Yvonne Vera (September 19, 1964 - April 7, 2005) was an award-winning
author from Zimbabwe. Her novels are known for their poetic
prose, difficult subject-matter, and their strong women characters, and are
firmly rooted in Zimbabwe's difficult past. For these reasons, she has been
widely studied and appreciated by those studying postcolonial African literature.
Vera was born in Bulawayo, in what was then Southern Rhodesia, to Jerry Vera and Ericah
Gwetai. At the age of eight, she worked as a cotton-picker near Hartley She attended Mzilikazi High School
and then taught English literature at Njube High School, both in Bulawayo. In 1987 she travelled to Canada and she married John Jose, a Canadian whom
she had met while he was teaching at Njube. At York University, Toronto, she completed an undergraduate degree, a master's and a PhD,
and taught literature.
In 1995, Vera returned to Zimbabwe
and in 1997 became director of the National Gallery of Zimbabwe in Bulawayo, a gallery that
showcases local talent ranging from that of professional artists to school
children. In 2004 she went back to Canada, where she died on April 7, 2005, of AIDS-related meningitis.While at university, Vera submitted
a story to a Toronto magazine: the publisher asked for more, so she sat down to
write them. Her collection of short stories, Why
Don't You Carve Other Animals, was published in 1992. It was followed by
five completed novels:
- Nehanda (1993), short-listed for Commonwealth Writers' Prize.
- Without a Name (1994), awarded Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Africa and Zimbabwe Publishers' Literary Award
- Under the Tongue (1997)
- Butterfly Buurning (2000), awarded a German literary prize, LiBeraturpreis, in 2002
- The Stone Virgins (2002), awarded Macmillan Writers' Prize for Africa.
At the time of her death she was
working on a new novel, Obedience. Her works have been published in
Zimbabwe, Canada and several other countries, including translations into
Spanish, Italian and Swedish.
Vera wrote obsessively, often for 10
hours a day, and described time when she was not writing as "a period of
fasting." Her work was passionate and lyrical.
She took on themes such as rape, incest and infanticide, and gender inequality
in Zimbabwe before and after the country's war of independence with sensitivity and courage.
She said, "I would love to be remembered as a writer who had no fear for
words and who had an intense love for her nation." In 2004 she was awarded the Swedish PEN Tucholsky Prize "for a corpus of works dealing with taboo subjects". Vera also edited several anthologies
by Zimbabwean women writers. (Courtesy of
Wikipedia)
Studies:
Sign and
taboo : perspectives on the poetic fiction of Yvonne Vera
Doris Lessing, Yvonne Vera : comparative views of Zimbabwe. By Annemarie Rathke
Emerging perspectives on Yvonne Vera. Edited by Helen Cousins and
Pauline Dodgson-Katiyo
Doris Lessing, Yvonne Vera : comparative views of Zimbabwe. By Annemarie Rathke
Emerging perspectives on Yvonne Vera. Edited by Helen Cousins and
Pauline Dodgson-Katiyo
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