logo
Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o obituary

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o obituary

The Guardian08-06-2025
Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, who has died aged 87, was long regarded as east Africa's most eminent writer and, along with Chinua Achebe and Wole Soyinka, a founding father of African literature in English.
Like Achebe, his novels showed the social, psychological and economic impact of the colonial encounter in Africa, as well as the disillusion that followed independence. In later years Ngũgĩ championed writing in African languages and published fiction, drama and poetry in Gikuyu, his mother tongue.
His first novel, Weep Not Child (1964), told the story of brothers who respond in different ways to the struggle in the 1950s for independence from British rule by the Land and Freedom Army (also known as the Mau Mau) in his native Kenya, and depicted the brutality of the British in their attempts to quell the rebellion.
After Ngũgĩ showed the manuscript to Achebe at an African writers' conference in Makere, Uganda, in 1962, Achebe secured its publication (under the name James Ngũgĩ) in the Heinemann African Writers series. It was awarded Unesco's first prize at the World Festival of Black Arts in Senegal in 1966.
Thereafter, many more of Ngũgĩ's novels and short stories were published in that series. A Grain of Wheat (1967), considered by some critics his best work of fiction, is set during celebrations for Kenya's independence day and deals with issues of single-minded heroism and betrayal, as well as the sufferings of detainees and women during the struggle for freedom.
An earlier novel, The River Between (1965), featured an unhappy romance and divisions between Christians and non-Christians. It was written while Ngũgĩ was studying for a master's degree in the UK, at the University of Leeds.
Ngũgĩ also wrote plays, including The Black Hermit (1962), which dramatises a conflict between the desire to stay with the traditional world of a rural village and the wish to benefit from modern improvements and wealth, and The Trial of Dedan Kimathi, written in 1976 with Micere Githae Mugo, focusing on the deeds and aims of a leader of the Mau Mau.
Appointed professor of English literature and fellow of creative writing at the University of Nairobi in 1967, Ngũgĩ argued successfully for the re-formation of the department to place African literatures, including oral literatures and writing in African languages, at its centre. At this time he changed his name from James Thiong'o Ngũgĩ to Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o. He also published a series of influential essays gathered later in Homecoming: Essays on African and Caribbean Literature, Culture, and Politics (1972).
Increasingly alienated by the corruption and authoritarian policies that characterised Kenya's government under Jomo Kenyatta and his successor, Daniel Arap Moi, Ngũgĩ was influenced in his later writing by Frantz Fanon and Marxist ideology. Petals of Blood (1977), the last of his novels composed in English, was completed while he stayed in Yalta in Crimea, as a guest of the Soviet Union. Its central character, Wanja, a barmaid and prostitute, becomes a symbol of Kenya and the capitalist exploitation of labour, raped and damaged by corrupt businessmen and politicians.
In the same year that Petals of Blood was published, Ngũgĩ became involved in creating community theatre along the lines advocated by Fanon. Together with the Kenyan playwright Ngũgĩ wa Mirii he composed a play in Gikuyu, Ngaahika Ndeenda (I Will Marry When I Want), which included members of village audiences as actors and vocal responders.
Its success, allied to its outspoken criticism of the Kenyan establishment, led to Ngũgĩ's arrest in 1977. He was detained in Kamiti maximum security prison in Nairobi for almost a year, until released partly through the intervention of Amnesty International. Finding that he had been stripped of his professorship and facing threats to his family, he left Kenya for Britain in 1982.
While in prison Ngũgĩ had used sheets of toilet paper to write Caitaani Mutharaba-ini (The Devil on the Cross), his first novel in Gikuyu. Drawing on styles and forms reminiscent of traditional ballad singers, the novel mingles fantasy and realism to satirise wealthy Kenyans who exploit the poor.
In Britain between 1982 and 1985 he worked with the Committee for the Release of Political Prisoners in Kenya and was writer-in-residence for the London borough of Islington. He was also in demand as a speaker at conferences promoting the reading and study of African and other Commonwealth literatures, often explaining his conviction that African and other indigenous writers should cease writing fiction in English, 'the language of the oppressor'.
His arguments were later published in several collections of essays, including Barrel of a Pen (1982) and Decolonising the Mind: The Politics of Language in African Literature (1986).
Born in the village of Kamiriithu, near Limuru in Kenya, Ngũgĩ was the son of Ngũgĩ wa Ndūcū, a landowner, and his third wife, Wanjiku, in a family consisting of four wives and 28 children. After primary education in the village school he was sent as a boarder to the Alliance high school near Nairobi. There students were made to speak in English only, and beaten if caught speaking Gikuyu or other indigenous languages.
On his return home after his first term, he found that his village had been razed by British forces opposing the Mau Mau insurrection. His family were divided in their attitudes to the Mau Mau; some members opposed it, and one became an informer to the British government, while a half-brother joined the movement, another was detained, and a third, who was deaf, was shot in the back when he failed to stop in response to a command he did not hear. His mother had been detained and also abused.
Ngũgĩ went on to complete a degree in English at Makerere University College in Uganda in 1963, and in 1964 won a scholarship to Leeds. That same year he married his first wife, Nyambura, a teacher, farmer and small trader. He taught English and African literatures at the University of Nairobi from 1967 to 1977, while also serving as a fellow in creative writing at Makerere University.
Following his release from detention in December 1978 and subsequent move to the UK, he remained an exile from Kenya. His one attempt to return, in 2004, resulted in a brutal robbery and a sexual assault on his second wife, Njeeri, an incident that Ngũgĩ strongly suspected was encouraged by people close to the government.
While teaching in the UK and the US, Ngũgĩ wrote several memoirs, including Detained: a Writer's Prison Diary (1982, updated as Wrestling With the Devil, 2018), Dreams in a Time of War: a Childhood Memoir (2010), and Birth of a Dream Weaver: A Memoir of a Writer's Awakening (2016). He also continued to write fiction in Gikuyu. His verse epic retelling the Gikuyu myth of origin, Kenda Mũiyũru: Rũgano rwa Gĩkũyũ na Mũmbi (2019), translated by Ngũgĩ as The Perfect Nine, was the first work written in an indigenous African language to be longlisted for the International Booker prize.
He was the recipient of numerous awards and honorary degrees across the world, and was often seen as a leading candidate for the Nobel prize for literature; so much so that in 2010 many reporters gathered outside his home on the day of its announcement. When it became clear that the award had gone to Mario Vargas Llosa, Ngũgĩ seemed much less disappointed than the reporters, whom he had to console.
Having separated from Nyambura, who did not accompany him into exile, Ngũgĩ married Njeeri, a counsellor and therapist at the University of California, in 1992; they separated in 2023. He is survived by 10 children and seven grandchildren.
Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (James Thiong'o Ngũgĩ), writer and activist, born 5 January 1938; died 28 May 2025
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brian Cox: Trump talking 'b*******s' on Scottish independence
Brian Cox: Trump talking 'b*******s' on Scottish independence

Sky News

time17 hours ago

  • Sky News

Brian Cox: Trump talking 'b*******s' on Scottish independence

Why you can trust Sky News Hollywood actor Brian Cox has told Sky News that Donald Trump is talking "bollocks" after suggesting there should be 50 or 75 years between Scottish independence referendums. The US president said a country "can't go through that too much" when questioned by reporters during his visit to Scotland this week. The Emmy-winning star, who is an independence supporter, has hit back, branding him "that idiot in America". The 79-year-old told Sky News: "He's talking bollocks. I'm sorry, but he does. It's rubbish. Let's get on with it and let's get it [independence] done. We can do it. "It's been tough as there's a great deal of undermining that has gone on." 2:13 SNP fraud probe causing 'harm' Mr Cox said the police fraud investigation examining the SNP's finances has done "enormous harm" to the party and wider independence movement. Nicola Sturgeon was arrested as part of the long-running police probe but cleared of any wrongdoing earlier this year. The former first minister's estranged husband Peter Murrell, who was SNP chief executive for two decades, appeared in court in April to face a charge of alleged embezzlement. He has entered no plea. Brian Cox is preparing to return to the Scottish stage for the first time in a decade in a play about the Royal Bank of Scotland's role in the 2008 financial crash. Ahead of the Edinburgh festival performances, the veteran actor told Sky News: "I think it's a masterpiece. It's certainly one of the best pieces of work I've been involved in. 'My friend Spacey should be forgiven' The Succession star was also asked about his "old friend" Kevin Spacey. The former House of Cards actor, 65, was exiled from the showbiz world in 2017 after allegations of sexual misconduct. Spacey has admitted to "being too handsy" in the past and "touching someone sexually" when he didn't know they "didn't want him to". Spacey stood trial in the UK for multiple sexual offences against four men in July 2023 but was acquitted on all counts. Mr Cox told Sky News: "I am so against cancel culture. Kevin has made a lot of mistakes, but there is a sort of viciousness about it which is unwarranted. "Everybody is stupid as everybody else. Everybody is capable of the same mistakes and the same sins as everybody else." Asked if he could see a return to showbiz for Spacey, Cox replied: "I would think so eventually, but it's very tough for him. "He was tricky, but he has learnt a big lesson. He should be allowed to go on because he is a very fine actor. I just think we should be forgiving."

Praise indeed for Jimmie Rodgers
Praise indeed for Jimmie Rodgers

The Guardian

time2 days ago

  • The Guardian

Praise indeed for Jimmie Rodgers

'Country music has a loyal fan base in Kenya and its popularity is continuing to grow,' says the subheading on your photo gallery (Kenya celebrates International Cowboy Day – in pictures, 27 July). This is nothing new. In 1950 the ethnomusicologist Hugh Tracey recorded young girls of the Kipsigi people in Kenya singing Chemirocha, a song in praise of the 1930s 'father of country music' Jimmie Rodgers, who they believed from his recordings to be 'a faun, half-man and half-antelope'.Ian A AndersonCambridge Women performing on a football field are called Lionesses and not Lions (Letters, 29 July) because lionesses do all the work. They give birth and do the hunting while the lions just lie about. Enough GriceMatlock, Derbyshire 'There is a predictability about railways, timetables…' says the Rev David Gibson (Letters, 28 July). Truly a man of BibbySheffield Our local tip, Folkestone, has put dozens of teddies and soft animals all round it, in the trees, in the kiosk, along the railings. It's an absolute joy to visit (Letters, 25 July).Mandy JonesHythe, Kent MPs earn £93,904, up from £63,291 in 2008. How did they achieve a 48% rise without going on strike like resident doctors?Dr John Doherty Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire Keir Starmer's position on Gaza is akin to watching a burning building and promising not to call the fire brigade next week if the arsonist puts the matches down by HepworthRowland, Derbyshire Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

Artist's long career leads to place in Tate art book
Artist's long career leads to place in Tate art book

BBC News

time4 days ago

  • BBC News

Artist's long career leads to place in Tate art book

"I don't plan my work completely. It comes together. Like life."Sardul Gill has been developing his artistic style over decades during which he moved from India, to Kenya and then to Nottingham, where he taught for nearly 30 87-year-old regularly uses 'found' items to create collages, alongside prints and paintings which often have a religious or spiritual has now received national recognition after he was featured in a book on the history of British South Asian art, from Tate Publishing. Mr Gill was born in India but moved to Kenya following the death of his took a job working at a garage in Kenya, where he won first prize at an exhibition with a painting called Sita in 1959."Someone [offered] me a thousand shillings for it," he said. "But I couldn't sell it. It was the beginning of everything."Mr Gill then came to the UK in 1963 and finally settled in Nottingham in 1972, where he studied diplomas in Art and Education, gained an MA in Fine Art and taught as a lecturer at what was then South Nottingham College for almost 30 Gill added: "Whenever I am going through Nottingham, ex-students come up to me and say how I motivated them." "I showed them my own work in the college so that students could see what I was doing, not just what I was teaching."Beginning with landscape and realism, Mr Gill later turned toward abstraction, collage, and installation. One ever-present in his work is recycled material — polystyrene, cardboard, even scrap palettes. "Recycling is the right word," he said. "I use what I find. Nothing is wasted." Mr Gill said his work frequently deals with cultural remembrance. He painted a portrait of Guru Nanak for his mother, shortly before she died. "She wouldn't have gotten abstraction," he said. "So I painted something she could really relate to."His wife, Inderjit Gill, said: "When he's painting, he doesn't think about anything else — even his tea."He's in a meditative state."Mrs Gill has played a key role in his career and handled communications, organised exhibitions and ensured Mr Gill was able to focus on creating art. "I like living in an art gallery," she smiles. "I say to him — let's put more work up."He was a prominent figure in Nottingham's Asian Artists Group during the 1980s and had his work exhibited widely, from Leicester Museum to the New Art Exchange. Now, his piece, Earth Shrine, will appear in Alina Khakoo's 'A Brief History of British South Asian Art', from Tate Publishing. The painting, composed of texture, nature forms, and metaphorical items is presented as a reflection of Gill's compound, intuitive style. "I don't plan my work completely," he said. "It comes together. Like life."Mr Gill said he was delighted to have his work acknowledged in the book. "All artists want to be acknowledged," he added. "This is gratifying. Surprising. An honour."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store