William Farquhar Conton
William Farquhar Conton | |
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Born | Freetown, Sierra Leone | 5 September 1925
Occupation |
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Nationality | Amy Manto Bondfield Wellesley-Cole, née Hotobah-During (sister-in-law) |
William Farquhar Conton (5 September 1925 – 23 June 2003) was a
Background and early life
William Farquhar Conton was born on 5 September 1925 in Bathurst, Gambia, to the union of Cecil Conton (1885–1926) and Olive Conton, née Farquhar. The Contons and Farquhars were first-generation Sierra Leone Creoles of Caribbean origin who settled in Sierra Leone during the late nineteenth century. Cecil Barger Conton had been born in Bermuda to William A. Conton (b. 1837) and Elizabeth Conton (b. 1857). Olive Farquhar was the daughter of Archdeacon Charles William Farquhar (d. 1928) of Barbados, a missionary in French Guinea.
Education
William Conton was educated at
Career
After graduating in 1947, he taught at Fourah Bay College for the next six years, moving on to become principal of Accra High School in Ghana.[3] Returning to Sierra Leone, he was principal of two high schools, before rising to be chief education officer in Sierra Leone.[4] He subsequently worked for UNESCO in Paris.[1]
Writing
In 1960, Conton's novel The African was the twelfth book published in the important
In 1961, Conton published his two-volume work entitled West Africa in History, which covered various aspects of West African history and combined his interests and experience as a historian with his literary flair.
In 1987, Conton published The Flights, which is in some respects a sequel to The African, and depicts Saidu, a political exile in England from the same fictional West African country of Songhai, who under psychological stress resorts to hijacking a commercial airliner to force the Songhai government to accede to his demands.[6] Described by literature scholar Oyekan Owomoyela in The Columbia Guide to West African Literature in English since 1945 as "Badly written and badly printed", the book has attracted little attention.[6]
Personal life
In 1949, William Conton married
Later years
William Conton died in
Works
- The African, 1960. Republished in the Heinemann African Writers Series, 1964.
- West Africa in History, 1961
- The Flights, 1987
References
- ^ a b "Conton, William Farquhar – Literary Map of Africa". Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
- ^ Graduates of the University. Durham: Durham University. 1948. p. 63.
- ^ Fyle, C. Magbaily (2006). Historical Dictionary of Sierra Leone. Scarecrow Press. p. 39.
- ISBN 978-0-415-23019-3.
- ^ a b Wole Soyinka (1990). Myth, Literature and the African World. Cambridge University Press. pp. 67–68.
- ^ a b Owomoyela, Oyekan (2008). The Columbia Guide to West African Literature since 1945. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 94.