Mĩcere Gĩthae Mũgo | |
Birth Name: | Madeleine Mĩcere Gĩthae |
Birth Date: | 12 December 1942 |
Birth Place: | Baricho, Kirinyaga District |
Death Place: | Syracuse, New York, United States |
Nationality: | Kenyan |
Citizenship: | Kenya and the United States |
Occupation: | Professor, playwright, author, activist and poet |
Employer: | Syracuse University |
Children: | Mũmbi wa Mũgo, Njeri Kũi Mũgo |
Spouse: | Divorced |
Mĩcere Gĩthae Mũgo (born Madeleine Mĩcere Gĩthae; 12 December 1942 – 30 June 2023) was a Kenyan professor, playwright, author, activist and poet. She was a literary critic and professor of Literature, Creative Writing and Research Methods in the Department of African American Studies at Syracuse University. She was forced into exile in 1982 from Kenya during the Daniel Arap Moi dictatorship for activism and moved to teach in the United States, and later Zimbabwe. She taught Orature, Literature, and Creative Writing.
Mũgo's publications include six books, a play co-authored with Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o and three monographs. She also edited journals and the Zimbabwean school curriculum. The East African Standard listed her among the 100 most influential people in Kenya in 2002.[1]
Mũgo was born on 12 December 1942, in Baricho, Kirinyaga District, Kenya.[2] The daughter of two progressive (liberal) teachers – Senior Chief Richard Karuga Gĩthae and Mwalimu Grace Njeri Gĩthae – who were politically active in Kenya's fight for independence.[3]
Mũgo attended Alliance Girls' High School from 1957 to 1960.[4]
Mũgo went on to attend Makerere University (where she gained her B.A. in 1966). She enrolled at the University of Nairobi in September 1966, later leaving for Canada to attend in 1969 the University of New Brunswick, where she earned her M.A. and PhD in 1973. She returned to Kenya to take up a teaching position at the University of Nairobi in 1973,[5] and in 1978 became Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, making her the first female faculty dean in Kenya. She taught at the University of Nairobi until 1982, St. Lawrence University (1982–1984) the University of Zimbabwe (1984–1991) and was a visiting professor at Cornell University (1992).[6]
Mũgo was a political activist who fought against human rights abuses in Kenya.[7] Her political activism led to her being harassed by the police and arrested.[7] Mũgo and her family (including two young daughters) were forced to depart Kenya in 1982 after the attempted coup of the Daniel Arap Moi government, following which she became a target of official government harassment.[8] She was stripped of her Kenyan citizenship, but after one year, the Zimbabwean government invited her to apply for Zimbabwean citizenship, which she held until the mid-1990s, when she regained her Kenyan citizenship.[5]
After leaving Kenya, she worked, wrote, and taught from abroad,[9] and later said:
The poem "Speaking of Hurricanes" by Ama Ata Aidoo, included in Aidoo's 1992 collection An Angry Letter in January, was written "for Micere Mugo and all other African exiles".[10] [11]
In 1993, Mũgo joined Syracuse University,[12] where she taught Orature, Creative Writing, Caribbean Women Writers and Research Methods in the Department of African American Studies (AAS).[13] In 2007, she was awarded the Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor for Teaching Excellence. In 2013, while at Syracuse University, she participated in the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) conference at the United Nations, the theme of which was "The Elimination and Prevention of Violence Against Women and Girls", and in her address said:
After 22 years of service, Mũgo retired in 2015 and was awarded Emeritus status. Marking Mũgo's retirement from the AAS faculty at Syracuse, a symposium was held in her honour.
That same year, she delivered the keynote International African Writers Lecture, entitled "African Orature Artists and Writers birthing humanizing Sankofa-visions of Utu, Ubuntu and Justice for All", at the University of South Africa (UNISA) as part of the 4th Africa Century International African Writers Conference.[14]
In 2021, the Royal African Society in London presented Mũgo with the "Africa Writes" Lifetime Achievement award in African Literature, the first recipient having been Margaret Busby in 2019.[15] [16] [17]
Mũgo was the founder of the United Women of Africa Organization (UWAO) and a co-founder and President (at the time of her death) of the Pan African Community of Central New York (PACCNY). She was an official speaker for Amnesty International, a consultant for the "Africa on the Horizon" series by Blackside, a council member at Riara University, a past chairperson of the board of directors at the Southern Africa Regional Institute for Policy Studies (SARIPS) in Harare and had also served as a consultant for many foundations, and on the board of many journals and organizations.
Mũgo, who had been outspoken about having had multiple myeloma cancer for sixteen years,[18] died on 30 June 2023, at the age of 80,[19] [20] in Syracuse, New York.[21]
Mũgo was a distinguished poet, and the author or editor of 15 books.[7] Her work is generally from a traditional African, Pan-African and feminist perspective, and draws heavily upon indigenous African cultural traditions.
Mũgo and fellow Kenyan activist writer Ngugi wa Thiong'o co-wrote the play The Trial of Dedan Kimathi, published in 1977 and performed at FESTAC 77 in Lagos, Nigeria. Trial had its U.S. premiere in 2014 at the experimental theatre space in UC Irvine's Claire Trevor School of the Arts, directed by Dr. Jaye Austin Williams and choreographed by Dr. S. Ama Wray.
Mũgo also collaborated with the Zimbabwean writer Shimmer Chinodya in editing plays and stories for adolescents in Shona.