Showing posts with label Graham Mort. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graham Mort. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

#BABISHAI2016 GUEST INTERVIEW-GRAHAM MORT


Every week, we publish interviews of the guests for the #Babishai2016 Poetry Festival, scheduled from 24 to 26 August in Kampala. Here’s Graham Mort, Professor of Transcultural Literature at Lancaster University , author of more than nine volumes of poetry and who can’t wait to return to Uganda.


Graham Mort  (Courtesy photo)






1.      You have nine volumes of poetry to your name. Were there significant changes in your poetry after the first three volumes?
Well, I think it’s been more a process of evolution rather than rapid change. The first three collections explored some of the things I was most interested in – landscape and places, politics, violence, conflict, work, forms of social injustice. I think that my poems became more complicated after that period, so I’d try to build more themes into the same poem. I don’t like poems that preach, so my other preoccupation was trying to make poems that got people to think, but didn’t tell them what to think. So for me the personal and the political have always worked together, often with the underpinning of a very distinct location. The more I’ve travelled, the older I’ve become, the more those locations have opened out new dimensions in the poems.But one constant has been writing about birds in both my poems and my prose. One of my richest experiences of Africa was visiting lake Mburo in Western Uganda – the birdlife there is amazing and I found that very affecting. But even in Kampala there are birds everywhere, the most I’ve seen in any city in the world. So they’re a constant thread through my work that’s been there from the beginning, though they’re never really just about themselves. I guess they’re emblems of flight, freedom, the ability to soar above everything and look down in a predatory way, like writers.


Students at the 2011 Lancaster University Summer school where Graham Mort teaches.


2.      Last year you visited Vietnam to talk about poetry. Briefly describe the objectives and outcome of that visit.
This was a visit I made to the Asia Pacific Poetry Festival in Hanoi. It was large event mounted by the Vietnam Writers’ Association that brought together about 100 poets from all over the world – many from current or former communist bloc countries such as Cuba, Poland, Czechoslovakia, China, and Russia. But also from Indonesia, the US and – of course, me from the UK.  Like many people of my generation, I grew up with the Vietnam War raging on the news media, so that was a formative time in terms of our political beliefs and affiliations. It was very moving to see this beautiful country, still in recovery, and to meet such a graceful people who had managed to defeat the military might of the US through sheer persistence and self-belief. It was also very moving to meet American veterans who had fought in Vietnam through conscription, but had found the courage to go back there and meet Vietnamese writers, who have since befriended them.  The aim of the festival was to create insight into Vietnamese culture and poetry and it certainly did that in a powerful and long-lasting way.

2015 Writing for Liberty Conference at Lancaster University
3.      In 2002 and 2003 when you launched the Crossing Boarders Writing Mentorship scheme in Sub-Saharan Africa. What were the major changes you saw in writing amongst the writers of the program?

I’d been writer–in-residence at Makerere University for the British Council in 2001 and I fell for Uganda and its people almost from the moment I stepped from the plane. There I was in Uganda for the first time with no one to meet me, this shy Englishman, yet it was just extraordinary. During my visit I met many young writers whose work was influenced by rather archaic models of poetry and, at that time, there were virtually no Ugandan writers on the school curriculum. So it felt as if writers working in English had a very outdated sense of contemporary writing in English. When I built a team of mentors in the UK, I wanted to find professionals writers who also represented the cultural diversity of the UK. When they came together with young Ugandan writers – and later with those across sub-Saharan Africa – I think there was a recognition that we were working together in a common purpose of cultural exchange and writing development, not in a hierarchical relationship as teachers and students. In fact, we were very were keen to avoid that perception. Uganda was conspicuous because of the way that young writers gained confidence in their work and in their own voices. They began to publish their writing and to win significant literary prizes. But this wasn’t just one-way traffic, the writers who worked as mentors from the UK all visited African countries and that had a profound affect on many of them.

4.      Your session at the #Babishai2016 Poetry Festival is called Working with Words. Who is your target and what can participants expect?
I haven’t worked out the fine details of my workshop yet, but I want to get down to the idea that the work of poets is to build poems in the way an engineer builds a complicated structure, or the way a composer harmonises a piece of music but includes dissonant elements. It’s important to understand the nature of the materials we’re using: the extraordinary energy and potential of language, the interrelatedness and inherent ambiguity of words. The American poet, Robert Lowell said that a poem doesn’t just describe an event: it is an event. By that he meant it was an event brought about by language that happens in the realm of language. The ability to speak about how we think, feel and experience the world is uniquely human, it expresses our individuality and difference, but also the solidarity that takes place between humans when we communicate. I’m hoping to provide a workshop for anyone interested in the ability of language to describe this world whilst inventing other ones. Oh, and I should say that a sense of humour will be essential!

5.      Why was it important for you to accept our invitation?
When I first came to Uganda in 2001 I was received with warmth and generosity by everyone I met. In a way this helped me to understand things about myself – a middle-aged writer from the northwest of England caught in the vortex of a Ugandan general election, with all the tensions of that time sparking around me. I even played cricket at Lugogo stadium for a local team. So here I was, out of my comfort zone, but I was also thinking about home and writing about it, making connections. I’ve been an educator all my life, so it was natural to want to set up a new project,to respond to thetrust and generosity I’d received in some way. That’s why I started Crossing Borders and then the Radiophonics project that led to the Under the Sun broadcasts by Ugandan and Nigerian writers. But I have a much more selfish reasons, which is that I love being in Uganda and miss it when I’ve been away too long! I’ve been back to work with the women writers at FEMRITE – who were instrumental in opening up the writing scene in Kampala for me when Goretti Kyomuhendo was in charge. Kampala is a rapidly changing city and that includes its literary life. I was really honoured to be asked onto the Babishai Niwe board and then to be invited to the festival. I want to see what’s going on now, in 2016 – and, of course, to meet up with some old friends. I’m going to stay at the Guest House at Makerere, drink a Bell lager or two, and tune into the political discussions on the terrace as the city lights up at night.

6.      What are the two main subjects you find yourself constantly writing about?
That’s a really tricky question when it comes to poetry.  It seems an obvious question but writers nearly always take evasive action when they’re asked what their poems are about, because poems are always reaching beyond language to the ineffable. I suppose ‘love’ is an obvious answer to that, the way it endures and is redefined as one gets older. Louis Armstrong said that without love a musician couldn’t play. But that kind of love is not just for another individual, it’s the sense of importance we attach to life and the vitality of language. The other constant dimension for me is definitely that sense of exploring location: not just the present moment of a place, but history and future, too. I guess writing about places also involves the feeling of being out of place. Maybe that’s how we understand ourselves best, when we’re taken out of our natural element and have to try to breathe somewhere else. It’s also a tricky question, because poems themselves try to evade obvious subject matter or to subvert it. Back to Robert Lowell. It's not so much that a poem is about its subject, it is its subject. Each poem is really complex and individual: we don’t say that people are about themselves; they are themselves.

7.      How do you feel towards art for social change?
It’s one of the main reasons that I return to Africa and why I’ve been working in Kurdistan recently. African writers, in particular, have always seemed to believe that writing can redress social and political injustice. It’s no coincidence that some of the towering moral figures in Africa are writers rather than politicians. I think writers also know that you have to forgive in order to understand, in order to create a poem or a narrative that is more than a judgment, that can synthesise a new vision for the future. I think Nelson Mandela was a great politician because he understood that kind of forgiveness and reconciliation. In my own work – especially in prose fiction – this is something that I’ve explored, the way we need to confront injustice, but can’t merely judge. Injustice is its own judgment when exposed. My last book of stories, Terroir, is largely concerned with forms of violence against the individual. It’s true of some of my poems, too, but poems also need to celebrate life in a positive way. Sometime it feels that I permit myself those more joyful events, those glimpses of irony, humour and beauty, the ways that poems remake experience and show us things just beyond our understanding.So social change, realisation, insight, can be brought about in many ways, including – or especially - by an artist being true to themselves rather than to a political agenda. That takes me back to those bird poems and how mysterious, miraculous and moving things we almost take for granted can be when they’re remade through words.

We look forward to hosting you. Any concluding remarks?
Just that I’m so much looking forward to coming back. When I step off the plane I’ll catch that incredible scent in the air, the sense of tumult and excitement that is Entebbe, Kampala, Uganda.Then black kites and marabou storks soaring above as we drive towards the city centre.There are lots of memories in Uganda for me, so there’s always a little sadness, something a little wistful about going back to a place that has been important in one’s past. I’ll be thinking about homeand writing, bridging that space between continents with words. Then, after the festival, I’llbe flying to Johannesburg where I have work to do and some more old friends to meet up with!

In partnership with Praxis Magazine, we’ll be publishing weekly interviews of the guests for the #Babishai2016 Poetry festival.
Tel: +256 751 703226

Twitter: @BNPoetryAward

Sunday, January 11, 2015

MEET THE #BNPA2015 BOARD MEMBERS

BN Poetry Foundation, in 2015, has a new board that is committed to making this year the year for poetry in Africa. With vast experiences as published authors, poets, publishers, academics, diplomats, entrepreneurs, global arts ambassadors and award-winners, their commitment is going to light up the poetry world in a way that will nourish, serve and inspire.
The first board member we will introduce is Sahro Ahmed Koshin, a Somali-Dutch poet and founder of the Puntland Women Writers Association.
Sahro Ahmed Koshin is a Somali-Dutch poet and author of three poetry collections as well as an upcoming biography of her late father Mr. Ahmed H. Koshin. https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-biography-of-my-father-the-late-Ahmed-H-Koshin-AUN/606941062707422?ref=hl
Sahro holds double MA degrees in Cultural Anthropology (Leiden University) and Development Studies (Radboud University), respectively. A Goodwill Ambassador with Globcall International: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Ambassador-Sahro-Ahmed-Koshin/301986015692?ref=hl
She is a Peace Builder and a Development Expert with over 10 years of international work experience in Institutional Reform, Gender Analysis/Research, Human Rights, Post-conflict Reconstruction, Complex Emergencies, African Diaspora Issues & Forced Migration.
Sahro has worked in various (post) conflict countries such as Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan and North-eastern Kenya with with different organizations such as CARE, Cordaid, The UN, Hivos as well with LNGOs and line ministries in Puntland, Somalia. A Community Board Member of WorldPulse, Sahro is a PhD candidate (Gender, governance, Somalia), Sahro is currently based in Garowe where she is supporting the Ministry of Education in Puntland with technical expertise on girls education and gender mainstreaming in the education sector. She blogs about her work on gender in Somalia here https://genderissuesinsomalia.wordpress.com And here https://www.facebook.com/pages/Gender-Unit-Ministry-of-Education-Puntland/298388056980123?ref=hl
Sahro is also involved in various charity and cultural projects such as the ERAYO (Words, in Somali) cultural project which was a project implemented in the Netherlands and that was meant to support Somali refugee children to write down their thought and feelings on home through poetry and art. The project led to the compilation of all the poems and artworks submitted by the refugee children and the publication of a book in 2005. She is also managing a project for orphaned girls to get an education with financial support from the Somali Diaspora. https://www.facebook.com/AgoonFoundation?ref=hl and on Facebook http://agoonfoundationpuntland.wordpress.com/

She is currently serving as a volunteer Community Board member with WorldPulse where she earlier volunteered as a Voice Over Correspondent reporting on the situation of Somali women living in Somalia. http://worldpulse.com/about/blog/world-pulse-launches-our-inaugural-community-advisory-board

She is the founder of the Puntand Women Writers Association (PWWA, www.pwwa.so) based in Garowe, Puntland where she runs diverse literary activities encouraging women and young girls to express themselves through the power of the written word and through poetry and art. PWWA has a newsletter which comes every 3 months and they have a Facebook page here: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Puntland-Women-Writers-Association/271873706326131?ref=hl
In 2014 she published her book “The Sounds of Laughter: A Collection of Poems from the Soul” becoming the first Somali woman to write, publish and present a book in Puntland.
Awards and recognitions
In 1999 Sahro Ahmed Koshin was the recipient of the prestigious Rabobank Poetry Prize
In 2002 Sahro was awarded the highly acclaimed Dutch Leadership ECHO-Award by the ECHO Foundation in collaboration with the Ministry of Education.

Published Works

2002: Between Summon and Echo 2002,
2005: Erayo: Poems and Short stories by Somali children living in refugee camps in The Netherlands
2014: Sounds of Laughter: A collection of poems from the soul.

The second board member we’ll introduce is Remi Raji, Professor at Ibadan University and published author.

Aderemi Raji-Oyelade is popularly known as Remi Raji,Nigerian poet, scholar, literary organiser, and cultural activist.  Remi Raji attended Holy Trinity Grammar School, Ibadan and Olivet Baptist High School, Oyo. He graduated with a B.A. Hons degree, Second Class Upper, in English from the University of Ibadan in 1984. He got his Master’s degree in Literature in 1986 and his doctorate degree in African American and African literatures in 1994 from the same university. 
Between 1994 and 1995, he taught for a session each at the Ogun State University, Ago-Iwoye and at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria. Raji-Oyelade joined the University of Ibadan formally as a Lecturer II, on April 1, 1995, and became full Professor in 2007.He was the Acting Head of English Department, UI (2009-2011), substantive Head (2011-2012), and the current Dean of Arts at the University of Ibadan.
Professor Raji-Oyelade has published a number of books and essays in African, African American and Caribbean literatures, literary theory, contemporary Nigerian poetry, cultural studies and creative writing. A visiting professor and writer to a number of institutions including Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, Universities of California at Riverside and Irvine, University of Cape Town, South Africa, Stockholms University, Sweden, and Cambridge University, UK, his scholarly essays have appeared in journals including Research in African Literatures and African Literature Today.
He is the author of six collections of poetry including A harvest of laughters (1997) which has won national and international recognition, Webs of Remembrance (2001), Shuttlesongs America: A Poetic Guided Tour (2003), Lovesong for My Wasteland (2005), Gather My Blood Rivers of Song (2009), and Sea of my mind (2013).  Raji has read his poems in over 15 different countries in Africa, Europe and America. In 2005, he served as the Guest Writer to the City of Stockholm, Sweden. Raji’s works have been translated into French, German, Catalan, Swedish, Ukrainian, Slovenian and Latvian.
He has been an Alexander von Humboldt Scholar to Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany.  In 2004, he was appointed by the Nigerian National Commission for UNESCO to serve as a member of the National Jury for the “Bridges of Strugga” International Poetry Award. He served as Secretary of the Nigerian chapter of PEN International (2002-2010), and the first Coordinator of PAN, the collective of PEN African Centres (2003-2007).  In December 2011, he was elected as the President of the Association of Nigerian Authors, the largest umbrella body of writers in any African country.
The third board member we will introduce is Graham Mort, Professor of Transcultural Literature at Lancaster University.
Graham Mort is professor of Creative Writing and Transcultural Literature at Lancaster University, UK. He has published nine books of poetry and has won a number of awards for his work, including prizes in the Arvon and Cheltenham Poetry Competitions and a major Eric Gregory Award.His selected poems – ‘Visibility: New & Selected Poems’ (Seren) – appeared in 2007 when he was described as ‘One of contemporary verse’s most accomplished practitioners. This book perfectly exhibits the blend of formal scrupulousness and sensory evocation and intellectual rigour that has shaped his reputation,’ (Sarah Crown, The Guardian). His latest book of poems, Cusp, appeared from Seren in 2010. He has also broadcast, fiction, drama and poetry on BBC Radio.  In 2007 Graham won the Bridport prize for his short story The Prince and his collection of short stories Touch (Seren 2010) went on to win the Edge Hill prize – the UK’s only prize for a whole collection of short fiction. He is currently working on a new book of stories Terroir, which will appear in May 2015, and a new book of poems Black Shiver Moss, scheduled for 2016.
Graham had worked extensively in sub-Saharan Africa for the British Council, on the Crossing Borders mentoring project, which he designed and led. He helped stage Beyond Borders – a major literary festival – in Kampala in 2005. He then designed and developing Radiophonics, a new short story writing radio writing project in Uganda and Nigeria, in partnership with the British Council and local broadcasters. Stories on Sanyu FM, Uganda, and Inspiration and Raypower FM in Nigeria reached audiences of over 5 million through a unique interactive broadcasting format.
Graham has carried out a number of projects with FEMRITE women’s writing association in Uganda. He is currently working with Soran University in Kurdistan to research the narratives of older women who survived Saddam Hussein’s Al Anfal campaign against the Kurdish people. He will be visiting Hanoi in 2015 to speak and read his work at the Asia-Pacific Poetry Festival.
The fourth board member to be introduced is David Ishaya Osu, poet and social commentator from Nigeria.

David Ishaya Osu (b. October 27, 1991) is a Nigerian poet. He was born in Onda, Nasarawa State, Nigeria. He is an Afro native. From dawn to dusk, all that David cares about revolves around ‘the arts’ –poems, pictures, sounds, gowns, etc. In 2012, he attended The Lumina Foundation creative writing workshop facilitated by multiple award-winning author Unoma Azuah. His poems have appeared in publications including: The New Black Magazine, Saturday Sun, African Writer, Gobbet Magazine, Elohi Gadugi Journal, The Kalahari Review, Ann Arbor Review, Sentinel Annual Literature Anthology (SALA 2012), Poetic Diversity, SOFTBLOW Poetry Journal, Helicon Magazine, Hedgerow, Undertow Tanka Review, Watershed Review, The Missing Slate, etc. and awaits publication elsewhere.
David is currently exploring Japanese poetry forms, as well as polishing his debut poetry book titled Rape Album. He is also a street photography enthusiast. David believes in hedonism and worships ‘Air’. He sings and plays the guitar, harmonica, and enjoys skipping and hopscotch and cat’s cradle and other plays.
The fifth board member we’ll introduce is Richard Ugbede Ali.

Richard Ali is a lawyer, author and poet born in Kano, Nigeria. Author of the warmly received 2012 novel, City of Memories, Richard is also Editor-in-Chief of the Sentinel Nigeria Magazine and was a runner-up at the 2008 John la Rose Short Story Competition. He edits the quarterly Sentinel Nigeria Magazine and serves as Publicity Secretary [North] on the Association of Nigerian Authors. Richard completed a 6-week Residency at the Ebedi Writers Residency Program in 2012, attended the Chimamanda Adichie-led Farafina Workshop in 2012 and was a Guest at the 2013 Ake Book and Arts Festival, Abeokuta. He lives in Abuja where he practices law and runs the northern office of ParrĂ©sia Publishers Ltd where he serves as Chief Operating Officer. He is unmarried and enjoys chess, reading and travelling.  He is working on his debut collection of poems, The Divan.
Poetry
http://www.african-writing.com/four/richardugbedeali.htm
http://www.african-writing.com/eight/richardugbedeali.htm
Downloadable: http://www.sarabamag.com/voices-on-the-four-winds-3-poetry-chapbook/
Radio Play
http://www.transculturalwriting.com/radiophonics/contents/onlineworkshops/radiophonicsinnigeria/radiophonicspodcasts/index.html
Interview
Emmanuel Iduma interviews Richard Ali http://mantlethought.org/category/keywords/richard-ali


And the last but not least is Ehab Ibrahim, a diplomat  from The Sudan Embassy to Uganda.

Ehab first interacted  with poetry in Uganda through the BN Poetry Foundation and after announcing the 2014 winner, made a promise on behalf of the Sudanese Embassy to be supportive of poetry through BNP.
Here are our board members, the team will grow along the way. We will announce a women’s initiative which will see more women. Right now, we are extremely pleased with the team.
“Working with this exceptional and highly motivated and intelligent board, will bring new beginnings for BN Poetry Foundation and the entire strategic team, not to mention the poets we aspire to mentoring and creating new platforms for,” The Director and Founder, Beverley Nambozo Nsengiyunva says of the board.