Arthur Gakwandi is a novelist, short story writer and diplomat.[1] He wrote "Kosiya Kifefe",[2] the fifth work of literature written by a Ugandan to feature on the Ugandan syllabus since independence.[3] He is a lecturer in the Literature Department at Makerere University.[4] He was Commonwealth Writers Prize judge for Africa in 2008.[5]
Arthur Gakwandi | |
---|---|
Born | Arthur Gakwandi 1943 Uganda |
Occupation | Writer, diplomat, story teller |
Nationality | Ugandan |
Genre | Fiction |
Notable awards | Commonwealth Writers Prize 2008 |
Early life and education
editGakwandi was born in Kajara.[6] He attended Ntare School in Mbarara and later Makerere University college where he earned his BA. He later received an MLit degree from the University of Edinburgh. After years of teaching literature at Makerere, he joined the Ugandan diplomatic service in 1998 and served in various capacities as an ambassador.[7]
Pan-Africanism
editGakwandi theorized a re-imagined African continent, due to his belief that "political restructuring of the continent is a more important priority that needs to be addressed before economic restructuring can bring about the desired results."[8][failed verification] Moreover, Gakwandi argues that the colonially-inherited borders are the source of the small size of the majority of African states, causing the levels of poverty, dependency, underdevelopment, and ethnic conflict that is currently experienced in the region. Thus, Gakwandi proposed the creation of a new political map of Africa[9] that would eliminate landlocked countries, as a way to mitigate border disputes, reunite African nationalities currently divided by the colonial borders, provide new states with an adequate resource base, ease existing intrastate ethnic tensions, enhance Africa's world standing, and reduce inter-ethnic tensions. With these critical objectives in mind, Gakwandi proposed a new political map of Africa consisting of seven African conglomerate states to represent the critical regions of Africa. These seven new states consisted of the Sahara Republic, Senegambia, Central Africa and Swahili Republic, Ethiopia, Swahili Republic, Mozambia, and Madagascar. The Sahara Republic state would encompass North Africa, Senegambia would encompass West Africa, the Central Africa and Swahili Republic would encompass Central Africa, Ethiopia would encompass modern-day Ethiopia as well as Eritrea, the Swahili Republic would include East Africa and art of Central Africa, Mozambia would include Southern Africa. In Gakwandi's imagining, Madagascar would remain as it currently stands and would not be incorporated into a new republic.[10]
Published works
editNovels
edit- Kosiya Kifefe. East African Education Publishers. 1997. ISBN 9789966468383.
Commentary
edit- Uganda Pocket facts. Fountain Publishers. 1997. ISBN 9970-02-145-1.
Literary Criticism
edit- The novel and contemporary experience in Africa. London : Heinemann. 1977. ISBN 9780841903067.
References
edit- ^ "Writers are mirrors of society, says Prof Arthur Gakwandi" observer.ug. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- ^ "Kosiya Kifefe (by Arthur Gakwandi)" africabookclub.com. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- ^ "Uganda: Kosiya Kifefe Guide Launched" allafrica.com. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- ^ "BOOKS THEY READ: Prof Arthur Gakwandi " monitor.co.ug.Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- ^ "The Commonwealth Writers’ Prize 2008 " Archived April 23, 2013, at the Wayback Machine peepaltreepress.com. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- ^ nevender (2017-02-13). "Who Are The Male Heroes of Ugandan Literature?". Writivism. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
- ^ Simon Gikandi, Evan Mwangi (Aug 13, 2013). The Columbia Guide to East African Literature in English Since 1945. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231500647. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
- ^ Nesther Nachafiya, Alu (July 2011). "Between New Challenges in African Literature and Contemporary Realities: the Case Study of Opanachi's Eaters of the Living". African Research Review. 5 (4) (21): 342–353. ISSN 2070-0083.
- ^ Martin, Guy (2012). Pan-Africanism and African unity. Routledge Handbooks Online. ISBN 9780367030667.
- ^ Falola, Toyin (2004). Nationalism and African Intellectuals. University Rochester Press. ISBN 978-1-58046-149-8.