Tchicaya U Tam'si | |
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Born | Gérald-Félix Tchicaya August 25, 1931 Mpili, French Equatorial Africa (now Republic of the Congo) |
Died | April 22, 1988 |
Occupation | Poet, Journalist |
Tchicaya U Tam'si (25 August 1931 - 22 April 1988 ) was a Congolese author born Gérald-Félix Tchicaya; his pen name means "small paper that speaks for a country" in Kikongo.
Born in Mpili, near Brazzaville, French Equatorial Africa (now Congo) in 1931, U Tam'si spent his childhood in France, where he worked as a journalist until he returned to his homeland in 1960. Back in Congo, he continued to work as a journalist; during this time he maintained contact to the politician Patrice Lumumba. In 1961, he started to work for UNESCO.
He died in 1988 in Bazancourt, Oise, near Paris.
Since 1989, the Tchicaya U Tam'si Prize for African Poetry is awarded every two years in the Moroccan city of Asilah.
U Tam'si's poetry incorporates elements of surrealism; it often has vivid historic images, and comments African life and society, as well as humanity in general.