Angèle Rawiri
Angèle Ntyugwetondo Rawiri (29 April 1954 – 15 November 2010) was the first Gabonese novelist.[1]
A daughter of politician and poet Georges Rawiri, she was born at Port-Gentil. Her mother, a teacher, died when she was six. Angèle studied at Alès in France, earned a bac from the Vanves girls' college, then a second bac, in English translation, from the . She then lived in London for two years, where she played small roles in James Bond films and modelled for fashion magazines.
She returned to Gabon in 1979, working as a translator and interpreter, and writing her first novel, G'amarakano. The story of the clash between a young girl's desire for material goods and the older generation's traditional values, it was published in 1983. Her second novel, Elonga (1986) was about a young metis' encounter with fetishism upon his return to his mother's country. Fureur et cris et femmes appeared in 1989.
She published her first works under the name Ntyugwetondo Rawiri.
Published works[]
- Elonga: roman Paris: Silex: L’Harmattan, diffusion, c1986. ISBN 2-903871-72-8
- Gʾamèrakano: au carrefour: roman Paris: Silex, c1988. ISBN 2-87693-021-8
- Fureurs et cris de femme Paris: L’Harmattan, c1989. ISBN 2-7384-0250-X
References[]
- ^ Décès de Angèle Ntyugwetondo Rawiri. Africultures, December 2010.
- , Historical Dictionary of Gabon, 2nd ed. (The Scarecrow Press, 1994) p. 287
External links[]
- 1954 births
- 2010 deaths
- Gabonese women writers
- Gabonese novelists
- People from Ogooué-Maritime Province
- 20th-century novelists
- 20th-century women writers
- Gabonese people stubs
- Central African writer stubs