Zimbabwean author and filmmaker
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Santanu Bhattacharya grew up in India, and studied at the University of Oxford and the National University of Singapore. He won the Desmond Elliott Prize Residency in 2023, and the Mo Siewcharran and Life Writing Prizes in 2021. His first novel, One Small Voice, was an Observer best debut novel of 2023, and was shortlisted for the Authors' Club Best First Novel Award and the Society of Authors' Gordon Bowker Volcano Prize. He now lives in London.Deviants has been praised by The Guardian, The i Paper and The Financial Times. Santanu's first book One Small Voice has been celebrated by Max Porter, Nikesh Shukla, Tsitsi Dangarembga, The Irish Times and The Guardian. Get the book here or at your local bookshop. Vivaan, a teenager in India's silicon plateau, has discovered love on his smartphone. Intoxicating, boundary-breaking love. His parents know he is gay, and their support is something Vivaan can count on, but they don't know what exactly their son gets up to in the online world.For his uncle, born thirty years earlier, things were very different. Mambro's life changed forever when he fell for a male classmate at a time, and in a country, where the persecution of gay people was rife under a colonial-era law criminalising homosexuality.And before that was Mambro's uncle Sukumar, a young man hopelessly in love with another young man, but forced by social taboos to keep their relationship a secret at all costs. Sukumar would never live the life he yearned for, but his story would ignite and inspire his nephew and grand-nephew after him.Bold and bracing, intimate and heartbreaking, Deviants examines the histories we inherit and the legacies we leave behind.
Roman To objokovano telo - v izvirniku je izšel leta 2018 - je tretji del trilogije, ki je nastajala od leta 1988. V njem je pisateljica drobce avtofikcije, ki ni prvoosebna, pač pa je zgodba podana kot nekakšna samorefleksija z razdalje (z vidika drugoosebne pripovedovalke), vdelala predvsem v lik, ki ni v ospredju, čeprav so določene izkušnje prve zimbabvejske pisateljice, ki je izdala knjigo v angleškem jeziku, vpisane v podobo protagonistke romana.Ta se ukvarja predvsem s tem, kako osmisliti življenje v družbi neenakih možnosti, kako s končano visoko izobrazbo ubežati revnemu življenju vaške periferije, obogateti, zlesti iz depresivnih epizod, upleniti bogatega moža, postati uspešna v očeh svojih sorodnikov, se izviti iz zavisti do drugih, se otresti sramote, ker ni uspelo poseganje po sanjah obljubljenega življenja ... Njena spoznanja o družbi, lastni vrednosti in statusu, odnosih moški - ženska, beli - temnopolti, jo pahnejo v pesimizem in obup ... A smisel zanjo, ki je obtičala v okoliščinah, predvidenih za mlajše ženske, vseeno obstaja. Nenazadnje se na lastnih nogah, v prenesenem pomenu sicer, obdržijo tudi invalidni ljudje in prizadete osebe iz časov bojev za neodvisnost in svobodo, iz časov vojne, okrog katere je zgrajen skoraj ves njihov identitetni svet ... Knjigo, ki je izšla pri Založbi Goga, je prevedel Andrej E. Skubic.
A complete unknown, il biopic su Bob Dylan di James Mangold con Timothée Chalamet, ha ottenuto otto candidature per gli Oscar e ha fatto conoscere il grande cantautore statunitense (e premio Nobel per la letteratura) alla generazione Z. Lo scrittore Vincenzo Latronico racconta l'incredibile storia del ladro di libri. Nevrosi di Tsitsi Dangarembga è un classico della letteratura postcoloniale africana che torna in libreria. Il compositore Ennio Morricone e tutta la sua musica, non solo quella da film, sono i protagonisti dello spettacolo di danza Notte Morricone del coreografo e regista spagnolo Marcos Morau. CONGiovanni Ansaldo, editor di musica di InternazionaleVincenzo Latronico, scrittore Francesca Sibani, editor di Africa di Internazionale Maria Luisa Buzzi, critica di danza
Tsitsi Dangarembga is a critically acclaimed Zimbabwean writer. She is known for her trilogy of semi-autobiographical novels- ‘Nervous Conditions', ‘The Book of Not', and ‘This Mournable Body'. She's won awards, made films, been arrested for anti-government protests in her home country and lived in Zimbabwe and abroad. For the last episode in our ‘How I became me' series, Alan Kasujja speaks to her about the choices and moments that shaped her life and her decision to become a writer.
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Gerade senden wir mit "Verleugnen" den zweiten Teil aus der Roman-Trilogie der simbabwischen Schriftstellerin Tsitsi Dangarembga. Für diese drei Romane wurde die Autorin international gefeiert. Im Jahr 2020 stand ihr dritter Roman "Überleben" auf der Shortlist des britischen Booker Prize, 2021 erhielt sie den Friedenspreis des deutschen Buchhandels. Aber welche Rolle spielt Tsitsi Dangarembga in ihrer Heimat Simabwe? Wir sprechen mit Barbara Groeblinghoff, Projektleiterin für Simbabwe und Südafrika der Friedrich-Naumann-Stiftung.
Tsitsi Dangarembga, genomineerd voor de Booker Prize, schrijft indringend over de pijnlijke realiteit van discriminatie. Uitgegeven door Ten Have Spreker: Angelique Houtveen
Tsitsi Dangarembga skriver om flukten fra undertrykkelse, fattigdom og rasisme i «Nervøse tilstander». Hør episoden i appen NRK Radio
«Every time we say it can't get any worse it does,» writer Tsitsi Dangarembga has said about the situation in her home country Zimbabwe.The UNs special envoy has reacted to the arbitrary arrests of activists and politicians from the opposition. Last year, Dangarembga was herself convicted after partaking in a peaceful protest with one other activist in 2020. While large parts of the middle class and cultural elite has left Zimbabwe, Dangarembga has staid put and fought for change. Now she debates moving countries.Across the world, it is becoming increasingly difficult to protest governments and large corporations. Environmental activists are especially vulnerable: According to the human rights organization Global Witness, 200 environmental activists were murdered across the world in 2021 alone.In 2016, South African activist Nonhle Mbuthuma lost a close friend and colleague. Ever since, she has lived with constant death threats in her work to protect the nature and community where she lives, on the east coast of South Africa.Mbuthuma and Dangarembga will join for a conversation about the conditions for human rights and civil society in Zimbabwe and South Africa. How do you keep fighting for grass roots engagement and change under such perilous conditions?Moderating the conversation is Bergdís Jóelsdóttir. She has worked with civil society and human rights initiatives in Southern Africa for a number of years, and is currently the policy director for Amnesty International Norway. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
«Hver gang vi sier det ikke kan bli verre, så blir det det,» sier forfatter Tsitsi Dangarembga om situasjonen i hjemlandet Zimbabwe.Vilkårlig arrest og fengsling av opposisjonspolitikere, aktivister og journalister har fått FNs spesialutsending til å reagere. I fjor ble Dangarembga selv dømt etter å ha deltatt i en fredelig protest med en annen aktivist i 2020. Mens store deler av middelklassen og kultureliten har forlatt Zimbabwe, har Dangarembga blitt værende og kjempet for forbedring. Nå vurderer hun for første gang å flytte.Verden over blir det stadig vanskeligere å protestere mot myndigheter og store selskaper. Miljøaktivister er særlig utsatt: I 2021 ble 200 miljøaktivister myrdet, ifølge menneskerettsorganisasjonen Global Witness.I 2016 mistet sørafrikanske Nonhle Mbuthuma en nær venn og kollega. Siden har hun også levd med jevnlige dødstrusler i arbeidet for å bevare naturen og lokalsamfunnet sitt på Sør-Afrikas østkyst.Mbuthuma og Dangarembga møtes til en samtale om situasjonen for menneskerettigheter og sivilsamfunn i Zimbabwe og Sør-Afrika. Hvordan kjempe videre for folkelig engasjement og endring under så farlige forhold?Til å lede samtalen kommer Bergdís Jóelsdóttir. Hun har jobbet med menneskerettigheter i det Sørlige Afrika i en årrekke, og er i dag leder for politikk og samfunnsavdelingen i Amnesty Norge. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Zimbabwiske Tsitsi Dangarembga har gjennom mer enn 30 år markert seg som en betydningsfull forfatter. I fjor ble hun innlemmet i det prestisjefylte Royal Society of Literature, og hun ble nylig tildelt Den Norske Forfatterforenings ytringsfrihetspris.Med trilogien om Tambu har hun skildret en brytningstid i hjemlandet, fra livet under Rhodesias koloniregime til frihetskamp og den desillusjonerte hverdagen etter uavhengigheten. Debutboka Nervous Conditions (nylig oversatt til norsk som Nervøse tilstander av Merete Alfsen) var ikke bare den første romanen utgitt på engelsk av en svart kvinne i Zimbabwe, den har blitt en moderne klassiker, og i 2018 var den med på BBCs kåring av «100 historier som formet verden». Samme år ble tredje bok i serien nominert til den prestisjetunge Booker-prisen.Men det var ikke gitt at Dangarembga skulle få en slik posisjon, og det var nære på at hun ikke fikk gitt ut sin første bok i det hele tatt. I essay-boka Svart og kvinne (til norsk ved Gøril Eldøen) vever Dangarembga sammen det personlige og det politiske når hun forteller om hvordan hun konstant har arbeidet i motbakke for å kunne høres, som svart og som kvinne.På Litteraturhuset møter Dangarembga etiopiske Maaza Mengiste til samtale. Mengiste står bak flere kritikerroste romaner om Etiopias historie, og har løftet fram Dangarembga som en av sine store litterære inspirasjonskilder. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
A young girl from a poor family fighting to get the education she wants, but which is primarily reserved for her brother. A beautiful and worldly friend who brings her out of her shell. The history of a region told through the childhood of a young girl.This could be the description of Elena Ferrante's Naples Quartet, but in fact it describes the trilogy of Tsitsi Dangarembga, began several decades earlier.In this trilogy, we follow the young girl Tambudzai from her childhood in colonised Rhodesia, through adolescence during the liberation war to the young woman attempting to carve out a life for herself in an independent, but disillusioned, Zimbabwe.How are these novels read today? And why is it that many of the most central authors from the African continent are still unfamiliar to many European readers?Dangarembga has made her mark as a writer for more than 30 years. In 2021, she was the eighth writer to be included in the art project The Future Library in Oslo, and this Spring, she was awarded the Freedom of Expression Prize from the Norwegian Writers Union. Her novels have become modern classics, and a number of writers have been inspired by her nuanced portraits of a young girl, by how she renders girls' and women's fight for equal rights and how she tells the recent story of Zimbabwe through her fiction.One of the writers inspired by Dangarembga's fiction, is Ethiopian Maaza Mengiste. She has also employed the novel to tell the story of a country in her books Beneath the Lion's Gaze and The Shadow King.Marjam Idriss is the author of the novel Jannikeevangeliet («The Gospel of Jannike»), a literary critic and a translator of names such as Audre Lorde and Amanda Gorman. This Spring, she has delved into Dangarembga's body of work.Tonje Vold is a professor at the Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies at the University of Oslo. She wrote her thesis about Tsitsi Dangarembga, and her research has focused especially on postcolonial literature and literature from Southern Africa.Moderating the conversation is writer and former artistic director at the House of Literature, Andreas Liebe Delsett. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Through more than 30 years, Zimbabwean Tsitsi Dangarembga has made her mark as a writer and director. With her trilogy of novels following Tambu, she portrays a period of upheaval for her home country, from life under the colonial regime of Rhodesia to the struggle for freedom and the disillusioned everyday life after independence.Her debut novel Nervous Conditions was not only the first novel in English published by a Black woman in Zimbabwe, it has become a modern classic, and in 2018, it figured on BBC's “100 books that changed the world”. That same year, the third book in the trilogy, This Mournable Body, was shortlisted for the prestigious Booker prize.But it was not a given that Dangarembga would end up in this position, and at one point, it seemed she would not be able to publish her first book at all. In her recent essay collection Black and Female, Dangarembga connects the personal and the political in her recount of how she has been forced into a constant uphill battle to be heard, as a Black person and as a woman.At the House of Literature, Dangarembga will meet Ethiopian Maaza Mengiste in conversation. Mengiste is the author of several critically acclaimed novels portraying the history of Ethiopia, and she has named Dangarembga as one of her literary inspirations. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
En ung jente fra en fattig familie som må kjempe for å ta den utdanningen hun ønsker, som først og fremst er forbeholdt sønnene i familien. En vakker og verdensvant venninne som får henne ut av skallet. En regions historie som skildres gjennom en ungjentes oppvekst.Det kunne vært beskrivelsen av Elena Ferrantes Napoli-kvartett, men dette er utgangspunktet for zimbabwiske Tsitsi Dangarembgas trilogi, som ble påbegynt flere tiår tidligere. Her følger vi ungjenta Tambudzai fra oppveksten i det koloniserte Rhodesia, gjennom frigjøringskrigen og til hun forsøker å skape seg et liv i et selvstendig, men desillusjonert, Zimbabwe. Nå utgis første bok i serien på norsk, i Merete Alfsens oversettelse.Hvordan leses Dangarembgas bøker i dag? Og hvorfor er mange av de mest sentrale forfatterne fra det afrikanske kontinentet fremdeles ukjente for så mange europeiske lesere?Dangarembga har vært en betydningsfull forfatterstemme gjennom mer enn 30 år, helt fra hun med debutboka Nervous Conditions ble den første svarte kvinnen i Zimbabwe til å utgi en roman på engelsk. I 2021 ble hun den åttende forfatteren som leverte sitt bidrag til kunstprosjektet Framtidsbiblioteket, og i vår ble hun tildelt Den Norske Forfatterforenings ytringsfrihetspris.Bøkene hennes er blitt moderne klassikere, og en rekke andre forfattere har blitt inspirert av hennes nyanserte barne- og ungdomsportrett, av hvordan hun skriver om jenter og kvinners kamp for like rettigheter og hvordan hun forteller Zimbabwes nyere historie i romans form.En av dem som har latt seg inspirere av Dangarembga, er den etiopiske forfatteren Maaza Mengiste. Hun har selv benyttet romanformen for å skrive fram et lands historie med bøkene Beneath the Lion's Gaze og The Shadow King.Marjam Idriss er forfatter av romanen Jannikeevangeliet, litteraturkritiker og oversetter av navn som Audre Lorde og Amanda Gorman. I vår har hun dykket ned i Dangarembgas forfatterskap.Tonje Vold er professor ved institutt for lingvistiske og nordiske studier ved UiO. Hun skrev hovedoppgave om Tsitsi Dangarembga, og har siden jobbet med temaer som postkolonial litteratur og litteratur fra det sørlige Afrika.Samtalen ledes av forfatter og tidligere programsjef ved Litteraturhuset, Andreas Liebe Delsett. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mit: Ukraine-Update, Armenien, Sanktionen gegen Russland, Long Covid und Impfungen, Holgis Gesundheitspredigt, Kaddas und OECDs Finanztipps, Hinweisgeberschutzgesetz, Quellenschutz, ESC, Sham zu Tsitsi Dangarembga und ÖPNV in Nigeria. Außerdem mit einem Faktencheck von Nándor Hulverscheidt und einem Limerick von Jens Ohrenblicker.
On Daybreak Africa: Zimbabwe writer and filmmaker, Tsitsi Dangarembga, says her acquittal by the Zimbabwe High Court proves her earlier conviction was a miscarriage of justice. Plus, a Malawi court orders the government to allow Rastafarian children to Wear dreadlocks in Class. For this and more, stay tuned to Daybreak Africa!
Tsitsi Dangarembga is a novelist, playwright, activist, and filmmaker. She is the author of the Tambudzai Trilogy, which traces the life of a rural girl from her childhood in colonial Zimbabwe to her adulthood in a country repressed by political elites. The first novel in the series, Nervous Conditions, was “hailed as one of the 20th century's most significant works of African literature”. On February 28, 2023, Tsitsi Dangarembga came to the Sydney Goldstein Theater to read from her new essay collection, Black and Female, and to talk with the legendary Black activist Angela Davis.
Check out Eve's book, The Inheritors: https://www.amazon.com/Inheritors-Intimate-Portrait-Africas-Reckoning-ebook/dp/B09JPJ5FPQ/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=eve+fairbanks+the+inheritors&qid=1672215573&sprefix=eve+fair%2Caps%2C357&sr=8-1Eve's article on The Atlantic: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/10/fear-cancel-culture-free-speech/671828/Eve Recommends:My Traitor's Heart by Rian Malan: https://www.amazon.com/My-Traitors-Heart-African-Conscience/dp/0802136842/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=my+traitors+heart&qid=1672215678&sprefix=my+trai%2Caps%2C194&sr=8-1Nervous Conditions and This Mournable Body by Tsitsi Dangarembga:https://www.amazon.com/Nervous-Conditions-Tsitsi-Dangarembga-ebook/dp/B08L58N4PR/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=tsitsi+dangarembga&qid=1672215695&sprefix=tsitsi+%2Caps%2C189&sr=8-1https://www.amazon.com/This-Mournable-Body-Tsitsi-Dangarembga-ebook/dp/B0756FMSL6/ref=sr_1_4?keywords=tsitsi+dangarembga&qid=1672215695&sprefix=tsitsi+%2Caps%2C189&sr=8-4Twitter: @eusebius, @reditlhabi: https://twitter.com/Eusebius?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthorhttps://twitter.com/RediTlhabi?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5EauthorThe movie District 9: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1136608/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0 Get full access to Musically Speaking Podcast with Chuong Nguyen at musicallyspeaking.substack.com/subscribe
Our guest is Professor Jean Mcneil, who not only teaches writing but is an author of both novels and travel narratives. Hear her thoughts on the differences between factual and fictional evocations of other places, but also her top tips for good travel reading. Amongst her favourites are the novels of Zimbabwean author Tsitsi Dangarembga. Discover Jean's own work at https://www.jeanmcneil.co.uk/
For the final episode of the season, Amanda & Ziporah go right back to the beginning and re-read the book that started it all…Nervous Conditions by Tsitsi Dangarembga. They discuss their journey so far, honouring both their cultures and themselves, and exactly what it was about this incredible book that set them on the path they now find themselves.Contact us at thestackedpod@gmail.com and follow us on Instagram at: Stacked - https://www.instagram.com/thestackedpod/ Amanda - https://www.instagram.com/amandaafuaa/ Ziporah - https://www.instagram.com/blackandbound/ Credits: AiAi Studios - https://www.instagram.com/aiai.studios/ CC co - https://www.instagram.com/cc_____co/ Acast - https://www.instagram.com/acast/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Black and Female by Tsitsi Dangarembga by Poets & Writers
Bascha Mika im Gespräch mit Joachim Schollwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, LesartDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Wehrheim, Karinwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Studio 9Direkter Link zur Audiodatei
(00:00:32) TsiTsi Dangarembga wurde über Monate hinweg der Prozess gemacht, weil sie in Harare an einer Demonstration teilgenommen hatte. Nun hat das Gericht ein vermeintlich harmloses Urteil gefällt. Das Ziel: Die Schriftstellerin mundtot zu machen. Weitere Themen: (00:03:44) Das ZFF Filmfestival gewinnt an Profil. (00:07:44) Das Musikgeschäft ist immer noch eine Männer-Monokultur. (00:12:34) Nochmals sexuelle Belästigungen an einem Theater: diesmal beim Ballett Bern. (00:17:11) Keine Ego-Show – Ann Demeester, die neue Direktorin des Kunsthauses Zürich.
Sechs Monate Haft auf Bewährung: Das lange Warten hat ein Ende, das Urteil gegen Tsitsi Dangarembga in Simbabwe ist gefallen. Die Prozessbeobachterinnen Barbara Groeblinghoff und Bascha Mika kritisieren das Verfahren deutlich.Barbara Groeblinghoff im Gespräch mit Vladimir Balzerwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, FazitDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
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Zimbabwe writer Tsitsi Dangarembga found guilty +++ Africans win "Alternative Nobel" +++ Saving food waste in Kenya +++ Rwanda: Children of local and foreign parents who end up on the street +++ Starmakers - Ikorudu Bois
Heute soll in Simbabwe nach 32 Verhandlungstagen das Urteil im Prozess gegen die Friedenspreisträgerin Tsitsi Dangarembga ergehen. Die Autorin, Filmemacherin und Aktivistin steht in Harare vor Gericht wegen öffentlichem Aufruf zur Gewalt, Friedensbruch und Bigotterie. Barbara Groeblinghoff von der Friedrich-Naumann-Stiftung ist vor Ort - und schildert, wie sie das Verfahren erlebt hat / "odysseus.live" - das neue hybride Theaterprojekt der Nachwuchsregisseurin des Jahres 2021, Cosmea Spelleken, am Staatschauspiel Nürnberg / "Pistol" - Oscar-Preisträger Danny Boyle hat eine Mini-Serie über die Sex Pistols gedreht / Eine kleine Kulturgeschichte des rollenden R.
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Netz, Dinawww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, BuchkritikDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Angola ruling party set to win hotly contested vote+++Zimbabwean author Tsitsi Dangarembga's verdict postponed+++Ghana's alternative dispute resolution reduces backlog of cases+++Ugandan freedom fighter Rosebell Kagumire standing up for voiceless
Literarische Restaurantbekanntschaften, eine großartige Trilogie aus Simbabwe und Tipps von Venice Trommer von der ersten deutschen Buchhandlung mit Afrika-Spezialisierung. Eine afrikanische Familiensaga, möglichst dick und mit möglichst viel Religionsthematik? Kein Problem für Venice Trommer. Als eat.READ.sleep.-Buchladenjoker empfiehlt sie Daniel und Jan spannende Romane vom afrikanischen Kontinent. Warum sich der Blick auf diese vielfältige Literatur unbedingt lohnt, erzählt sie im Gespräch mit den beiden Hosts. Jan hat ein Buch dabei, das sogar für ihn stellenweise zu erschütternd war: Der Erste Weltkrieg, erzählt aus Sicht eines sogenannten Senegalschützen. Umso schöner, dass in der Bestsellerchallenge eigentlich nichts passiert - das Buch die beiden aber trotzdem begeistert. Außerdem lernt Daniel spannende Autorinnen beim Essen kennen. Und eine preisgekrönte Trilogie aus Simbabwe darf bei diesem Afrika-Schwerpunkt auch nicht fehlen. Genauso wie ein Geheimtipp aus der senegalesischen Küche. Aber Vorsicht: Manches, was hart aussieht, hat auch einen harten Kern. Die Bücher der Sendung Marc Engelhardt: "Baobab- ein Portrait" (Matthes&Seitz Berlin) Maaza Mengiste: "Der Schattenkönig". Übersetzt von Brigitte Jakobeit und Patricia Klobusiczky. (dtv) Tsitsi Dangarembga: "Überleben". Übersetzt von Anette Grube. (Orlanda Verlag) David Diop: "Nachts ist unser Blut schwarz". Übersetzt von Andreas Jandl. (Aufbau Taschenbuch) Anne Tyler: "Eine gemeinsame Sache". Übersetzt von Michaela Grabinger. (Kein & Aber) Nagib Mahfuz: "Kairoer Trilogie". Übersetzt von Doris Kilias. (Unionsverlag) Abubakar Adam Ibrahim: "Wo wir stolpern und wo wir fallen". Übersetzt von Susann Urban. (Residenz Verlag). Tipp von Venice Trommer für Daniel Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi: "Die erste Frau (Interkontinental)". Tipp von Venice Trommer für Jan Ausgelost für die nächste Bestsellerchallenge: Mathijs Deen: "Der Holländer". Übersetzt von Andreas Ecke. (mare) Buchtipps zum Afrika-Schwerpunkt aus der eat.READ.sleep.-Community Ngugi wa Thiong'o: "Träume in Zeiten des Krieges". (S. Fischer Verlag). Tipp von Silke Chris Cleave: "Little Bee. (dtv). Tipp von Hanne Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: "Blauer Hibiskus". (S. Fischer Verlag). Tipp von Anita Richard Dooling: "Grab des weißen Mannes". (Hanser). Tipp von Christine Oyinkan Braithwaite: "Meine Schwester, die Serienmörderin". (Blumenbar). Tipp von Petra Abraham Verghese: "Rückkehr nach Missing". (Insel). Tipp von Katrin Taiye Selasi: "Diese Dinge geschehen nicht einfach so". (S. Fischer Verlag). Tipp von Inge Binyavanga Wainaina: "Eines Tages werde ich über diesen Ort schreiben". (Das Wunderhorn). Tipp von Maria Und zahlreiche weitere Romane zum Hören findet ihr in der ARD Audiothek. Das Rezept für afrikanisches Baobabbrot Zutaten: 2 Eier 200 ml Buttermilch 120 ml Rapsöl 3 Bananen (reif) 150 g Rohrzucker 300 g Dinkelmehl 2 TL Backpulver 20 g Baobabpulver (bekommt man manchmal sogar schon im sehr gut sortierten Supermarkt) Zubereitung: Den Ofen auf 180 Grad vorheizen. Die Eier trennen. Die Eigelbe mit der Buttermilch und dem Öl zusammenmixen. Die trockenen Zutaten mischen und in die Ei-Öl-Milchmasse geben. Das Eiweiß steifschlagen und unter den Teig heben. 50 Minuten in den Ofen, bis das Brot durch und oben goldbraun ist. Das Baobab-Fruchtfleisch enthält angeblich sechsmal mehr Vitamin C als eine Orange, zehnmal mehr Antioxidantien als ein Apfel und doppelt so viel Calcium wie Milch. (…) Es ist eine sättigende Energiequelle, ein Mittel gegen Müdigkeit und zur Stärkung der Abwehrkräfte. Seither gebe ich einen Esslöffel Baobabpulver an mein Müsli. Ein Mittel gegen Müdigkeit kann ich morgens immer gebrauchen. Außer einer sanften Zitrusnote verströmt das Pulver immer auch einen Hauch von Afrika und Fernweh. Er bemächtigt sich des ganzen Planeten. Er durchdringt ihn mit seinen Wurzeln. Und wenn der Planet zu klein ist und die Affenbrotbäume zu zahlreich werden, sprengen sie ihn. Feedback, Anregungen und Ideen? Her damit! Wer Feedback geben oder eigene Lieblingsbücher nennen möchte, der erreicht die drei Hosts per E-Mail unter eatreadsleep@ndr.de. Der Podcast wird alle 14 Tage freitags um 6 Uhr veröffentlicht und läuft als Gemeinschaftsprojekt unter der NDR Dachmarke - zu hören und hier zu abonnieren - oder aber in der ARD-Audiothek.
Zetsche, Corneliawww.deutschlandfunk.de, Kultur heuteDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Die Autorin Tsitsi Dangarembga steht in Simbabwe vor Gericht. Vorwurf: Verletzung der Coronahygienemaßnahmen und Aufwiegelung zur Gewalt. Ihr Ehemann Olaf Koschke über ein Verfahren, das von vielen als absurd empfunden wird.Koschke, Olafwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Studio 9Direkter Link zur Audiodatei
Themen u.a.: Harare: Prozess gegen Tsitsi Dangarembga geht weiter; Güstrower Bibliothek ist "Bibliothek des Jahres 2022"; Neuer Gedichtband der Lyrikerin Sabine Schiffner "Wundern"; Film-Tipps: "Busters Welt" und "Bullet Train"; Moderation: Claudia Dichter. Von Claudia Dichter.
Zimbabwiska författaren Tsitsi Dangarembga begärs häktad och Musikförläggarna väljer att inte prisa "kriminellt belastade personer.
Themen u.a.: Friedenspreisträgerin Tsitsi Dangarembga in Simbabwe vor Gericht; große Römerausstellung in Trier; Solinger Künstler schmiedet Werke aus Stahl; Jugendliteraturtipp; Moderation: Jörg Biesler Von Jörg Biesler.
Ein Gericht in Simbabwe hat Haftbefehl gegen die Friedenspreisträgerin Tsitsi Dangarembga erlassen. Man wolle an der Autorin ein Exempel statuieren, meint Barbara Groeblinghoff von der Naumann-Stiftung in Simbabwe.Barbara Groeblinghoff im Gespräch mit Andrea Gerkwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, FazitDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Das Wichtigste für Sie an diesem Montag: Beim G-7-Gipfel wird der ukrainische Präsident Selenskyj seine Wünsche formulieren. Hafenbetreiber hoffen auf eine Einigung mit der Gewerkschaft Verdi in Berlin. Und die Friedenpreisträgerin Tsitsi Dangarembga hofft, einer Haftstrafe zu entrinnen.
Hueck, Carstenwww.deutschlandfunk.de, BüchermarktDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Genth, Janawww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, LesartDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Groeblinghoff, Barbarawww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Studio 9Direkter Link zur Audiodatei
Koldehoff, Stefanwww.deutschlandfunk.de, Kultur heuteDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Two masters of the form, George Saunders and Tsisti Dangarembga, share lessons from their extensive writing careers.
In this episode, we discuss the impact of authoritarianism in Africa, with a focus on the wider implications of Nigeria's #EndSARS movement across the continent. We hear from our special guest,Juliet Ihediohanma. After graduating from college, Juliet moved to Chicago for three years where she initially worked as an Academy Coordinator at a youth residential treatment facility, then later as a Refugee Employment Specialist at a refugee community partner organization. Her favorite part of living in Chicago was taking walks on the 606 and at the lakefront trail, as well as exploring different Chicago neighborhoods. Juliet is currently pursuing her Master of Public Administration at Columbia University. She is passionate about issues related to refugee and immigrant rights, gender equity, racial justice, and the economic empowerment of historically disenfranchised groups. She hopes to focus on these issues through a career in policy advocacy. Juliet enjoys reading in her free time. Her favorite book is Beloved by Toni Morrison, and for those looking to start a new book, she recommends Nervous Conditions by Tsitsi Dangarembga.
This week as part of the BBC World Service's 100 Women Season we're celebrating the female writers, artists and performers overcoming challenges and making their voices heard. Shortlisted for the prestigious Booker prize, Tsitsi Dangarembga's latest novel This Mournable Body reveals late 1990s Zimbabwe through the eyes of her female lead, Tambusai. Tsitsi talks to Tina about exploring the experience of Zimbabwean women through her characters and how she feels about being shortlisted at this point in her writing career. Chilean female collective Las Tesis speak to our reporter Constanza Hola about their viral protest song The Rapist in Your Path and how it's inspired women worldwide to speak out against sexual violence. British Somali poet Hibaq Osman's writing explores family history and identity with heartfelt honesty. She shares a poem from her first full collection, Where the Memory Was. Plus: has a film, a book or a song ever changed the way you see the world? South African singer-songwriter Zahara on how she took courage from the film A Walk to Remember. Presented by Tina Daheley. (Photo: Tsitsi Dangarembga. Credit: DANIEL ROLAND/AFP via Getty Images)