Oscar Dathorne
Oscar Ronald Dathorne (19 November 1934 – 18 December 2007) was a Guyanese educator, novelist, poet and critic. He was the founder of the Association of Caribbean Studies and the Journal of Caribbean Studies.[1]
Biography
Born in
However, having completed his studies he found that few English universities were willing to offer him anything other than junior positions. He therefore sought job opportunities abroad and successfully applied for a teaching post at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria. He remained in West Africa for six years, completing his stay while holding a full professorship at the University of Sierra Leone as head of the English department. With his use of African literature as a basis for many English classes and the increased recognition that African literature be defined as written by Africans rather than about Africans, in 1969 he was invited to the United States as a guest lecturer at Yale University.
With the continuing changes in the
He taught
In 1979 he became the founding editor of the Journal of Caribbean Studies.[4]
Dathorne was the author of novels, poetry and non-fiction works, as well as having edited the anthologies Caribbean Narrative (London: Heinemann, 1966) and Caribbean Verse (Heinemann, 1967).
Selected writings
- The Black Mind: A History of African Literature, 1974
- African Literature in the Twentieth Century, 1976
- Dark Ancestor: The Literature of the Black Man in the Caribbean, 1981
- In Europe's Image: The Need for American Multiculturalism, 1994
- Imagining the World: Mythical Belief Versus Reality in Global Encounters, 1994
- Asian Voyages: Two Thousand Years of Constructing the Other, 1996
- Worlds Apart: Race in the Modern Periods, 2001
Novels
- Dumplings in the Soup, 1963
- The Scholar-Man, 1964
- Dele's Child, 1986
Poetry
- Songs for a New World, 1988
References
- ^ Wilson, Lucy, "Continental Girl: A Profile of Hilde Dathorne", Caribbean Quarterly, Vol. 56, No. 3, September 2010.
- ^ "Dathorne, Oscar Ronald", in Michael Hughes, A Companion to West Indian Literature, Collins, 1979, o. 38.
- ^ "In Memoriam | English". english.as.uky.edu. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
- ^ Leota S. Lawrence, "O. R. Dathorne" in Daryl Cumber Dance (ed.), Fifty Caribbean Writers: A Bio-bibliographical Critical Sourcebook, Greenwood Press, p. 134.