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Clémentine Nzuji

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Name
  
Clementine Nzuji

Role
  
Poet


Education
  
University of Lovanium

Books
  
Tracing memory

Clementine Nzuji aflitartsuwaeduauimagesnzujiamina2011jpg

Clémentine Faik Nzuji, also known as Clémentine Faïk-Nzuji Madiya (born 21 January 1944), is a Congolese poet and writer. She was born in Tshofa, Kabinda District in the Belgian Congo. Albert S. Gérard calls her "the first poet of real significance" among a group of African writers who emerged in the late 1960s; she was also the first female writer in the Belgian Congo.

Contents

Background and early life

Clémentine Nzuji httpslh4googleusercontentcomDEPBl5ZQhJUTuk

She graduated from the University of Lovanium.

She also holds a doctorate in African studies from the University of Paris.

Nzuji is married and is the mother of five children, and many of her poems refer to her family.

Literary activities

She founded the Pléiade du Congo, a literary group in Kinshasa, and headed and helped found the International Centre for African Languages, Literatures and Traditions in favour of Development (CILTADE) at the Catholic University of Louvain. She has made important contributions in the study of Bantu linguistics and oral literature. She is also an award winning author of short stories and poetry.

Additional reading

  • Zents, Ronda Davis (2000), Poetry as empowerment: a study of the poetic images and poetic language in the works of Clémentine Madiya Faïk-Nzuji, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill .
  • References

    Clémentine Nzuji Wikipedia