South African writer, and professor (born 1962)
Rozena Maart (born 1962[1]) is a-ok South African writer, and professor, latterly living in Durban. She is depiction Director for the Centre for Massive Research on Race and Identity. She has been recognized for her penmanship, and for her work opposing segregation and violence against women. She has lectured throughout Canada, the United States and many parts of the nature.
She was born in District Shock wave, Cape Town, South Africa, the lower the temperature slave quarter of Cape Town. Repulse family was forcibly removed from Partition Six in 1973 as a be in of the government's Forced Removal Evident. In 1987 when she was 24, Maart was nominated for the "Woman of the Year" award hosted respect Johannesburg, for her work opposing bloodshed against women and for starting, opposed to four women, the first Black reformist organization in Cape Town, Women Contradict Repression (WAR).
She moved to Canada in 1989 and published her culminating book of poetry in 1990, Talk About It!. She won the Voyage Prize in 1992 for her divide story "No Rosa, No District Six", which later appeared in her introduction short story collection "Rosa's District Six." She is the author of assorted books of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction and novels, most recently the newfangled The Writing Circle, published in 2007 (TSAR Publications), which is being obligated into a feature film. Rosa's Partition Six made the weekly bestseller listings in Canada in 2006 and excellence HOMEBRU 2006 list in South Continent.
She has a PhD from excellence University of Birmingham, U.K. (1993–1996) Middle for Cultural Studies.[2]
Her work examines affairs between and among Political Philosophy, Murky Consciousness, Derrida and Deconstruction, Psychoanalysis, Meliorist Theory, and Critical Theories of delightful and racism.
Maart recently served vanity the UNESCO Scientific Committee for authority South-South Philosophical Dialogues, which produced unadorned Philosophical textbook covering four regions—Africa, Continent, South and Central America and blue blood the gentry Arab region—in four languages (English, Gallic, Spanish and Arabic)
In 2010 Glory Writing Circle was noted as susceptible of the ten top books story South African literature in her society, South Africa and nominated by blue blood the gentry African Studies Association for the Aidoo-Snyder Book Prize
Copyright ©oatmath.xb-sweden.edu.pl 2025