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F Abiola Irele

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Name
  
F. Irele




Education
  
University of Ibadan, University of Paris

Books
  
The African imagination, The Cambridge history of, The Negritude Moment, The African experience in literatur, Selected Poems of Leopold

Similar People
  
Biodun Jeyifo, Leopold Sedar Senghor, J F Ade Ajayi

From harvard to kwasu abiola irele in motion


Francis Abiola Irele (commonly Abiola Irele, 22 May 1936 – 2 July 2017) was a Nigerian academic best known as the doyen of Africanist literary scholars worldwide. He was Provost at Kwara State University, founded in 2009 in Ilorin, Nigeria. Before moving back to Nigeria, Irele was Visiting Professor of African and African American Studies and of Romance Languages and Literatures at Harvard University.

Contents

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Early life

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Abiola Irele was born in Ora, Nigeria, and moved to Enugu very early in his life. While he was of Edo ethnicity, and had been born in an area where Ora was predominantly spoken, the first language he learned was Igbo, which he learned from the servants who worked for his father and took care of him growing up. After moving to Lagos in 1940, he began to speak Yoruba. In 1943, after a fight between his parents, Irele returned with his mother to Ora, where he picked up and developed a fluency in the Ora language over the course of a year. However, after returning to Lagos in 1944 to live with his father, he began to predominantly speak Yoruba and maintained it as his ethnic identification.

Irele's first encounter with literature was through folk tales and the oral poets who recounted "raras" in the streets. During the years of his formal education, he began to read more English literature.

Education and career

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Irele graduated from Ibadan University in 1960. Immediately after graduation, he went to Paris to learn French and completed a Ph.D in French at the University of Paris, Sorbonne, in 1966. On his return to Nigeria, he was employed on the Languages Faculty at the University of Lagos, and then at the University of Ghana, Legon. He was editor of Black Orpheus magazine, from 1968 until 1975. He also held teaching positions at the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University), and in 1975 at the University of Ibadan, where he was Chair of Languages. In 1989, he moved to Ohio State University in the U.S. as Professor of African, French and Comparative Literature.

He was Provost at Kwara State University, founded in 2009, in Ilorin, Nigeria. Before moving back to Nigeria, Irele was Visiting Professor of African and African American Studies and of Romance Languages and Literatures at Harvard University.

Négritude

Irele helped to expound upon the understanding of Négritude first theorized by Léopold Sédar Senghor in his article "What is Negritude?" featured in Tejumola Olaniyan and Ato Quayson's African Literature: An Anthology of Criticism and Theory. In his article, Irele defines Négritude as "the literary and ideological movement of French-speaking black intellectuals, which took form as a distinctive and significant aspect of the comprehensive reaction of the black man to the colonial situation...".

In his collection of essays Négritude et condition africaine, Irele explores the question of African thought. He begins by rejecting the notion of ideological difference between anglophone and francophone Africa. He aims to root African progress in the present and not in a romanticized past.

Death

Irele died at the age of 81 on 2 July 2017 in a US hospital. Tributes to him included a poem by Wole Soyinka.

Selected publications

  • The African Imagination: Literature in Africa and the Black Diaspora, Oxford University Press (paperback 2001), ISBN 0-19-508619-8
  • The African Experience in Literature and Ideology, Indiana University Press (reprint 1990), ISBN 0-253-33124-2
  • Joint editor with Simon Gikandi of The Cambridge History of African and Caribbean Literature, Cambridge University Press (2004), ISBN 0-521-59434-0
  • "Négritude: Literature and ideology" in The African Philosophy Reader, ISBN 0-415-96809-7
  • References

    Abiola Irele Wikipedia