
Professor Ngugi WA THIONG'O
Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative
Literature
University of California, Irvine, USA
Professor Ngugi wa Thiong'o, currently Distinguished Professor
of English and Comparative Literature and Director of the
International Center for Writing and Translation at the
University of California, Irvine, was born in Kenya, in
1938. He is one of Africa's greatest living novelists, playwrights,
cultural and literary theoreticians and intellectuals.
Ngugi burst onto the literary scene in East Africa with
the performance of his first major play, The Black Hermit
in 1962 as part of the celebration of Uganda's Independence.
In 1967, Ngugi became lecturer in English Literature at
the University of Nairobi. He taught there until 1977. His
first novel in ten years -
Petals of Blood, depicted
a harsh and unsparing picture of life in neo-colonial Kenya,
was published in the same year. His works were politically
controversial. He was arrested and imprisoned without charge
and was released with the help of International Amnesty
in 1978.
Ngugi went into self-imposed exile after he had learnt that
the Moi regime's plot to eliminate him. He was first in
Britain (1982 ¡V1989), and then the U.S. after (1989-2002),
during this period, he was Visiting Professor in various
universities in Europe and US (including Yale). He then
became Professor of Comparative Literature and Performance
Studies at New York University (1992 ¡V2002).
Ngugi has continued to write prolifically, publishing, in
2006, what some have described as his crowning achievement,
Wizard of the Crow, an English translation of the Gikuyu
language novel, Murogi wa Kagogo. On August 8, 2004, Ngugi
ended his exile by visiting Kenya as part of a month-long
tour of East Africa.