Ulli Beier

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Ulli Beier (1922- ) is a German editor, writer and scholar, who had a pioneering role in developing Nigerian drama and poetry.

Ulli Beier was born in Glowitz, Germany, in July 1922. His father was a medical doctor and an appreciator of art and raised his son to embrace the arts. After the coming of the Nazi party to power, the Beiers, who are non-practicing Jews, left for Palestine. In Palestine, while his family was briefly detained as enemy alien by the British Authorities, Ulli Beier was able to earn a BA as an external student of the University of London. However, he later moved to London, to earn a degree in Phonetics. A few years later, he was given a faculty position at the University of Ibadan to teach Phonetics.

[edit] Career

While at the University, he transfered from the Phonetics department to the Mural Studies department. It was at the Mural Studies department he became interested in Yoruba culture and arts. Though, he was a teacher at Ibadan, he ventured outside the city and lived in nearby cities, of Ede, Ilobu and Osogbo, this gave him an avenue to see the spatial environment of different Yoruba communities. In 1956, after visiting a Black writers conference in Berlin, Ulli Beier returned to Ibadan and founded Black Orpheus, the name was inspired by Jean Paul Sartre's famous essay "Orphée noir". The journal quickly became the leading space for Nigerian authors to write and publish their works. The journal became known for its innovative works and literary excellence and was widely acclaimed. Later in 1961, Beier, co-founded the Mbari club also called Mbari-Mbayo, a place for new writers, dramatist and artists, to meet and perform their work.

Ulli Beier is known for his effort in translating African works. He emerged as one of the scholars who introduced African writers to a large international audience for his works in translating plays of dramatists such as Duro Ladipo and publishing "Modern Poetry" an anthology of African poems, published in 1963.

Beier left Nigeria in 1968, he worked in Papua New Guinea and intermittently returned to Nigeria for brief periods of time. He returned to his native country of Germany in 1981.

[edit] References

Beier, Ulli. Literature Online biography.Published in Cambridge, 2005, by Chadwyck-Healey

[edit] Works

  • Voices of Independence: New Black Writing from Papua New Guinea. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1980. 251 pp.s
  • Editor: The Penguin Book of Modern African Poetry, 1999.
  • Black Orpheus: An Anthology of New African and Afro-American Stories, 1965.