Names: Nkosi, Lewis
Born: 1936, Durban, KwaZulu-Natal (then Natal), South Africa
In Summary: South African writer, academic and literary critic.
Lewis Nkosi was born in Durban, South Africa and was educated at local schools before enrolling at M. L. Sultan Technical College in Durban.
Nkosi began his writing career at the publication Ilanga lase Natal in Durban. In 1956, he joined other African writers on the staff of Drum magazine, which was founded in 1951.
In his book Home and Exile and Other Selections (1965), Nkosi describes the Drum staff as "the new African[s] cut adrift from the tribal reserve - urbanised, eager, fast-talking and brash."
In 1960, Nkosi accepted a fellowship to study at Harvard University, and left South Africa on an exit permit.
Nkosi has since worked as an editor for The New African in London and the NET in the United States. Nkosi has also been a Professor of Literature at various universities, including the University of Wyoming, the University of California-Irvine, and universities in Zambia and Warsaw, Poland.
Nkosi has also worked with well known African authors such as Chinua Achebe and Wole Soyinka, which was recorded in an interview in Bernth Lindfors' Conversations with Chinua Achebe.
Nkosi also shared the writing credits with Lionel Rogosin and William “Bloke” Modisane for the film Come Back, Africa in 1960.
He now lives in England, where he teaches and writes articles on African literature.
Novels:
Mating Birds (1986)
Underground People (2002)
Mandela’s Ego (2006)
Plays:
The Rhythm of Violence (1963)
Malcolm (1972)
The Black Psychiatrist (2001)
Essays:
Home and Exile (1965)
Home and Exile and Other Selections (1983)
The Transplanted Heart: Essays on South Africa (1975)
Tasks and Masks: Themes and Styles of African Literature (1981)
References:
- Come Back, Africa [online] Available at: www.wikipedia.org [Accessed 22 July 2009]
- Lewis Nkosi [online] Available at: www.wikipedia.org [Accessed 22 July 2009]
- Lewis Nkosi Biography [online] Available at: www.answers.com [Accessed 22 July 2009]