Flora Veit-Wild

Flora Veit-Wild (born 11 May 1947)[1] is a German literary academic, Professor of African Literatures and Cultures at Humboldt University, Berlin. She has published on the Zimbabwean writer Dambudzo Marechera, and on the body and madness in African literature.

Life

Flora Wild was born in West Germany in 1947,[2] and originally studied French and German languages and literature at university.[3]

She first met Dambudzo Marechera in Harare in 1980. The pair had a relationship, and remained close friends until Marechera's death in 1987.[4] Veit-Wild lived in Zimbabwe from 1983 to 1993.[5] In 1986 she met Dieter Riemenschneider in Harare, who subsequently supervised a PhD dissertation by Veit-Wild on the social history of Zimbabwean literature, which she gained in Anglistik from Frankfurt University in 1991.[3] She was a founder member of Zimbabwean Women Writers and of the Dambudzo Marechera Trust.[5]

In 1994 Veit-Wild became professor of African literatures and cultures at the African Studies Department, Humboldt University of Berlin.[2]

The academic Agnieszka Piotrowska made a 2014 film about Veit-Wild's relationship with Marechera, Flora and Dambudzo.[4]

Works

  • (ed.) The black insider. Harare : Baobab Books.
  • Teachers, preachers, non-believers : a social history of Zimbabwean literature. London; New York; Hans Zell Publishers, 1992.
  • (ed.) Cemetery of mind : collected poems of Dambudzo Marechera by Dambudzo Marechera. Harare, Zimbabwe: Baobab Books, 1992.
  • Dambudzo Marechera: a source book on his life and work. London; New York: Hans Zell, 1992.
  • (ed.) Scrapiron blue by Dambudzo Marechera. Harare: Baobab Books, 1994.
  • (ed. with Anthony Chennell) Emerging perspectives on Dambudzo Marechera. Asmara: Africa World Press, 1998.
  • (ed. with Dirk Naguschewski) Body, sexuality, and gender. New York: Rodopi, 2005.
  • (ed. with Alain Ricard) Interfaces between the oral and the written / Interfaces entre l'écrit et l'oral. New York: Rodopi, 2005.
  • Writing madness: borderlines of the body in African literature. Oxford: James Currey, 2006.
  • They Called You Dambudzo: A Memoir. Jacana Media Ltd, 2020.

References

  1. "Veit-Wild, Flora, 1947-". id.loc.gov. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  2. Veit-Wild, Flora, 1947-, Library of Congress Name Authority File. Accessed 20 January 2021.
  3. Flora Veit-Wild (2002). "The Arduous Success Story of a 'Non-Discipline': Teaching African Literature at German Universities". In Gordon Collier; Frank Schulze-Engler (eds.). Crabtracks: Progress and Process in Teaching the New Literatures in English : Essays in Honour of Dieter Riemenschneider. Rodopi. p. 21. ISBN 90-420-1539-X.
  4. Matthew Reisz, UK-based academic’s film well received in Zimbabwe, Times Higher Education Supplement, 9 November 2014. Accessed 18 January 2021.
  5. Carole Boyce-Davies; Molara Ogundipe-Leslie (1995). Moving Beyond Boundaries (Vol. 2): Black Women's Diasporas. NYU Press. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-8147-1240-5.
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