Soyinka, Wole 1934-
SOYINKA, Wole 1934-
PERSONAL: Name is pronounced "Woh-leh Shaw-yin-ka"; given name, Akinwande Oluwole; born July 13, 1934, in Isara, Nigeria; son of Ayo (a headmaster) and Eniola Soyinka; married; children: four. Education: Attended University of Ibadan; University of Leeds, B.A. (with honors), 1959. Religion: "Human liberty."
ADDRESSES: Offıce—P.O. Box 935, Abeokuta, Ogun, Nigeria. Agent—Greenbaum, Wolff & Ernst, 437 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022.
CAREER: Playwright, poet, and novelist. University of Ibadan, Nigeria, research fellow in drama, 1960-61, chairman of department of theatre arts, 1967-71; University of Ife, professor of drama, 1972; Cambridge University, Cambridge, England, fellow of Churchill College, 1973-74; University of Ife, chairman of department of dramatic arts, 1975-85. Director of own theatre groups, Orisun Players and 1960 Masks, in Lagos and Ibadan, Nigeria, and Unife Guerilla theatre, Ife-Ife, 1978. Visiting professor at University of Sheffield, 1974, University of Ghana, 1975, Yale University, 1979-80, and Cornell University, 1986. Goldwin Smith professor for African Studies and Theatre Arts, Cornell University, 1988-91; Robert W. Woodruff Professor of the Arts, Emory University. Director of plays and actor on stage, film, and radio.
MEMBER: International Theatre Institute (president), Union of Writers of the African Peoples (secretary-general), AAAL, African Academy of Sciences.
AWARDS, HONORS: Rockefeller Foundation grant, 1960; John Whiting Drama Prize, 1966; Dakar Negro Arts Festival award, 1966; Jock Campbell Award, New Statesman, 1968, for The Interpreters; Nobel Prize in Literature, 1986; Leopold Sedan Senghor Award, 1986; Enrico Mattei Award for Humanities, 1986; named Commander of the Federal Republic of Nigeria by General Ibrahim Babangida, 1986; named Commander of the French Legion of Honor, 1989; named Commander of Order of the Italian Republic, 1990; D.Litt., Yale University, University of Leeds, 1973, University of Montpellier, France, and University of Lagos; Prisoner of Conscience Prize, Amnesty International.
WRITINGS:
POETRY
Idanre and Other Poems, Methuen (London, England), 1967, Hill & Wang (New York, NY), 1969.
Poems from Prison, Rex Collings (London, England), 1969, expanded edition published as A Shuttle in the Crypt, Hill & Wang (New York, NY), 1972.
(Editor and author of introduction) Poems of Black Africa, Hill & Wang (New York, NY), 1975.
Ogun Abibiman, Rex Collings (London, England), 1976.
Mandela's Earth and Other Poems, Random House (New York, NY), 1988.
Early Poems, Oxford University Press (New York, NY), 1997.
PLAYS
The Invention, first produced in London, England, at Royal Court Theatre, 1955.
A Dance of the Forests (also see below; first produced in London, England, 1960), Oxford University Press (London, England), 1962.
The Lion and the Jewel (also see below; first produced in London, England, at Royal Court Theatre, 1966), Oxford University Press (London, England), 1962.
Three Plays (includes The Trials of Brother Jero [also see below], one-act, produced Off-Broadway at Greenwich Mews Playhouse, November 9, 1967; The Strong Breed [also see below], one-act, produced at Greenwich Mews Playhouse, November 9, 1967; and The Swamp Dwellers [also see below]), Mbari Publications (Ibadan, Nigeria), 1962, Northwestern University Press (Evanston, IL), 1963.
Five Plays: A Dance of the Forests, The Lion and the Jewel, The Swamp Dwellers, The Trials of Brother Jero, The Strong Breed, Oxford University Press (London, England), 1964.
The Road (produced in Stratford, England, at Theatre Royal, 1965), Oxford University Press (London, England), 1965.
Kongi's Harvest (also see below; produced Off-Broadway at St. Mark's Playhouse, April 14, 1968), Oxford University Press (London, England), 1966.
Rites of the Harmattan Solstice, produced in Lagos, 1966.
Three Short Plays, Oxford University Press (London, England), 1969.
The Trials of Brother Jero, Oxford University Press (London, England), 1969, published with The Strong Breed as The Trials of Brother Jero and The Strong Breed: Two Plays, Dramatists Play Service (New York, NY), 1969.
Kongi's Harvest (screenplay), produced by Calpenny-Nigerian Films, 1970.
Madmen and Specialists (two-act; produced in Waterford, CT, at Eugene O'Neill Memorial Theatre, August 1, 1970), Methuen (London, England), 1971, Hill & Wang (New York, NY), 1972.
(Contributor) Palaver: Three Dramatic Discussion Starters (includes The Lion and the Jewel), Friendship Press (New York, NY), 1971.
Before the Blackout (revue sketches; also see below), Orisun Acting Editions (Ibadan, Nigeria), 1971.
(Editor) Plays from the Third World: An Anthology, Doubleday (New York, NY), 1971.
The Jero Plays: The Trials of Brother Jero and Jero's Metamorphosis, Methuen (London, England), 1973.
(Contributor) African Theatre: Eight Prize-Winning Plays for Radio, Heinemann (London, England), 1973.
Camwood on the Leaves, Methuen (London, England), 1973, published with Before the Blackout as Camwood on the Leaves and Before the Blackout: Two Short Plays, Third Press (New York, NY), 1974.
(Adapter) The Bacchae of Euripides: A Communion Rite (first produced in London, England, at Old Vic Theatre, August 2, 1973), Methuen (London, England), 1973, Norton (New York, NY), 1974.
Collected Plays, Oxford University Press (London, England), Volume 1: A Dance of the Forests, The Swamp Dwellers, The Strong Breed, The Road, The Bacchae, 1973, Volume 2: The Lion and the Jewel, Kongi's Harvest, The Trials of Brother Jero, Jero's Metamorphosis, Madmen and Specialists, 1974.
Death and the King's Horseman (produced at University of Ife, 1976; produced in Chicago, IL, at Goodman Theatre, 1979; produced in New York, NY, at Vivian Beaumont Theatre, March, 1987), Norton (New York, NY), 1975, new edition, Methuen Drama (London, England), 2002.
Opera Wonyosi (light opera; produced in Ife-Ife, Nigeria, 1977), Indiana University Press (Bloomington, IN), 1981.
Priority Projects, revue; produced on Nigeria tour, 1982.
Requiem for a Futurologist (produced in Ife-Ife, Nigeria, 1983), Rex Collings (London, England), 1985.
A Play of Giants (produced in New Haven, CT, 1984), Methuen (London, England), 1984.
Six Plays, Methuen (London, England), 1984.
The Beatification of Area Boy, first produced in Leeds, England, 1996.
Also author of television script, "Culture in Transition."
OTHER
The Interpreters (novel), Deutsch (London, England), 1965.
(Translator) D. O. Fagunwa, The Forest of a Thousand Daemons: A Hunter's Saga (novel), Nelson (London, England), 1967, Humanities Press (Atlantic Highlands, NJ), 1969.
(Contributor) D. W. Jefferson, editor, The Morality of Art, Routledge & Kegan Paul (London, England), 1969.
(Contributor) O. R. Dathorne and Wilfried Feuser, editors, Africa in Prose, Penguin (New York, NY), 1969.
The Man Died: Prison Notes of Wole Soyinka, Harper & Row (New York, NY), 1972; Noonday Press (New York, NY), 1988.
Season of Anomy (novel), Rex Collings (London, England), 1973.
Myth, Literature and the African World (essays), Cambridge University Press (New York, NY), 1976.
Ake: The Years of Childhood (autobiography), Random House (New York, NY), 1981.
Art, Dialogue, and Outrage (essays), New Horn Press (Oxford, England), 1988.
Isara: A Voyage around "Essay," (biography of the author's father), Random House (New York, NY), 1989.
Ibadan: The Penkelemes Years: A Memoir, Spectrum Books (Ibadan, Nigeria), 1994.
The Open Sore of a Continent: A Personal Narrative of the Nigerian Crisis, Oxford University Press (London, England), 1996.
The Burden of Memory, the Muse of Forgiveness (nonfiction), Oxford University Press (London, England), 1998.
Arms and the Arts—A Continent's Unequal Dialogue, University of Cape Town (Cape Town, South Africa), 1999.
Conversations with Wole Soyinka, edited by Biodun Jeyifo, University Press of Mississippi (Jackson, MS), 2001.
Nigeria's Transition to Democracy: Illustrations and Realities, Centre for Advanced Social Science (CASS), (Port Harcourt, Nigeria), 2002.
Salutation to the Gut, (Ibadan, Nigeria), 2002.
Coeditor, Black Orpheus, 1961-64; editor, Transition (now Ch'Indaba), 1974-76.
SIDELIGHTS: Many critics consider Wole Soyinka Africa's finest writer. The Nigerian playwright's unique style blends traditional Yoruban folk-drama with European dramatic form to provide both spectacle and penetrating satire. Soyinka told New York Times Magazine writer Jason Berry that in the African cultural tradition, the artist "has always functioned as the record of the mores and experience of his society." His plays, novels, and poetry all reflect that philosophy, serving as a record of twentieth-century Africa's political turmoil and its struggle to reconcile tradition with modernization. As a young child, Soyinka was comfortable with the conflicting cultures in his world, but as he grew older, he became increasingly aware of the pull between African tradition and Western modernization. Eldred Jones stated in his book Wole Soyinka that the author's work touches on universal themes as well as addressing specifically African concerns: "The essential ideas which emerge from a reading of Soyinka's work are not specially African ideas, although his characters and their mannerisms are African. His concern is with man on earth. Man is dressed for the nonce in African dress and lives in the sun and tropical forest, but he represents the whole race."
Ake, Soyinka's village, was mainly populated with people from the Yoruba tribe and was presided over by the ogboni, or tribal elders. Soyinka's grandfather introduced him to the pantheon of Yoruba gods and to other tribal folklore. His parents were key representatives of colonial influences, however: his mother was a devout Christian convert and his father acted as headmaster for the village school established by the British. When Soyinka's father began urging Wole to leave Ake to attend the government school in Ibadan, the boy was spirited away by his grandfather, who administered a scarification rite of manhood. Soyinka was also consecrated to the god Ogun, ruler of metal, roads, and both the creative and destructive essence. Ogun is a recurring figure in Soyinka's work and has been named by the author as his muse.
Ake: The Years of Childhood, Soyinka's account of his first ten years, stands as "a classic of childhood memoirs wherever and whenever produced," stated New York Times Book Review contributor James Olney. Numerous critics have singled out Soyinka's ability to recapture the changing perspective of a child as the book's outstanding feature; it begins in a light tone but grows increasingly serious as the boy matures and becomes aware of the problems faced by the adults around him. The book concludes with an account of a tax revolt organized by Soyinka's mother and the beginnings of Nigerian independence. "Most of 'Ake' charms; that was Mr. Soyinka's intention," wrote John Leonard of the New York Times. "The last fifty pages, however, inspire and confound; they are transcendent." Olney was of a similar opinion, writing that "the lyricism, grace, humor and charm of 'Ake' . . . are in the service of a profoundly serious viewpoint. . . . Mr. Soyinka, however, does this dramatically, not discursively. Through recollection, restoration and recreation, he conveys a personal vision that was formed by the childhood world that he now returns to evoke and exalt in his autobiography. This is the ideal circle of autobiography at its best. It is what makes 'Ake,' in addition to its other great virtues, the best introduction available to the work of one of the liveliest, most exciting writers in the world today."
Soyinka published some poems and short stories in Black Orpheus, a highly regarded Nigerian literary magazine, before leaving Africa to attend the University of Leeds in England. There his first play was produced. The Invention is a comic satire based on a sudden loss of pigment by South Africa's black population. Unable to distinguish blacks from whites and thus enforce its apartheid policies, the government is thrown into chaos. "The play is Soyinka's sole direct treatment of the political situation in Africa," noted Thomas Hayes in the Dictionary of Literary Biography Yearbook: 1986.
Soyinka returned to Nigeria in 1960 shortly after the country's independence from colonial rule had been declared. He began to research Yoruba folklore and drama in depth and incorporated elements of both into his play A Dance of the Forests, which was commissioned as part of Nigeria's independence celebrations. In his play, Soyinka warned the newly independent Nigerians that the end of colonial rule did not mean an end to their country's problems. It shows a bickering group of mortals who summon up the egungun (spirits of the dead, revered by the Yoruba people) for a festival. They have presumed the egungun to be noble and wise, but they discover that their ancestors are as petty and spiteful as any living people. "The whole concept ridicules the African viewpoint that glorifies the past at the expense of the present," suggested John F. Povey in Tri-Quarterly. "The sentimentalized glamour of the past is exposed so that the same absurdities may not be reenacted in the future. This constitutes a bold assertion to an audience awaiting an easy appeal to racial heroics." Povey also praised Soyinka's skill in using dancing, drumming, and singing to reinforce his theme: "The dramatic power of the surging forest dance [in the play] carries its own visual conviction. It is this that shows Soyinka to be a man of the theatre, not simply a writer."
After warning against living in nostalgia for Africa's past in A Dance of the Forests, Soyinka lampooned the indiscriminate embrace of Western modernization in The Lion and the Jewel. A Times Literary Supplement reviewer called this play a "richly ribald comedy," which combines poetry and prose "with a marvellous lightness in the treatment of both." The plot revolves around Sidi, the village beauty, and the rivalry between her two suitors. Baroka is the village chief, an old man with many wives; Lakunle is the enthusiastically Westernized schoolteacher who dreams of molding Sidi into a "civilized" woman.
In Introduction to Nigerian Literature, Eldred Jones commented that The Lion and the Jewel represents "a clash between the genuine and the false; between the well-done and the half-baked. Lakunle the school teacher would have been a poor symbol of any desirable kind of progress. . . . He is a man of totally confused values. [Baroka's worth lies in] the traditional values of which he is so confident and in which he so completely outmaneouvres Lakunle who really has no values at all." Bruce King, editor of Introduction to Nigerian Literature, named The Lion and the Jewel "the best literary work to come out of Africa."
Soyinka was well established as Nigeria's premier playwright when, in 1965, he published his first novel,The Interpreters. The novel allowed him to expand on themes already expressed in his stage dramas and to present a sweeping view of Nigerian life in the years immediately following independence. Essentially plotless, The Interpreters is loosely structured around informal discussions among five young Nigerian intellectuals. Each one has been educated in a foreign country and returned, hoping to shape Nigeria's destiny. They are hampered by their own confused values, however, as well as the corruption they encounter everywhere. Some reviewers likened Soyinka's writing style in The Interpreters to that of James Joyce and William Faulkner. Others took exception to the formless quality of the novel, but Eustace Palmer asserted in The Growth of the African Novel: "If there are reservations about the novel's structure, there can be none about the thoroughness of the satire at society's expense. Soyinka's wide-ranging wit takes in all sections of a corrupt society. . . . He is careful to expose [the interpreters'] selfishness, egoism, cynicism and aimlessness. Indeed the conduct of the intellectuals both in and out of the university is a major preoccupation of Soyinka's in this novel. The aimlessness and superficiality of the lives of most of the interpreters is patent."
Neil McEwan pointed out in Africa and the Novel that for all its seriousness, The Interpreters is also "among the liveliest of recent novels in English. It is bright satire full of good sense and good humour which are African and contemporary: the highest spirits of its author's early work. . . . Behind the jokes of his novel is a theme that he has developed angrily elsewhere: that whatever progress may mean for Africa it is not a lesson to be learned from outside, however much of 'modernity' Africans may share with others." McEwan further observed that although The Interpreters does not have a rigidly structured plot, "there is unity in the warmth and sharpness of its comic vision. There are moments which sadden or anger; but they do not diminish the fun." Palmer noted that The Interpreters notably influenced the African fiction that followed it, shifting the focus "from historical, cultural and sociological analysis to penetrating social comment and social satire."
The year The Interpreters was published, 1965, also marked Soyinka's first arrest by the Nigerian police. He was accused of using a gun to force a radio announcer to broadcast incorrect election results. No evidence was ever produced, however, and the PEN writers' organization launched a protest campaign, headed by William Styron and Norman Mailer. Soyinka was released after three months. He was next arrested two years later, during Nigeria's civil war. Soyinka was completely opposed to the conflict and especially to the Nigerian government's brutal policies toward the Ibo people who were attempting to form their own country, Biafra. He traveled to Biafra to establish a peace commission composed of leading intellectuals from both sides; when he returned, the Nigerian police accused him of helping the Biafrans to buy jet fighters. Once again he was imprisoned, this time held for more than two years although never formally charged with any crime. Most of that time, he was kept in solitary confinement. When all of his fellow prisoners were vaccinated against meningitis, Soyinka was passed by; when he developed serious vision problems, they were ignored by his jailers. He was denied reading and writing materials, but he manufactured his own ink and began to keep a prison diary, written on toilet paper, cigarette packages and in between the lines of the few books he secretly obtained. Each poem or fragment of journal he managed to smuggle to the outside world became a literary event and a reassurance to his supporters that he still lived, despite rumors to the contrary. He was released in 1969 and left Nigeria soon after, not returning until a change of power took place in 1975.
Published as The Man Died: Prison Notes of Wole Soyinka, the author's diary constitutes "the most important work ever written about the Biafran war," believed Charles R. Larson, contributor to Nation. "'The Man Died' is not so much the story of Wole Soyinka's own temporary death during the Nigerian Civil War but a personified account of Nigeria's fall from sanity documented by one of the country's leading intellectuals." Gerald Weales's New York Times Book Review article suggested that the political content of The Man Died is less fascinating than "the notes that deal with prison life, the observation of everything from a warder's catarrh to the predatory life of insects after a rain. Of course, these are not simply reportorial. They are vehicles to carry the author's shifting states of mind, to convey the real subject matter of the book; the author's attempt to survive as a man, and as a mind. The notes are both a means to that survival and a record to it." Larson underlined the book's political impact, however, noting that ironically, "while other Nigerian writers were emotionally castrated by the war, Soyinka, who was placed in solitary confinement so that he wouldn't embarrass the government, was writing work after work, books that will no doubt embarrass the Nigerian Government more than anything the Ibo writers may ever publish." A Times Literary Supplement reviewer expressed similar sentiment, characterizing The Man Died as "a damning indictment of what Mr. Soyinka sees as the iniquities of wartime Nigeria and the criminal tyranny of its administration in peacetime." Many literary commentators felt that Soyinka's work changed profoundly after his prison term, darkening in tone and focusing on the war and its aftermath.
In the Dictionary of Literary Biography Yearbook: 1986, Hayes quoted Soyinka on his concerns after the war: "I have one abiding religion—human liberty. . . . conditioned to the truth that life is meaningless, insulting, without this fullest liberty, and in spite of the despairing knowledge that words alone seem unable to guarantee its possession, my writing grows more and more preoccupied with the theme of the oppressive boot, the irrelevance of the color of the foot that wears it and the struggle for individuality." In spite of its satire, most critics found The Interpreters to be ultimately an optimistic book. In contrast, Soyinka's second novel Season of Anomy, expresses almost no hope for Africa's future, wrote John Mellors in London Magazine, commenting that the author seemed to write the book "in a blazing fury, angry beyond complete control of words at the abuses of power and the outbreaks of both considered and spontaneous violence. . . . The plot charges along, dragging the reader (not because he doesn't want to go, but because he finds it hard to keep up) through forest, mortuary and prison camp in nightmare visions of tyranny, torture, slaughter and putrefaction. . . . [M]urder and mutilation, while sickeningly explicit, are justified by . . . the author's anger and compassion and insistence that bad will not become better by our refusal to examine it."
Like Season of Anomy, Soyinka's postwar plays are considered more brooding than his earlier work. Madmen and Specialists was described as "grim" by Martin Banham and Clive Wake in African Theatre Today. In the play, a doctor returns from the war trained as a specialist in torture and uses his new skills on his father. The play's major themes are "the loss of faith and rituals" and "the break-up of the family unit which traditionally in Africa has been the foundation of society," according to Charles Larson in the New York Times Book Review. Names and events in the play are fictionalized to avoid censorship, but Soyinka has clearly "leveled a wholesale criticism of life in Nigeria since the Civil War: a police state in which only madmen and spies can survive, in which the losers are mad and the winners are paranoid about the possibility of another rebellion. The prewar corruption and crime have returned, supported by the more sophisticated acts of terrorism and espionage introduced during the war." Larson believed that, in large part, the play was a product of the time Soyinka spent in prison as a political prisoner. "It is, not surprisingly, the most brutal piece of social criticism he has published," Larson commented.
In a similar tone, A Play of Giants presents four African leaders—thinly disguised versions of Jean Bedel Bokassa, Sese Seko Mobutu, Macias Ngeuma, and Idi Amin—meeting at the United Nations building, where "their conversation reflects the corruption and cruelty of their regimes and the casual, brutal flavor of their rule," commented Hayes, in whose opinion the play demonstrates that, "as Soyinka has matured he has hardened his criticism of all that restricts the individual's ability to choose, think, and act free from external oppression. . . . [It is] his harshest attack against modern Africa, a blunt, venomous assault on . . . African leaders and the powers who support them."
In Isara: A Voyage around "Essay," Soyinka provides a portrait of his father, Akinyode Soditan, as well as "vivid sketches of characters and culturally intriguing events that cover a period of fifteen years," Charles Johnson related in the Washington Post. The narrative follows S. A., or "Essay," and his classmates through his years at St. Simeon's Teacher Training Seminary in Ilesa. Aided by documents left to him in a tin box, Soyinka dramatizes the changes that profoundly affected his father's life. The Great Depression that brought the Western world to its knees during the early 1930s was a time of economic opportunity for Africans. The quest for financial gain transformed African culture, as did Mussolini's invasion of Ethiopia and the onset of World War II. More threatening was the violent civil war for the throne following the death of their king. An aged peacemaker named Agunrin resolved the conflict by an appeal to the people's common past. "As each side presents its case, Agunrin, half listening, sinks into memories that unfold his people's collective history, and finally he speaks, finding his voice in a scene so masterfully rendered it alone is worth the price of the book," Johnson claimed. The book is neither a strict biography nor a straight historical account. However, "in his effort to expose Western readers to a unique, African perspective on the war years, Soyinka succeeds brilliantly," Johnson commented. New York Times reviewer Michiko Kakutani wrote that, in addition, "Essay emerges as a high-minded teacher, a mentor and companion, blessed with dignity and strong ideals, a father who inspired his son to achievement."
In his 1996 work, The Open Sore of a Continent: A Personal Narrative of the Nigerian Crisis, Soyinka takes an expansive and unrestrained look at Nigeria's dictatorship. A collection of essays originally delivered as lectures at Harvard, The Open Sore questions the corrupt government, the ideas of nationalism, and international intervention. The book begins with the execution of Ken Saro-Wiwa. For Soyinka, his death, along with the annulment of the elections in 1993, signaled the disintegration of the state. According to Robert D. Kaplan in the New York Times Book Review, Soyinka "uses these harsh facts to dissect, then reinvent not just Nigeria but the concept of nationhood itself."
In 1998, Soyinka ended a self-imposed exile from Nigeria that began in 1993 when a democratically elected government was to have assumed power. Instead, General Ibrahim Babangida, who had ruled the nation for eight years, prohibited the publication of the voting results and installed his deputy, General Sani Abacha, as head of the Nigerian state. Soyinka, along with other pro-democracy activists, was charged with treason for his criticism of the military regime. Faced with a death sentence, Soyinka went into exile in 1994, during which time he traveled and lectured in Europe and the United States. Following the death of Abacha, who held control for five years, the new government, led by General Abdulsalem Abubakar, released numerous political prisoners and promised to hold civilian elections. Soyinka's return to his homeland renewed hope for a democratic Nigerian state. When confronted following a series of lectures at Emory University in early 2004 with questions about why he continues to struggle against almost overwhelming political odds, Soyinka was quoted by Richard Halicks in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution as commenting: "My conviction simply is that power must always be defeated, that the struggle must always continue to defeat power. I don't go looking for fights.
People don't believe this, I'm really a very lazy person. I enjoy my peace and quiet. There's nothing I love better than just to sit quietly somewhere, you know, have a glass of wine, read a book, listen to music, that really is my ideal existence." However, just months after that comment, Soyinka was tear gassed and again arrested, albeit briefly, while protesting the government of President Olusegun Obasanjo for what he and other human rights activists called, according to Andrew Meldrum of the Guardian, "a civilian dictatorship." Following his release, the almost-seventy-year-old Soyinka vowed to launch new antigovernment protests, which simply confirmed a statement he made several months before the arrest, quoted by Halicks, that seems to sum up his undaunted commitment to human liberty: "In prison I had lots of time to ponder, 'Why do I do things that get me into trouble?' I didn't find an answer. I also, to my surprise, didn't incur any internal suggestion that, when I get out of this one, I will stop. It has never occurred to me to stop."
Soyinka's work is frequently described as demanding but rewarding reading. Although his plays are widely praised, they are seldom performed, especially outside Africa. The dancing and choric speech often found in them are unfamiliar and difficult for non-African actors to master, a problem Holly Hill noted in her London Times review of the Lincoln Center Theatre production of Death and the King's Horseman. She awarded high praise to the play, however, saying it "has the stateliness and mystery of Greek tragedy." When the Swedish Academy awarded Soyinka the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986, its members singled out Death and the King's Horseman and A Dance of the Forests as "evidence that Soyinka is 'one of the finest poetical playwrights that have written in English,'" reported Stanley Meisler of the Los Angeles Times. Hayes summarized Soyinka's importance: "His drama and fiction have challenged the West to broaden its aesthetic and accept African standards of art and literature. His personal and political life have challenged Africa to embrace the truly democratic values of the African tribe and reject the tyranny of power practiced on the continent by its colonizers and by many of its modern rulers."
BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES:
BOOKS
Adelugba, Dapo, Wole Soyinka: A Birthday Letter, and Other Essays, University of Ibadan (Ibadan, Nigeria), 1984.
Adelugba, Dapo, editor, Before Our Very Eyes: Tribute to Wole Soyinka, Spectrum Books (Ibadan, Nigeria), 1987.
Agetua, John, When the Man Died: Views, Reviews and Interview on Wole Soyinka's Controversial Book, Agetua (Benin City, Nigeria), 1972.
Bamikunle, Aderemi, Introduction to Soyinka's Poetry: Analysis of A Shuttle in the Crypt, Ahmadu Bello University Press (Zaria, Nigeria), 1991.
Banham, Martin and Clive Wake, African Theatre Today, Pitman Publishing (New York, NY), 1976.
Banham, Martin, Wole Soyinka's "The Lion and the Jewel," Rex Collings (London, England), 1981.
Black Literature Criticism, Gale (Detroit, MI), 1992.
Chinweizu, Onwuchekwa Jemie, and others, Toward the Decolonization of African Literature, Routledge (New York, NY), 1985, pp. 163-238.
Contemporary Literary Criticism, Gale (Detroit, MI), Volume 3, 1975, Volume 5, 1976, Volume 14, 1980, Volume 36, 1986, Volume 44, 1987.
Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 125: Twentieth-Century Caribbean and Black African Writers, Second Series, Gale (Detroit, MI), 1993.
Dictionary of Literary Biography Yearbook: 1986, Gale (Detroit, MI), 1987.
Drama Criticism, Volume 2, Gale (Detroit, MI), 1992.
Duerden, Dennis, and Cosmo Pieterse, editors, African Writiers Talking: A Collection of Radio Interviews, Heinemann (London, England), 1972.
Egudu, Romanus N., Modern African Poetry and the African Predicament, Barnes & Noble (New York, NY), 1978, pp. 104-124.
Etherton, Michael, The Development of African Drama, Hutchinson, 1982.
Fraser, Robert, West African Poetry: A Critical History, Cambridge University Press (New York, NY), 1986.
Gakwandi, Shatto Arthur, The Novel and Contemporary Experience in America, Heinemann (London, England), 1977.
Gibbs, James, editor, Study Aid to "Kongi's Harvest," Rex Collings (London, England), 1973.
Gibbs, James, editor, Critical Perspectives on Wole Soyinka, Three Continents (Colorado Spring, CO), 1980.
Gibbs, James, Wole Soyinka, Macmillan (New York, NY), 1986.
Goodwin, K. L., Understanding African Poetry: A Study of Ten African Poets, Heinemann (London, England), 1982.
Graham-White, Anthony, The Drama of Black Africa, French, 1974.
Herdeck, Donald E., Three Dynamite Authors: Derek Walcott (Nobel 1992), Naguib Mahfouz (Nobel 1988), Wole Soyinka (Nobel 1986): Ten Bio-Critical Essays from Their Works As Published by Three Continents Press, Three Continents Press (Colorado Springs, CO), 1995.
Irele, Abiola, The African Experience in Literature and Ideology, Heinemann (London, England), 1981.
Jeyifo, Biodun, The Truthful Lie: Essays in the Sociology of African Literature, New Beacon, 1985, pp. 11-45.
Jones, Eldred, editor, African Literature Today, Number 5: The Novel in Africa, Heinemann (London, England), 1971.
Jones, Eldred, editor, African Literature Today, number 6: Poetry in Africa, Heinemann (London, England), 1973.
Jones, Eldred, Wole Soyinka, Twayne (Boston, MA), 1973, published in England as The Writings of Wole Soyinka, Heinemann (London, England), 1973, revised, Currey, 1988.
King, Bruce, editor, Introduction to Nigerian Literature, Africana Publishing (New York, NY), 1972.
Larson, Charles R., The Emergence of African Fiction, revised edition, Indiana University Press (Bloomington, IN), 1972.
Lindfors, Bernth, and James Gibbs, editors, Research on Wole Soyinka, Africa World Press (Trenton, NJ), 1992.
McEwan, Neil, Africa and the Novel, Humanities Press (Atlantic Highlands, NJ), 1983.
Moore, Gerald, Wole Soyinka, Africana Publishing (New York, NY), 1971.
Morell, Karen L., editor, In Person—Achebe, Awoonor, and Soyinka at the University of Washington, African Studies Program, Institute for Comparative and Foreign Area Studies, University of Washington (Seattle, WA), 1975.
Ogunba, Oyin, The Movement of Transition: A Study of the Plays of Wole Soyinka, Ibadan University Press (Ibadan, Nigeria), 1975.
Ogunba, Oyin and others, editors, Theatre in Africa, Ibadan University Press (Ibadan, Nigeria), 1978.
Okpu, B., Wole Soyinka: A Bibliography, Libriservice (Lagos, Nigeria), 1984.
Olaniyan, Tejumola, Scars of Conquest/Masks of Resistance: The Invention of Cultural Identities in African, African-American, and Carribbean Drama, Oxford University Press (London, England), 1995.
Omotoso, Kole, Achebe or Soyinka: A Study in Contrasts, Zell (London, England), 1996.
Palmer, Eustace, The Growth of the African Novel, Heinemann (London, England), 1979.
Parsons, E. M., editor, Notes on Wole Soyinka's "The Jero Plays," Methuen (London, England), 1982.
Pieterse, Cosmo, and Dennis Duerden, editors, African Writers Talking: A Collection of Radio Interviews, Africana Publishing (New York, NY), 1972.
Quayson, Ato, Strategic Transformations in Nigerian Writing: Orality and History in the Work of Rev. Samuel Johnson, Amos Tutuola, Wole Soyinka, and Ben Okri, Indiana University Press (Bloomington, IN), 1997.
Ricard, Alain, Theatre et Nationalisme: Wole Soyinka et LeRoi Jones, Presence Africaine (Paris, France), 1972.
Roscoe, Adrian A., Mother Is Gold: A Study in West African Literature, Cambridge University Press (Cambridge, England), 1971.
Soyinka, Wole, The Man Died: Prison Notes of Wole Soyinka, Harper & Row (New York, NY), 1972.
Soyinka, Wole, Myth, Literature and the African World, Cambridge University Press (Cambridge, England), 1976.
Soyinka, Wole, Ake: The Years of Childhood, Random House (New York, NY), 1981.
Tucker, Martin, Africa in Modern Literature: A Survey of Contemporary Writing in English, Ungar (New York, NY), 1967.
Wilkinson, Jane, Talking with African Writers, J. Currey (Portsmouth, NH), 1992.
World Literature Criticism, Gale (Detroit, MI), 1992.
Wright, Derek, Wole Soyinka Revisited, Twayne (Boston, MA), 1993.
PERIODICALS
African American Review, spring, 1996, p. 99.
America, February 12, 1983.
American Theatre, January, 1997, p. 26.
Ariel, July, 1981.
Atlanta-Journal Constitution, April 4, 2004, Richard Halicks, "Q&A/Wole Soyinka: 'Power Must Always Be Defeated,'" section D, p. 1.
Black Orpheus, March, 1966.
Black World, August, 1975, pp. 20-48.
Book Forum, Volume 3, number 1, 1977.
Books Abroad, summer, 1972; spring, 1973.
British Book News, December, 1984; April, 1986.
Christian Science Monitor, July 31, 1970; August 15, 1970.
Commonweal, February 8, 1985.
Commonwealth Essays and Studies, spring, 1991, special on Wole Soyinka.
Contemporary Review, April, 1997, p. 211.
Detroit Free Press, March 20, 1983; October 17, 1986.
Detroit News, November 21, 1982.
Free Inquiry, fall, 1997, p. 48.
Globe and Mail (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), June 7, 1986; January 6, 1990.
Jet, July 18, 1994, p. 27.
London Magazine, April-May, 1974, John Mellors, review of Season of Anomy.
Los Angeles Times, October 17, 1986.
Los Angeles Times Book Review, October 15, 1989.
Nation, October 11, 1965; April 29, 1968; September 15, 1969; November 10, 1969; October 2, 1972; November 5, 1973; May 27, 1996, Charles R. Larson, review of The Beatification of Area Boy, p. 31.
New Perspectives, summer, 1994, p. 61.
New Republic, October 12, 1974; May 9, 1983; December 18, 1995, p. 12; June 16, 1997, p. 33.
New Statesman, December 20, 1968.
Newsweek, November 1, 1982.
New Yorker, May 16, 1977.
New York Review of Books, July 31, 1969; October 21, 1982.
New York Times, November 11, 1965; April 19, 1970; August 11, 1972; September 23, 1982, John Leonard, "Ake," section C, p. 18; May 29, 1986; May 31, 1986; June 15, 1986; October 17, 1986; November 9, 1986; March 1, 1987; March 2, 1987; November 3, 1989, Michiko Kakutani, review of Isara: A Voyage Around "Essay," section C, p. 31; August 26, 1996, p. 26.
New York Times Book Review, July 29, 1973; December 24, 1973; October 10, 1982, James Olney, "Ake," p. 7; January 15, 1984; November 12, 1989; May 15, 1994, p. 24; August 11, 1996, Robert D. Kaplan, review of The Open Sore of a Continent: A Personal Narrative of the Nigerian Crisis, p. 79.
New York Times Magazine, September 18, 1983, Jason Berry, "A Voice Out of Africa," p. 92.
Progressive, August, 1997, p. 36.
Publishers Weekly, June 3, 1996.
Research in African Literatures, spring, 1983.
Saturday Review/World, October 19, 1974.
Spectator, November 6, 1959; December 15, 1973; November 24, 1981.
Time, October 27, 1986; December 5, 1994, p. 29.
Times (London, England), October 17, 1986; April 6, 1987; March 15, 1990.
Times Literary Supplement, April 1, 1965; June 10, 1965; January 18, 1968; December 31, 1971; March 2, 1973; December 14, 1973; February 8, 1974; March 1, 1974; October 17, 1975; August 5, 1977; February 26, 1982; September 23, 1988; March 22-29, 1990; February 24, 1995, Adewale Maja-Pearce, review of Ibadan: The Penkelemes Years: A Memoir; June 13, 1997, Landeg White, "Walking a Step with Soyinka," p. 27.
Tribune Books (Chicago, IL), October 7, 1979; November 19, 1989; July 31, 1994.
Tri-Quarterly, fall, 1966, John F. Povey, review of A Dance of the Forests.
Village Voice, August 31, 1982.
Washington Post, October 30, 1979; October 17, 1986; November 10, 1989, Charles Johnson, review of Isara, section D, p. 3.
Washington Post Book World, November 10, 1996, p. 4.
World, February 13, 1973.
World Literature Today, winter, 1977; autumn, 1981; summer, 1982.
ONLINE
University of California—Berkeley, Institute of International Studies Web site, http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/ (April 16, 1998), "Conversation with Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka."*