School of Social and Political Science

African Writers’ Lives: Focus on Leila Aboulela

Category
Seminar Series
02 November 2022
16:00 - 17:30

Venue

Chrystal Macmillan Building Seminar Rooms 1 and 2

Description

Speaker: Bhakti Shringarpure, Department of English, University of Connecticut

Chair: Terri Ochiagha Plaza, School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures, University of Edinburgh

Venue: Chrystal Macmillan Building Seminar Rooms 1 and 2

Co-sponsored by CAS and the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH)


Abstract:

Literary production by writers from the African continent has increased exponentially over the past two decades. With an exciting rise in digital platforms, awards, anthologies and lucrative publishing deals, the figure of the African writer has become the subject of much discussion and debate. However, a missing component in these literary circuits is a focus on African writers' lives. A turn to biography can facilitate interconnections between writers and their worlds, and privilege intersections between historical and social context, and the emergence and consolidation of literary lives. Biographies help to articulate, assert and deepen the history of African literature. 

This seminar talk will present some ongoing research from a biography of Sudanese-Scottish writer Leila Aboulela (b.1964). Aboulela was born in Khartoum, Sudan to an Egyptian mother and Sudanese father, but has spent most of her adult life in Aberdeen, Scotland. Her ascent into the literary world has been steady with six novels, two story collections and several radio plays. Aboulela is claimed by many literary universes, from Sudanese and Scottish literature to Muslim women’s literature, as well as the growing body of Black British writing. Aboulela’s books do the work of bridging the often strained cultural, linguistic and geopolitical relations between a predominantly Muslim and ethnically and linguistically Arab region of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and the vast, predominantly Black region of sub-Saharan Africa consisting of 46 countries. Furthermore, Aboulela’s writing about and from Scotland, where she has been based for the past two decades, adds yet another dimension to her preoccupation with places on the margins of empire. The presentation will illustrate the ways in which biographies such as Aboulela's can complicate, enrich and expand not just African literary histories but African studies, more broadly. 

Key speakers

  • Bhakti Shringarpure
  • Terri Ochiagha Plaza

Location