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Sabtu, 07 April 2018

Nnedi Okorafor - a very short conversation - YouTube
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Nnedi Okorafor (full name: Nnedimma Nkemdili Okorafor; previously known as Nnedi Okorafor-Mbachu; translated from Igbo into English as "mother is good"; born April 8, 1974) is a Nigerian-American writer of fantasy and science fiction for both children and adults.


Video Nnedi Okorafor



Background and personal life

Okorafor's parents traveled to America to go to school, but they could not return to Nigeria because of the Nigerian Civil War. The American-born daughter of Igbo Nigerian parents, Okorafor has been visiting Nigeria since she was very young.

During her years attending Homewood-Flossmoor High School in Flossmoor, IL, Okorafor was known as a nationally-known tennis and track star, and excelled in math and the sciences. Due to her interest in insects, she desired to be an entomologist.

She was diagnosed with scoliosis at the age of 13, a condition that worsened as she grew older. At age 19, she underwent spinal fusion surgery to straighten and fuse her spine; a rare complication led to Okorafor becoming paralyzed from the waist down.

Okorafor turned to writing small stories in the margins of a science-fiction book that she had. It was the first time she had ever written anything creatively. That summer, with intense physical therapy, Okorafor regained her ability to walk, but she was unable to continue her athletic career, using a cane to walk. At the suggestion of a close friend, she took a creative writing class that spring semester, and was writing her first novel by the semester's end.

Okorafor holds a master's degree in journalism from Michigan State and a master's degree and PhD in English from the University of Illinois, Chicago. She is a 2001 graduate of the Clarion Writers Workshop in Lansing, Michigan. She is currently a full professor of creative writing and literature at the University at Buffalo (SUNY) and lives in Olympia Fields, Illinois, with her family.


Maps Nnedi Okorafor



Work

Short stories

Okorafor received a 2001 Hurston-Wright literary award for her story "Amphibious Green." Okorafor's short stories have been published in anthologies and magazines, including Dark Matter: Reading The Bones, Enkare Review, Strange Horizons, Moondance magazine, and Writers of the Future Volume XVIII. A collection of her stories, titled Kabu Kabu, was published by Prime Books in 2013. It includes the titular piece, co-authored by Alan Dean Foster, and six other previously unpublished short stories, as well as 14 stories that had been previously published in other venues since 2001, and a foreword by Whoopi Goldberg.

Novels and novellas

After her 2001 Hurston-Wright award, she then published two acclaimed books for young adults, The Shadow Speaker (Hyperion/Disney Book Group) and Zahrah the Windseeker (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt). Zahrah won the Wole Soyinka Prize for Literature in Africa. It was also shortlisted for the 2005 Carl Brandon Parallax and Kindred Awards and a finalist for the Garden State Teen Book Award and the Golden Duck Award. The Shadow Speaker was a winner of the Carl Brandon Parallax Award, a Booksense Pick for Winter 2007/2008, a Tiptree Honor Book, a finalist for the Essence Magazine Literary Award, the Andre Norton Award and the Golden Duck Award and an NAACP Image Award nominee. Okorafor's children's book Long Juju Man was the 2007-08 winner of the Macmillan Writer's Prize for Africa.

Okorafor's first adult novel, Who Fears Death (DAW/Penguin Books), won the 2011 World Fantasy Award for Best Novel, was a 2011 Tiptree Honor Book and was nominated for the 2010 Nebula Award. In 2011 she returned to young adult with Akata Witch (Viking/Penguin), which was a Junior Library Guild Selection, and nominated for the Andre Norton Award. It was also on the American Library Association's Amelia Bloomer Project list honoring children's books with feminist themes.

Okorafor's science fiction novel Lagoon was a finalist for a British Science Fiction Association Award (Best Novel) and a Red Tentacle Award (Best Novel) and a Tiptree Honor Book.

The Binti trilogy began with a 2015 novella, Binti. This was followed by Binti: Home, published in 2017, and Binti: The Night Masquerade, published in 2018. Binti won both the 2016 Nebula Award and 2016 Hugo Award for best novella, and was a finalist for a British Science Fiction Association Award (Best Short) and BooktubeSFF Award (Best Short Work).

Adaptations

In July 2017, Okorafor announced via Twitter that Who Fears Death was picked up by HBO to become a TV series with novelist and Game of Thrones producer, George R.R. Martin, joining the project as an executive producer. Okorafor will remain involved with the project as a consultant.

In February 2017, Okorafor announced via Facebook her science-meets-witchcraft short story "Hello, Moto" was optioned by Nigerian production company Fiery Film. The story is being adapted into a short film, titled Hello, Rain by filmmaker, C. J. Obasi. The story tells the tale of a woman who discovers that she can merge witchcraft and technology when she creates wigs for herself and her friends that allow them to wield influence and power, to help battle corruption. Instead, she watches her friends themselves become corrupted. A teaser was released in January 2018.

Other work

In 2005, Okorafor wrote and published her first play, Full Moon. The Buxville Theater Company in Chicago helped produce this full-length theatrical work.

In 2009 Okorafor donated her archive to the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) Collection of the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections at the Northern Illinois University Library.

Okorafor was the Young Adult Author special Guest of Honor at Detcon 1, the 2014 North American Science Fiction Convention; Detcon1 was putting special emphasis on YA science fiction.

She spoke at the TEDGlobal conference in Arusha, Tanzania, in August 2017.

In October 2017, Okorafor announced via Twitter she would be writing three issues of Marvel's Black Panther comic book, picking up where author Ta-Nehisi Coates left off. "Black Panther: Long Live the King" is due out in late 2017. A month earlier, Okorafor had a short comic entitled, "Blessing in Disguise," inspired by the 2014 Boko Haram kidnapping of over 200 Nigerian girls, released in Marvel's Venomverse War Stories No. 1 comic book. In March 2017, it was announced that Okorafor would return to writing derived from the Black Panther, Wakanda Forever, where the Dora Milaje act in team-ups with Spider-Man, X-Men and Avengers.


Is Nnedi Okorafor The Next George Rr Martin Chicago Magazine ...
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Influences and themes

Okorafor's novels and stories reflect both her West African heritage and her American life. Rather than identifying as Nigerian-American, Okorafor refers to herself as "Nigamerican" and explains the importance of her dual heritage during a 2016 NPR interview:

That's very much a part of my identity, and it's also very much a reason why I think I ended up writing science fiction and fantasy because I live on these borders - and these borders that allow me to see from multiple perspectives and kind of take things in and then kind of process certain ideas and certain stories in a very unique way. And that has led me to write this strange fiction that I write, which really isn't that strange if you really look at it through a sort of skewed lens.

Okorafor noticed how the fantasy and science fiction genre contain little diversity, and that was her motivation for writing books of these genres set in Africa. She wanted to include more people of color and create stories with Africa as the setting because so few stories were set there. She wrote her first story as a college sophomore and made the setting of her story Nigeria. Her stories place black girls in important roles that are usually given to white characters. Okorafor cites Nigeria as "her muse" as she is heavily influenced by Nigerian folklore and its rich mythology and mysticism.

Gary K. Wolfe wrote of her work: "Okorafor's genius has been to find the iconic images and traditions of African culture, mostly Nigerian and often Igbo, and tweak them just enough to become a seamless part of her vocabulary of fantastika."

Her work often looks at "weighty social issues: racial and gender inequality, political violence, the destruction of the environment, genocide and corruption" through "the framework of fantasy."

Okorafor shares that while the themes of her stories are often multi-layered they are always grounded in "stories of the women and girls around me and also within myself."

Okorafor asserts that her work and parental responsibility relates to each other because "writing and being a mother are a part of me, so they are mixed together and balance each other out."


Nnedi Okorafor: Marvel announces Nigerian-American author as ...
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World fantasy award

Shortly after winning The World Fantasy Award in 2011, Okorafor published an essay "Lovecraft's racism & The World Fantasy Award statuette, with comments from China Miéville", in which she reflected upon her conflicting emotions on winning an award in the shape of a large silver bust of H.P. Lovecraft, who was a known racist and anti-Semite. Okorafor would later voice her support for Daniel José Older's 2014 petition to replace the Lovecraft bust with one of Octavia Butler. In this piece, she acknowledges both the literary legacy of Lovecraft and his continued influence in the contemporary world of science fiction:

Do I want "The Howard" (the nickname for the World Fantasy Award statuette. Lovecraft's full name is "Howard Phillips Lovecraft") replaced with the head of some other great writer? Maybe. Maybe it's about that time. Maybe not. What I know I want it to face the history of this leg of literature rather than put it aside or bury it. If this is how some of the great minds of speculative fiction felt, then let's deal with that... as opposed to never mention it or explain it away.


YALLFest
src: yallfest.org


Awards

  • 2005 - The Strange Horizons Reader's Choice Award for Stephen King's Super-Duper Magical Negroes
  • 2007 - 2008 - Macmillan Writers' Prize for Africa for Long Juju Man
  • 2008 - Carl Brandon Parallax Award for The Shadow Speaker
  • 2008 - The Wole Soyinka Prize for Literature for Zahrah the Windseeker
  • 2012 - The 2012 Black Excellence Award for Outstanding Achievement in Literature (Fiction) for Zahrah the Windseeker
  • 2012 - Kindred Award for Who Fears Death
  • 2011 - The World Fantasy Award (Best Novel) for Who Fears Death
  • 2016 - The Nebula Award (Best Novella) for Binti
  • 2016 - Children's Africana Book Award for Best Book for Young Readers for Chicken in the Kitchen
  • 2016 - The Hugo Award for Best Novella for Binti

The “Black Panther” Comic: Nnedi Okorafor Says Wakanda Is “Close ...
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Bibliography

Young Adult--writing as Nnedi Okorafor-Mbachu

  • Zahrah the Windseeker (2005, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; paperback 2008, Graphia/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
  • The Shadow Speaker (2007, Hyperion/Disney)

Children--writing as Nnedi Okorafor

  • Long Juju Man (2009, Macmillan Africa)
  • Iridessa and the Secret of the Never Mine (2012, Disney Books)

Young Adult--writing as Nnedi Okorafor

  • Akata Witch (2011, Viking/Penguin) (Published as What Sunny Saw in the Flames in Nigeria and the UK by Cassava Republic Press)
  • Akata Warrior (2017, Viking/Penguin/PRH) (Published as Sunny and the Mysteries of Osisi in Nigeria and the UK by Cassava Republic Press)
  • The Man (to be published in Nigeria)

Adult--writing as Nnedi Okorafor

  • Who Fears Death (2010, DAW/Penguin)
  • "Hello, Moto" (2011, Tor.com)
  • "Moom!" short story in "AfroSF: Science Fiction by African Writers" (2012, Storytime)
  • Kabu Kabu (2013, Prime Books)
  • Lagoon (2014, Hodder & Stoughton Ltd.) (2015, Saga Press/Simon & Schuster)
  • The Book of Phoenix (2015, DAW/Penguin/PRH) (prequel of Who Fears Death)
  • Binti (2015, Tor.com)
  • Binti 2: Home (2017, Tor.com)
  • Binti: The Night Masquerade (2018, Tor.com)
  • Remote Control (upcoming 2018, Hodder & Stoughton)

Nnedi Okorafor Reading and Signing | Patrick Heath Public Library ...
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Selected filmography

  • Brave New Souls: Black Sci-Fi & Fantasy Writers of the 21st Century (2013) - Herself

Nnedi Okorafor: Sci-fi stories that imagine a future Africa | TED Talk
src: pi.tedcdn.com


See also

  • Afrofuturism

Nnedi Okorafor â€
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References




External links

  • Nnedi Okorafor Home Page
  • Mikki Kendall, "A Nigerian Sorceress Makes Her Way", Publishers Weekly, April 12, 2010
  • Donna Freitas, "Weapons of Mass Creation", New York Times review of The Shadow Speaker, July 13, 2008
  • Nebula Awards Guest Blog: Is Africa Ready for Science Fiction by Nnedi Okorafor
  • Review of Zahrah the Windseeker by Gary K. Wolfe
  • "Stephen King's Super-Duper Magical Negroes" by Okorafor-Mbachu
  • "From the Lost Diary of TreeFrog7" (short story), Clarkesworld Magazine, May 2009
  • Stories by Okorafor at AfricanWriter.com
  • "If It Scares You, Write It: A Conversation with Nnedi Okorafor" (interview), Clarkesworld Magazine, December 2009
  • Nnedi Okorafor at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  • 2010 Audio Interview on the Geek's Guide to the Galaxy Podcast
  • "Nigerian Woman,Nndei Okorafor's Novel to be Made into Series by HBO", Yeoal's Blogzine, July 10, 2017
  • "Sci-fi stories that imagine a future Africa". Nnedi Okorafor at TEDGlobal 2017

Source of article : Wikipedia