Boubacar Boris Diop (born 26 October 1946) is a Senegalese novelist, journalist and screenwriter. His best known work, Murambi, le livre des ossements (translated into English as Murambi: The Book of Bones), is the fictional account of a notorious massacre during the Rwandan genocide of 1994. He is also the founder of Sol, an independent newspaper in Senegal, and the author of many books, political works, plays and screenplays. Doomi Golo (2003) is one of the only novels ever written in Wolof;[citation needed] it deals with the life of a Senegalese Wolof family. The book was published by Papyrus Afrique, Dakar.
Senegalese novelist
Boubacar Boris Diop
Born
26 October 1946 (age 76)
Nationality
Senegalese
Occupation
Writer and journalist
Awards
Prix Tropiques (1997)
(1990)
(2019)
Neustadt International Prize for Literature (2022)
LiteratureXchange Festival, Aarhus/Denmark 2022
He was awarded the 2022 Neustadt International Prize for Literature.[1]
Life and career
Boubacar Boris Diop was born in Dakar in 1946. He taught literature and philosophy in several Senegalese high schools. He became technical advisor at the Cultural Ministry of Senegal. He began working as a journalist and writer, writing for local newspapers, the Swiss newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung and the Paris-based magazine Afrique, perspectives et réalités.[2]
Work
Diop's book Murambi, le livre des ossements was written for the Rwanda: écrire par devoir de mémoire [Rwanda: write out of a duty to remember] initiative of 1998. He is the author of Doomi Golo, a novel entirely in Wolof. It was translated to English by Vera Wülfing-Leckie and El Hadji Moustapha Diop, and published as Doomi Golo: The Hidden Notebooks by the Michigan State University Press in the series African Humanities and the Arts.[3] His novel Murambi, The Book of Bones won him the 2022 Neustadt International Prize for Literature.[4]
Diop also writes for the cinema and theatre and contributes to numerous publications, including Internazionale[it] and Chimurenga.
Novels
Kaveena, Philippe Rey, 2006.
L'Impossible innocence, Philippe Rey, 2004.
Doomi Golo, novel in Wolof, Éditions Papyrys, 2003 (in French Les Petits de la guenon, Éditions Philippe Rey, 2009).
Murambi, Le livre des ossements, Paris: Stock, 2000. English translation by Fiona McLaughlin, Murambi: The Book of Bones (Indiana University Press, 2006)
L'Europe, vues d'Afrique, short stories, several authors, Le Figuier.
Le Cavalier et son ombre, Paris: Stock, 1997, Price Tropiques 1997.
Les Traces de la meute, novel, Paris: Éditions l'Harmattan, 1993.
Les Tambours de la mémoire, Paris: Nathan, 1987, re-edition L'Harmattan, 1990, Grand Prix de la République du Sénégal pour les Lettres, 1990.
Le Temps de Tamango, follows Thiaroye, terre rouge (théâtre), first edition Paris: Harmattan, 1981, Prix Bureau Sénégalais du Droit d'Auteurs 1984. Translated into Italian. Re-issued Le Serpent à Plumes, 2002.
Diop, Boubacar Boris (2016). Doomi Golo—The Hidden Notebooks. African Humanities and the Arts. Michigan State University Press. ISBN978-1-61186-214-0. JSTOR10.14321/j.ctt1g0b8xw.
Interview with Boubacar Boris Diop, Yolande Bouka & Chantal Thompson. Lingua Romana: a journal of French, Italian and Romanian culture, Volume 2, number 1 / fall 2004.
Sugnet, Charles. Dances with Wolofs: A conversation with Boubacar Boris Diop. Transition - Issue 87 (Volume 10, Number 3), 2001, pp.138–159
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