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Bernard Binlin Dadié

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Name
  
Bernard Dadie


Role
  
Novelist

Bernard Binlin Dadie CONTREPOIDS Bernard DADIE et Laurent GBAGBO

Books
  
Climbie, The Black Cloth: A Collection of African Folktales

Awards
  
Grand prix litteraire d\'Afrique noire

Bernard binlin dadi


Bernard Binlin Dadié (or sometimes Bernard Dadie) (born 10 January 1916 in Assinie) is a prolific Ivorian novelist, playwright, poet, and ex-administrator. Among many other senior positions, starting in 1957, he held the post of Minister of Culture in the government of Côte d'Ivoire from 1977 to 1986.

Contents

Bernard Binlin Dadié Seche Tes Pleurs de Bernard Binlin Dadi Dry your Tears Afrika

Je vous remercie mon dieu bernard binlin dadi


Biography

Bernard Binlin Dadié BERNARD DADI Writer Poet African encyclopedia BERNARD DADI

Dadié was born in Assinie, Côte d'Ivoire, and attended the local Catholic school in Grand Bassam and then the Ecole William Ponty.

Bernard Binlin Dadié Geneva Book Fair Bernard Binlin Dadi a century of Negritude islaminfo

He worked for the French government in Dakar, Senegal, but on returning to his homeland in 1947 became part of its movement for independence. Before Côte d'Ivoire's independence in 1960, he was detained for sixteen months for taking part in demonstrations that opposed the French colonial government.

Bernard Binlin Dadié httpsimagesrapgeniuscom67a84557352a203b7ca03

In his writing, influenced by his experiences of colonialism as a child, Dadié attempts to connect the messages of traditional African folktales with the contemporary world. With Germain Coffi Gadeau and F. J. Amon d'Aby, he founded the Cercle Culturel et Folklorique de la Côte d'Ivoire (CCFCI) in 1953. His humanism and desire for the equality and independence of Africans and their culture is also prevalent.

Bernard Binlin Dadié Bernard Binlin Dadie Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

He was rediscovered with the release of the Steven Spielberg's 1997 movie "Amistad" which features the music by American composer John Williams. The choral text of Dadié's poem "Dry Your Tears, Afrika" (“Sèche Tes Pleurs“) is used for a song of the same name. Published in 1967, this poem is basically about Africa and her sons and daughters returning home. It focuses on healing the wounds of slavery, colonialism, and neo-colonialism. This poem was actually translated into Mende, a language spoken by ~ 46% of Sierra Leone, for the song.

He turned 100 in January 2016.

Main works

  • Afrique debout (1950)
  • Légendes africaines (1954)
  • Le pagne noir (1955)
  • La ronde des jours (1956)
  • Climbié (1956)
  • Un Nègre à Paris (1959)
  • Patron de New York (1964)
  • Hommes de tous les continents (1967)
  • La ville où nul ne meurt (1969)
  • Monsieur Thôgô-Gnini (1970)
  • Les voix dans le vent (1970)
  • Béatrice du Congo (1970)
  • Îles de tempête (1973)
  • Papassidi maître-escroc (1975)
  • Mhoi cheul (1979)
  • Opinions d'un nègre (1979)
  • Les belles histoires de Kacou Ananzè
  • Commandant Taureault et ses nègres (1980)
  • Les jambes du fils de Dieu (1980)
  • Carnets de prison (1981) – details his time in prison
  • Les contes de Koutou-as-Samala (1982)
  • "I Thank You God"

    Dadié is famous for his work "I Thank You, God" (translated here by Ibe Nwoga):

    References

    Bernard Binlin Dadié Wikipedia