetry

[edit] Short stories

[edit] Literary criticism

  • Those Years of Drought and Hunger: The Birth of African Fiction in English in Zimbabwe 1982. ISBN 0-86922-183-3

[edit] As editor

  • And Now the Poets Speak Mambo Press, 1981. With Mudereri Khadani. Anthology of Zimbawean poets. ISBN B-000-0EDXW-2
  • The Fate of Vultures: New Poetry of Africa Heinemann International, 1989. With Kofi Anyidoho and Peter Porter. ISBN 0-435-90550-3
  • Birthright: Selection of Poems from Southern Africa Longman International Education, 1990. ISBN 0-582-89523-5 Anthology of African poets

[edit] References

  1. ^ Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2006.

[edit] External links