where Africa speaks and the world listens

Presented by London Slam Central:
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September 16, 2005
Start Time: 7.00pm

The African Writers' Evening hosts another quality evening of literature with celebrated Malawian poet Jack Mapanje, and emerging Ugandan poet Jesica Mkakyera Horn. Recent UEA grad Akin Oladimeji jons them to read some fiction. Jack will be reading selected poems from his long career, Jessica will be reading from her forthcoming collection and Akin will read a short story from a collection he's working on. As usual there will be poets and writers from all over Africa sharing poetry on the open mike.

Address: 22 Betterton Street, Covent Garden, London WC2
entry: £4
to reserve a seat: events [at] x-bout [dot] com
Next Date
November 18

featured readers

September: Jack Mapanje & Jessica Mkakyera Horn
Biographies:

Jack Mapanje is a distinguished Malawian poet, linguist, editor and scholar. Formerly head of Department of English at Chancellor College, University of Malawi.

He was co-founder of the Linguistics Association for SADC Universities (LASU) - a forum for sharing and exchanging knowledge and research in linguistics, in the ten universities of Africa, south of the Sahara. He was imprisoned for three and a half years by dictator Hastings Kamuzu Banda of Malawi, essentially for his poetry, and now lives in the city of York, England, with his family.

Jack has published four books of poetry: Of Chameleons and Gods, (H.E.B, 1981), The Chattering Wagtails of Mikuyu Prison (H.E.B, 1993), Skipping Without Ropes (Bloodaxe Books, 1998) and The Last of the Sweet Bananas: New & Selected Poems (Bloodaxe Books, 2004). He has co-edited Oral Poetry from Africa: an anthology (Longmans, 1983), Summer Fires: New Poetry of Modern Africa (H.E.B, 1983), The African Writers’ Handbook (African Book Collective, 1999) and he has recently edited Gathering Seaweed: African Prison Writing (H.E.B, 2002). His prison memoir tentatively titled 'The Whispers We Shared' will appear in 2005.

For his academic achievement, contribution to poetry and human rights, Jack is recipient of the 1988 Rotterdam Poetry International Award and the 2002 African Literature Association (USA) Fonlon-Nichols Award. He was poet in residence at The Wordsworth Trust, Dove Cottage, Grasmere, Cumbria and is now a senior lecturer in English at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. Jack teaches on the Memoir Writing and Poetry Masterclass short courses.



Jessica Horn is a poet and women's rights activist. Born to a Ugandan mother and American father she has lived in Lesotho, the Fiji Islands and the USA and currently lives and works in London. She won the Sojourner Poetry Prize in 2001, judged by June Jordan, for her poem 'Dis UN: For Rwanda'. Jessica is currently working on a collection of poems.


Books by authors:


News:

African Writers' Evening listed in BBC recommended events list
Previous feature, Diana Evans, wins Orange New Writer Prize
Founder Nii Ayikwei Parkes fronts BBC's African Bookclub


Upcoming Features:

November: Atukwei Okai (Ghana - tbc) and others

for previous features click on relevant months below

This event is now supported by the Arts Council.
Other London SLAM Central events supported by the Arts Council are: Outdooring and Spoken Soul

*SLAM stands for Society, Literature, Art and Music