Mazisi Kunene | |
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Born | Mazisi kaMdabuli Kunene May 12, 1930 Durban, South Africa |
Died | August 11, 2006 Durbin South Africa |
Occupation | poet, national historian and diplomat |
Language | English and Zulu |
Nationality | South African |
Ethnicity | Zulu |
Period | Contemporary |
Influences
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Mazisi (Raymond) Kunene (May 12, 1930 – August 11, 2006) was a South African poet best known for his poem Emperor Shaka the Great. While in exile from South Africa's apartheid regime, Kunene was an active supporter and organizer of the anti-apartheid movement in Europe and Africa. He would later teach at UCLA and become Africa's and South Africa's poet laureate.
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Kunene was born in Durban, in the modern province of KwaZulu-Natal.[1] From very early he began writing poetry and short stories in Zulu, and by age eleven he was being published in local papers.[2] He later undertook a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Natal in Zulu and history and later a Master of Arts in Zulu Poetry.[3] His Master's thesis was titled An Analytical Survey of Zulu Poetry, Both Traditional and Modern.[2] There he criticized the changing nature of Zulu literature, and its emulation of the Western tradition.[2] He won a Bantu Literary Competition in 1956 and left for London to study at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London in 1959.[3]
He opposed the apartheid government as the head of the African United Front.[3] Fleeing into exile from the country in 1959, he helped push for the ani-apartheid movement in Britain between 1959-1968.[1][3] Kunene was closely affiliated with the African National Congress, quickly becoming their main representative in Europe and the United States in 1962.[1] He would later become the director of fiance for the ANC in 1972.[3] He became a Professor of African literature at the University of California, Los Angeles in 1975 after teaching in a number of universities as a cultural advisor for UNESCO.[1] He remained at UCLA for nearly two decades, retiring in 1992.[1]
Kunene wrote and published poetry from very early in his life. His works were written originally in Zulu and then translated into English.[3] In 1966, his works were banned by the Apartheid government of South Africa.[4] In 1970, Kunene published Zulu Poems, an anthology of poems ranging from "moral reflection to political commentary."
In Emperor Shaka the Great, published in English in 1979, Kunene tells the story of the rise of the Zulu under Shaka. World Literature Today contributor Christopher Larson described it as a "a monumental undertaking and achievement by any standards." [3] This extremely nationalistic work charted the growth of the Zulu nation under Shaka, as he reforms the military and the nation and conquers many of the tribes around Zululand.
Anthem of the Decades:A Zulu Epic published in English in 1981 tells the Zulu legend of how death came to mankind. In 1982, Kunene published a second collection of poems titled The Ancestors and the Sacred Mountain: Poems containing 100 of his poems.[1] This collection had a particular emphasis on socio-political topics.[3]
Kunene returned to South Africa in 1992 where he taught at the University of Natal until his retirement. UNESCO made him Africa's poet laureate in 1993 and in 2005 he became the poet laureate of South Africa.[1] He died August 11, 2006 in Durban after a lengthy bout of cancer.[1][5] He was survived by his wife and four children.[1]
Poetic works:[6]