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Biography:

Ama Ata Aidoo

(Christina) Ama Ata Aidoo (born 1942) explored the social conscience of her African peers through her writing, speaking, and teaching endeavors.

Ghanaian writer and educator, Ama Ata Aidoo delved the soul of African traditions through her literary works. As a novelist, poet, dramatist, critic, and lecturer, she voiced concerns over a variety of social and political issues at the forefront of Ghanaian society in the wake of a mid-20th century independence movement in her country. She uttered repeated concerns for the plight of womanhood in Ghanaian culture. She endowed the female characters in her literary works with strong wills and distinct personalities. Through her depictions of the traditional norms of society, she helped to expose the exploitation and disenfranchisement of women, not only from their careers but from the essence of their own identities.

Ama Ata Aidoo was born Christina Ama Aidoo on March 23, 1942. She was the daughter of royalty, a princess among the Fanti people of the town of Abeadzi Kyiakor in the south central region of Ghana. Aidoo's homeland, at the time of her birth, was under the oppression of a resurgent neocolonialism as a result of British aggression during the late 19th century. In the home of her parents, Chief Nana Yaw Fama and Maame Abba, anti-colonial sentiment was an unavoidable emotion in the wake of the murder of Aidoo's grandfather by neocolonialists. Yet in spite of the murderous tragedy, Fama acknowledged the superiority of Western education and sent his daughter to attend the Wesley Girls High School in the southern seaport town of Cape Coast, Ghana. She went on to study at the University of Ghana, beginning in 1961. In 1964, she graduated cum laude (with honors), earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in English.

Academic Career

At the University of Ghana, Aidoo became involved with the Ghana Drama Studio, founded by Efua Sutherland. Aidoo participated in writers workshops and contributed her work to the school of drama. During her years in undergraduate studies, she in fact completed two plays and a collection of short stories. Aidoo continued at the University of Ghana for an additional two years after graduation, through a fellowship to that school's Institute of African Studies. On fellowship in 1965 she published one of her most famous writings, and her first major dramatic work, The Dilemma of a Ghost. Ghost was one of only two dramas that she published by the end of the century. The play depicts the conflict of an African student, Ato, who studied abroad and returned home to Ghana with an African American wife. In The Dilemma of a Ghost, Aidoo delved into her concerns over pan-Africanism and the plight of Ghanaians who travel abroad in search of an education. The play exposes the conflicts that confront students in resolving their African traditions in the midst of Western culture.

In 1966, Aidoo traveled to the United States where she attended the Harvard International Seminar and spent time at Stanford University. She returned to Ghana in 1969. Between 1970 and 1982, Aidoo taught English at the University College at Cape Coast and completed research on her native Fanti drama. Over the years Aidoo taught and lectured at many universities in the United States and in Africa, including the University of Nairobi in Kenya.

Political Agenda

When Ghana gained its independence in March of 1956, the event precipitated a pan-African backlash. The resultant political tension simmered for over a decade and erupted in the 1970s. That decade was marred by an era of repression. Conservative attitudes prevailed, and many intellectuals were persecuted for their beliefs. In a 1997 interview, Aidoo commented to Jeanette Toomer of New York Amsterdam News regarding the nature and the extent of the oppression. Aidoo maintained that she endured not only incarceration but intimidation by jailers who threatened her with death. Her vocal and written expressions over the plight of women in traditional Ghanaian society, combined with her commentaries on pan-Africanism, left her vulnerable to scathing censorship policies and regulation. During that time, from 1970 until 1977, she published very little. She occupied herself in part as a consulting professor in the Washington Bureau of Phelps-Stokes's Ethnic Studies Program in 1974 and 1975.

Following her return to Ghana, Aidoo served as the national minister of education in 1982 and 1983 under the government of Jerry Rawlings. She remained prominent in Ghanaian academic affairs until 1983 when she once again abandoned the country for self-imposed political exile. She moved to Harare in Zimbabwe and remained there throughout the 1990s. In Zimbabwe Aidoo worked at the curriculum development unit of the Ministry of Education. She continued with her teaching as well as her writing, and established ties with the Zimbabwe Women Writers Group.

In 1988, Aidoo received a Fulbright Scholarship. She spent the following year at the University of Richmond, Virginia as a writer in residence. She returned to Africa in 1990 and for two years served as the chairperson of the African Regional Panel of the Commonwealth Writers' Prize.

Messages in Art

Among Aidoo's most respected publications was her 1970 collection of stories entitled, No Sweetness Here. The stories represent the psychological bondage of the neocolonial period. That work is structured within a loose but cohesive framework that illustrates Aidoo's message through the eyes of working class characters over a period of a few years. As with other of Aidoo's writings, the stories focus on urbanized women, female characters who are rarely affluent - but neither are they destitute or in financial conflict. Aidoo's female protagonists turn their attention instead toward a universal search, each for her own elusive soul and for a female identity that has been usurped by an oppressive environment. Aidoo portrays a class of women that is overburdened by the insensitivity of men but is accepting - or at least cognizant of - specific gender issues that create the cultural environment. Aidoo tacitly summons other writers to the urgency of their obligation, to address and to publicize the moral wrongs of the society in order to realize social progress. As Aidoo noted to interviewers Rosemary Maranoly George and Helen Scott of Novel regarding such issues as are presented by the author in No Sweetness Here, "The situation … The way the novel ends means that the story is not finished, as the issue is not resolved." She further emphasized her concerns for women and their lack of so-called homes, "For these women it is hard to have a home of their own … there is always the possibility that it can be taken away … the instability of dependence."

Aidoo's second major drama, after Ghost, was Anowa. The play, published in 1970, makes a disparaging examination of the value of love within the confines of a marriage and further creates a metaphor between the keeping of slaves and the keeping of wives. Also among Aidoo's published works in the feminist arena is her 1977 semi-autobiographical novel, Our Sister Killjoy.

Between 1991 and 1993 Aidoo wrote and published Changes, a tale of a woman from the Ghanaian capitol of Accra and her personal battles. As the plot unwinds, the main character, a government data analyst, endures rape by her husband and is forced to confront her own destiny. Naadu I. Blankson of Quarterly Black Review applauded the effort by Aidoo, wherein she "… weave[s] the passions of two women, three men, and a host of [others] … quite respectably." As a literary work the novel artfully enmeshes the passions of upward mobility, the plight of African women in the workplace, and the role of the African female as the designated pawn of a polygamous society. It was Aidoo's contention, which she furthered through her writing, that sexism was a learned behavior on the part of the African male and clearly a consequence of the neocolonial environment. In Research in African Literatures, Nada Elia quoted Aidoo's rebuttal to those critics of African feminism, "I really refuse to be told I am learning feminism from abroad."

In a 1994 work, The Art of Ama Ata Aidoo: Polylectics and Reading Against Neocolonialism (University Press of Florida), Vincent O. Odamtten commented that Aidoo "… radically transforms the Western literary genres," with her depth. He made further note of the disparity between the "narrowly formulated" feminist movements of Western cultures and the vital aura of feminism as demonstrated by Aidoo in her writing. Similarly Frank M. Chipasla noted in Kenyon Review, that her poetry "… continues to play functional and aesthetic roles … [in] the female literary traditions. In 1997, Aidoo appeared at Barnard College as a speaker in the Gildersleeve Lecture Series, in conjunction with the institution's Million Woman March. Toomer quoted Aidoo's personal observation that, "We are called feminists because we make it possible for our women characters to be themselves." Aidoo is averse to what she terms a "Western perception that the African (especially Ghanaian) female is a downtrodden wretch."

George and Scott said of Aidoo that perhaps, " … because of her own wealthy background … Aidoo spends less time addressing the material co-ordinates of Ghana and… focuses on the cultural dynamics … Aidoo has stressed the importance of artists and intellectuals being accountable, and calls for writers to retain their integrity …"

Certainly Aidoo's social-political apprehension transcends a spectrum of issues, among them the circumstances that served to fuel the emigration of African scholars and intellectuals from Ghana and which kept women oblivious to the full extent of their own oppression. In a provocative commentary to George and Scott in 1993 Aidoo said, "I'm published in the West. [And] There is something that makes [me] very uncomfortable about that. The people among whom [I] lived and grew up have no access to [my] products… . So it haunts the African writer …" By her remark she referred to the censorship of female authors in Ghana and elsewhere on the African continent. In 1994, Aidoo joined with others in founding the Women's World Organization for Rights Development and Literature to campaign on behalf of women's rights by means of publishing and other resources. In August 1999, the issue was at the forefront among representatives of that organization who gathered at the International Book Fair in Harare, Zimbabwe. Aidoo joined with others in reiterating their concerns. She was quoted by the Inter Press Service English News Wire in her vocal confirmation of the severity of the crisis. She rebuked a system where, "For African women, the struggle begins with the right to be born as a girl child… to have a whole body …to go to school; the right to be heard."

Aidoo published several works of poetry including her 1985, Someone Talking to Sometime, which addresses a variety of issues, and Birds and Other Poems, published in 1987. Her children's book, The Eagle and the Chickens and Other Stories, appeared in 1986, and she contributed to numerous anthologies and magazines including Black Orpheus, Journal of African Literature, and New African. Among her other works, An Angry Letter in January was published in 1992.

Further Reading

Black Writers, edited by Linda Metzger, Gale, 1989.

Contemporary Authors: New Revision Series, Volume 62, edited by Daniel Jones and John D. Jorgenson, Gale, 1998.

Under African Skies, edited by Charles R. Larson, Noonday Press, 1997.

Essence, February 1994.

Inter Press Service English News Wire, August 17, 1999.

Kenyon Review, Spring, 1994.

New York Amsterdam News, October 30, 1997.

Novel, Spring, 1993.

Publishers Weekly, October 25, 1993.

Quarterly Black Review of Books, February 28, 1994.

"Ama Ata Aidoo (1942-)," available at http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/hss/africana/voices.html (November 4, 1999).

"Ama Ata Aidoo: Biographical Introduction," available at http://www.stg.brown.edu/projects/hypertext/landow/post/aidoo/bio.html (November 4, 1999).

"Ama Ata Aidoo," The University of Western Australia/Department of French Studies, available at http://www.arts.uwa.edu.au/AFLIT/AidooEN.html (November 4, 1999).

Research in African Literatures, July 15, 1999.

 
 
Black Biography: Ama Ata Aidoo

writer; college teacher; chairperson; founder; poet; playwright

Personal Information

Born Christina Ama Ata Aidoo on March 23, 1942, in Abeadzi Kyiakor, Ghana; daughter of Nana Yaw Fama (a chief of Abeadzi Kyiakor) and Maame Abba Abasema; children: Kinna Likimani
Education: University of Ghana, B.A. (with honors), 1964; attended Stanford University.
Memberships:
(selected) Zimbabwe Women Writers Association; Organization of Women Writers of Africa (OWWA); Sisterhood is Global Institute (SIGI).

Career

Writer, educator. University of Cape Coast, Ghana, lecturer in English, 1970-82; Phelps-Stokes Fund Ethnic Studies Program, Washington, D.C., consulting professor, 1974-75; Minister of Education, Ghana, 1982-83; University of Richmond, Virginia, writer-in-residence, 1989; chair, African Regional Panel of the Commonwealth Writers' prize, 1990, 1991; Mbaase, a nonprofit organization that supports African women writers, founder and director.

Life's Work

Award-winning Ghanaian author, poet, critic, playwright, and feminist Ama Ata Aidoo has made it her life's work to explore the difficult and complex effects of progress on the role of women in African culture. Her work is often semi-autobiographical--she has struggled with many of the same issues that challenge her characters. She has tackled these controversial issues of Africa's cultural evolution in such novels as Our Sister Killjoy; or, Reflections from a Black-Eyed Squint and Changes: A Love Story, as well as in a host of poems, collected in Someone Talking to Sometime and An Angry Letter in January and Other Poems, and short stories, namely in the collection No Sweetness Here. She also has written the plays The Dilemma of a Ghost and Anowa, and numerous essays. In a 1993 review, one Publisher's Weekly critic declared Aidoo a "remarkable writer" who "writes with intense power."

Christina Ama Ata Aidoo was born in 1942 in Abeadzi Kyiakor, in central Ghana, then known by its colonial name, the Gold Coast. She was born into a Fante family and grew up as tribal royalty--her liberal-minded father was a chief in her town. After her graduation from Wesley Girls High School in Cape Coast, Aidoo began studying drama and literature at the University of Ghana at Legon, where she was a student from 1961-64. With her father's encouragement, she earned her bachelor's degree in English. At 15, Aidoo was asked what she wanted to do for a career and, without really knowing why, replied that she wanted to be a poet. When her entry won a short-story award, she only discovered she had won when she saw her name in the newspaper. "I believe these moments were crucial for me because ... I had articulated a dream ... it was a major affirmation for me as a writer, to see my name in print," she said in an interview located at the BBC World Service online.

Brought Women's Roles To Stage

Aidoo could not resist the appeal of writing for the stage and seeing her stories brought to life. She was particularly interested in the Fante dramatic style that was popular in the 1930s, and studied with Efua Sutherland, a leading Ghanaian dramatist. It was during her undergraduate years that she produced her first play, Dilemma of a Ghost, which was staged by the Student's Theater at the University of Ghana in 1964. In the play, a Westernized African man returns to his African village with an African-American wife. In the first of her many works that explore the roles of women in African culture, Aidoo tackled difficult and controversial issues in Dilemma of a Ghost. The African-American wife must face criticism among the other village women and remains an outsider because the choices the couple make are deemed untraditional.

After college Aidoo remained at the University as a junior research fellow at the Institute of African studies. It was likely this experience, from 1964-66, that influenced Aidoo's use of African oral traditions in her work. Ghana gained independence in 1957, when Aidoo was still a teen, and the spirit of socialism and Pan-Africanism of the time likely impacted her as well. Aidoo earned a creative writing fellowship at Stanford University in California, and traveled for two years before returning to Ghana to teach at the University of the Cape Coast and releasing her next play, Anowa, in 1970.

Anowa takes place in the late 19th century, when a strong-willed woman bucks tradition and refuses an arranged marriage, only to end up in misery with the man of her choosing, who becomes a slaveholder. In addition to again tackling the complex place of women in developing African culture, Anowa honestly examines the equally difficult history of slavery in Africa. In weaving historical fact into her story, Aidoo acknowledges the uncomfortable truth of Africa's complicity in transatlantic slave trading. The play was listed as one of the best African literary works of the 20th century by the Zimbabwe International Book Fair.

In No Sweetness Here (1970), Aidoo's first published collection of short stories, she explores further still both the complexities of gender and in her culture and the conflict between rural and urban, traditional and modern influences that stress it. It is in these works, which she wrote in the 1960s, that Aidoo exhibits her comfortable knowledge of and affinity for African oral traditions in her use of tools such as African idioms. Aidoo first experimented with using poetry in the midst of prose in her dense 1977 novel, Our Sister Killjoy; or Reflections from a Black-Eyed Squint. The novel follows a young African woman who travels to Europe in the late 1960s. The journey brings into sharp focus the underdevelopment of the African culture she left behind, as well as a kind of racism she never felt there.

Wrote Poetry and Political Love Story

After a frustrating 18-month stint as Ghana's minister of education, Aidoo left her homeland for Zimbabwe, where she taught and wrote poetry. She had taken her appointment to the ministry very seriously, believing that it was in her power to reform the Ghanaian school system, making an education available to all. She resigned after realizing that her dream was out of reach. During her time in Zimbabwe she composed enough poems to publish a collection, Someone Talking to Sometime, which was published in 1985, as well as a children's book, The Eagle and the Chickens in 1986. She continues to teach in Zimbabwe and abroad. She lectures frequently and has taught in the United States at Hamilton College, Oberlin College, Brandeis University, Mount Holyoke College, and Smith College.

Despite previous statements that there were too many serious political issues in Africa for her to ever consider writing a love story, Aidoo's 1991 novel, Changes, is just that. In writing Changes, Aidoo later admitted she came to realize that "love or the workings of love is also political," according to an online article at Africana.com. In Changes Aidoo examines the role of women in African society and around the world. The lead character, a Ghanaian woman named Esi, is punished by her husband for her independent ways and dedication to her job. They separate and Esi falls for a married man who makes her his second wife, an arrangement that would leave her free to work. Eventually, it is her second husband's independence that wears on Esi. In writing the book, Aidoo employs several different formats; she again uses poetic notes throughout the text, and captures conversation in script form. Changes earned Aidoo the Commonwealth Writers Prize for African writers.

Aidoo published An Angry Letter in January, her second collection of poetry, in 1992, and another volume of short stories, The Girl Who Can and Other Stories, followed in 1997. She founded and is director of Mbaasa, a nonprofit organization that subsidizes residencies for African women writers.

Awards

Short story prize from Mbari Press competition; prize from Black Orpheus for story, "No Sweetness Here;" Anowa listed one of the best African literary works of the 20th century by the Zimbabwe International Book Fair; research fellowship, Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana; Fulbright scholarship, 1988; earned the Commonwealth Writers Prize for African writers for Changes: A Love Story, 1992.

Works

Selected writings

  • The Dilemma of a Ghost, (play; first produced in Legon, Ghana, at Open Air Theatre, March, 1964), Longmans, Green (London), 1965, Macmillan (New York, NY), 1971.
  • Anowa, (play; produced in London, 1991), Humanities Press (New York, NY), 1970.
  • No Sweetness Here, (stories), Longmans, Green (London), 1970; Doubleday (New York, NY), 1971.
  • Our Sister Killjoy; or, Reflections from a Black-Eyed Squint, (novel), Longman (London), 1977; NOK Publishing (New York, NY), 1979.
  • Dancing Out Doubts, NOK (Engu, Nigeria), 1982.
  • Someone Talking to Sometime, (poetry), College Press (Harare, Zimbabwe), 1985.
  • The Eagle and the Chickens and Other Stories, (for children), Tana Press (Engu, Nigeria), 1986.
  • Birds and Other Poems, (for children), College Press (Harare, Zimbabwe), 1987.
  • Changes: A Love Story, (novel), Women's Press (London), 1991, Feminist Press at the City University of New York (New York, NY), 1993.
  • An Angry Letter in January and Other Poems, Dangaroo Press (Coventry, England), 1992.
  • The Girl Who Can and Other Stories, Sub-Saharan Publishers, 1997.
  • Also contributor to anthologies, including Modern African Stories, Faber, 1964; Black Orpheus: An Anthology of New African and Afro-American Stories, Longmans, 1964, McGraw-Hill, 1965; Pan African Short Stories, Thomas Nelson, 1966; New Sum of Poetry from the Negro World, Presence Africaine, 1966; African Writing Today, Penguin, 1967; African Writing Today, Manyland Books, 1969; Political Spider: An Anthology of Stories from 'Black Orpheus,'; Africana Publishing, 1969; and African Literature and the Arts, Volume I, Crowell, 1970; and contributor of stories and poems to magazines, including Okyeame, Black Orpheus, Presence Africaine, Journal of African Literature, and New African.

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Publishers Weekly, October 25, 1993, p. 56.
  • Research in African Literatures, summer 2002.
Online
  • "Ama Ata Aidoo," Africana.com, http://www.africana.com/Articles/tt_615.htm (December 23, 2002).
  • "Ama Ata Aidoo," BBC World Service, http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/arts/features/womenwriters/aidoo_life.shtml (December 23, 2002).
  • "Ama Ata Aidoo," Pegasos Literature-Related Resources, http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/aidoo.htm (December 23, 2002).
  • "Ama Ata Aidoo," Post-colonial African Literatures in English, http://www.fb10.uni-bremen.de/anglistik/kerkhoff/AfrWomenWriters/Aidoo/Aidoo.html (December 23, 2002).

— Brenna Sanchez

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Aidoo, Ama Ata
(äm'ä ätä'ä ī') (Christina Ama Ata Aidoo), 1942–, Ghanaian author, poet, and playwright, grad. Univ. of Ghana (B.A., 1964). Combining traditional African storytelling with Western genres, she writes of the contemporary roles of African women and the negative impact of Western influences on African culture. Her first play, The Dilemma of a Ghost, was published in 1965. Her short stories, collected in No Sweetness Here (1970) and The Girl Who Can (1997), and her novel, Our Sister Killjoy (1977), expand on these themes, many of which mirror Aidoo's own experiences. Her other works include the play Anowa (1980), the poems of Someone Talking to Sometime (1985), Birds (1987), and Angry Letter in January (1992); a collection of children's stories (1986); and the novel Changes: A Love Story (1991), which explores a contemporary African marriage.

Bibliography

See V. O. Odamtten, The Art of Ama Ata Aidoo (1994), A. U. Azodo and G. Wilentz, ed., Emerging Perspectives on Ama Ata Aidoo (1997).

 
Quotes By: Ama Ata Aidoo

Quotes:

"It's a sad moment, really, when parents first become a bit frightened of their children."

 
Wikipedia: Ama Ata Aidoo
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Ama Ata Aidoo (born March 23, 1942) is a Ghanaian author and playwright who was born Christina Ama Aidoo in Abeadzi Kyiakor. She grew up in a Fante royal household and was sent by her father to the Wesley Girls' High School in Cape Coast from 1961 to 1964. After graduating, she enrolled at the University of Ghana in Legon and received her bachelor of arts in English as well as writing her first play, The Dilemma of a Ghost, in 1964. It was published by Longman the following year.

Aidoo's works of fiction particularly deal with the tension between Western and African world views. Many of her protagonists are women who defy the stereotypical women's roles of their time.

She is also an accomplished poet and has written several children's books. She also won many literary awards, including the Commonwealth Writers Prize for Best Book in 1992.

Aside from her literary career, Aidoo was appointed Minister of Education in 1982. She resigned after 18 months. She has also spent a great deal of time teaching and living abroad for months at a time. She has resided in America, Britain, Germany, and Zimbabwe. Currently she is a Visiting Professor in the Africana Studies Department at Brown University.

Works

Other works by Ama Ata Aidoo:

  • Anowa (a play based on a Ghanaian legend; (1970)
  • No Sweetness Here: A Collection of Short Stories (1970)
  • Birds and Other Poems (1988)
  • The Girl Who Can and Other Stories (1997)
  • Our Sister Killjoy (1977)
  • Changes: A Love Story (novel; 1991)
  • The Dilemma of a Ghost (1965)
  • Someone Talking to Sometime (a poetry collection)( 1986)
  • An Angry Letter in January (poems; 1992)
  • The Eagle and the Chicken (1986)

Sources


 
 

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Copyrights:

Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ama Ata Aidoo" Read more

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