Opal Palmer Adisa
| Opal Palmer Adisa | |
|---|---|
| Kingston (mul) | |
| O ya Tiŋgbaŋ | America |
| Education | |
| Shikuru shɛli o ni chaŋ | San Francisco State University (en) University of California, Berkeley (en) San Francisco State University (en) Hunter College (mul) |
| Bala yɛlibu, sabbu bee buɣisibu | Silmiinsili |
| Tuma | |
| Tuma | daankpɛɣulana, novelist (en) |
| Ŋun kpuɣi o tuma | University of California, Berkeley (en) Stanford University (en) University of the Virgin Islands (en) San Francisco State University (en) California College of the Arts (en) |
| Magnum opus | It Begins With Tears (en) |
| Pin' shɛŋa o ni dee | view
|
| Nira zaŋti | Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (en) Society for the Study of Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States (en) Association for Ethnic Studies (en) National Writers Union (mul) |
| opalpalmeradisa.com | |
Opal Palmer Adisa (doɣim dabisili 6 November 1954) nyela nira ŋun niŋdi yeltoɣ'taɣimalisi, ŋun sabiri kundunima ka yi Jamaica ni America na.[1] O nyela ŋun kuli gindi duniya yaanga zuɣu boba ni yaɣa n niŋdi yeltoɣtaɣimalisi ka mali o tuma n wuhiri salo.[2] o nyela Professor Emeritus, California College of the Arts, Adisa n lahi nye Kpema zaŋti Institute for Gender and Development Studies din be University of the West Indies, Mona Campus din be Jamaica la, luɣi sheli o ni kuli be pumpoŋo.
Tuuli Biɛhagu
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Adisa daa nyela bini wumisi so Jamaica, ka o ni daa chaŋ shikuru sheli daa nye din be Jamaica tinzuɣu ni, di ni mi sheli Kingston la. Yuuni 1970 o daa chaŋ nti bo baŋsim Hunter College, New York, ka daa tuɣi chaŋ San Fransisco Bay Area nti tuɣi baŋsim yaɣili din jendi sabbu yuuni 1979, ni ka o daa deegi o MA in creative writing shahira gbaŋ.[3] David Katz daa yeliya "ni yela din daa niŋ Adisa bilim ni ni niriba ban daa gilo nyela din niŋ daliri ka o ti piigi tuun sheli o ni tumdi maa, o ni daa yisiri na , o ba daa nyela chemist ka o ma nye ŋun guli kundunima. Lala ŋo ni ka o daa milisi salima salimbu , yaha di ni daa niŋ ka o laamba che taba, nti pahi nahingu ni daa kuli be paɣaba zuɣu ni faranima ŋo zaa daa pahi lebigi o ka o ti piigi lala soli maa bee tuma maa nti o maŋa. O ma daa lahi nyela ŋun kuli mori ni o lebigi biehigu nti ninvuɣu sheba ban miriba, di gba daa che ka Adisa ti yisina n bori ni o duhi o kukoli nti ninvuɣ'sheba ban be nahingu ni."[4]
Tuma ni sabbu
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Opal Palmer Adisa nyela ŋun mali master's degree shahira gbana ayi ka di yina San Fransisco State University ni Phd din yina University of California, Berkeley. O nyela ŋun na mini wuhi baŋsim California College of the Arts, Stanford University, University of Berkeley, ni San Francisco State University.[5] Yuuni 1993 hali ni 2017, Adisa daa nyela ŋun wuhi karimbihi sabbu, ka daa nye kuɣu lana zaŋti Ethnic Studies/Cultural Diversity Program, California College of Arts and Crafts din be Oakland. silimin goli September yuuni 2017; o daa nyela bini piigi so ni o leegi kpema zaŋti Institute for Gender and Development Studies, University of the West Indies din be Mona, Jamaica, luɣi sheli o ni pa be pumpoŋo. [6] Yuuni 2018, Adisa daa nyela bini duhi so n chaŋ Professor Emeritus zaasheei, ka daliri nyemi o yuun pishinaanu kpaŋmaŋa zaŋti California College of Arts, o yaɣili maa.[7]
Artists residencies
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Writer-in-Residence, Binational Fulbright Institute, Cairo, Egypt, December–February yuuni 2007
- Writer-in-Residence, Sacatar Institute, Itaparica, Bahia, Brazil, Silimiingoli December ni hali ni silimiingoli March ni, yuuni 2006
- Writer-in-Residence, McColl Center for Art + Innovation, Laurel Hill, NC, silimiingoli March ni, yuuni 2001
- Writer-in-Residence, McColl Center for Art + Innovation, Charlotte, NC, September–December 2000
- Writer-in-Residence, Headlands Center for the Arts, Sausalito, CA, February–December 1996.
Jaashehi ni kpaŋmaŋ pina
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Council for a performance of "Daughters of Yam", with Devorah Major
- Pushcart Prize (kpaŋmaŋ pini) zaŋti o lahabali ŋmaa sheli o ni daa boli "Duppy Get Her", yuuni 1987
- PEN Oakland/Josephine Miles Literary Award zaŋti o Tamarind and Mango Women, tuma la yuuni 1992
- Writer in Residence for Wadastick Artists & Scholar ,Laurel Hill, North Carolina
- Writer in Residence zaŋti McColl Center for Visual Art din be Charlotte, NC
- Lahabli sabira ŋun gaham kpaŋmaŋ pini zaŋti Middle Atlantic Writers Association
Bibliography
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]Kundinima ni lahibali jihi kpanjori
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Bake-Face and Other Guava Stories (yuuni 1986), lahabali jihi
- It Begins With Tears (yuuni 1997), kundu
- Until Judgement Comes (yuuni 2007), lahabali jihi
- Painting Away Regrets (yuuni 2011), lahabli kundu
Yeltoɣ'taɣimalisi
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Traveling Women (yuuni 1989, with Devorah Major)
- Fierce Love (yuuni 1992, including jazz recording with Devorah Major)
- Tamarind and Mango Women (yuuni 1992)
- Leaf-of-Life (yuuni 2000)
- The Tongue Is a Drum (yuuni 2002, including jazz CD with Devorah Major)
- Caribbean Passion (yuuni 2004)
- Eros Muse (yuuni 2006)
- I Name Me Name (yuuni 2008)
- Conscious Living (yuuni 2009)
- Amour Verdinia (yuuni 2009)
- What a Woman Is (yuuni 2010, including paintings by Shyam Kamel)
- Incantations & Rites (yuuni 2013, with Devorah Major)
- 4-Headed Woman (yuuni 2013)
Bibihi Kundinima
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Pina, The Many-Eyed Fruit (yuuni 1985)
- Playing Is Our Work (yuuni 2008)
- Look! A Moko Jumbie (yuuni 2016)
Onivihi kundi sheŋa poi ka di naa yi zaŋ wuhi salo
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Interviewing the Caribbean: “Caribbean Life + Olympian Feats, Volume 3 part 2” (pohim zuɣu lahabli kpanoɣu), Spring yuuni 2018
- Interviewing the Caribbean: “Caribbean Life + Olympian Feats, Volume 3 part 1” (pohim zuɣu lahabli kpanoɣu), Winter yuuni 2017
- Interviewing the Caribbean: “Violence in the Caribbean, Volume 2” (pohim zuɣu lahabli kpanoɣu), Spring yuuni 2017
- Interviewing the Caribbean: “Violence in the Caribbean, Volume 1” (pohim zuɣu lahabli kpanoɣu), Fall yuuni 2016
- Interviewing the Caribbean: “Intellectual Property” (pohim zuɣu lahabli kpanoɣu), Fall yuuni 2015
- ProudFlesh, Riding The Waves of Caribbean Women (yeltoɣ'taɣimalisi ni kperigu) Issue 8, yuuni 2013
- The Caribbean Writer: Ayiti/Haiti, Volume 25 yeltoɣ'ta`yimalisi, kperigu; bini daa lebigi sheli n labi french balli ni), yuuni 2011
Kundivihira
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- ↑ Nelson, Barbara (2 March 2008). Opal Palmer In love with Mr Write. Jamaica Gleaner.
- ↑ For the Reckord – Opal Palmer Adisa a multifaceted writer, performer (en) (2 March 2018).
- ↑ Busby, Margaret (1992), "Opal Palmer Adisa", Daughters of Africa: An International Anthology of Words and Writings by Women of African Descent, London: Vintage, 1993, p. 873.
- ↑ "I focused on the difficult" (interview with Adisa). Caribbean Beat (September–October 2005).
- ↑ Opal Palmer Adisa (en).
- ↑ Professor Opal Palmer Adisa is new Director of The UWI's Institute for Gender and Development Studies.
- ↑ Opal Adisa | California College of the Arts (en).
Karimpahi
[mali niŋ | mali mi di yibu sheena n-niŋ]- Interview with Opal Palmer Adisa (7 July 2014).
- (June 2016) "Rewriting the Caribbean Female Body: A Conversation with Opal Palmer Adisa". Journal of the Spanish Association of Anglo-American Studies: 203–220. ISSN 0210-6124.
- (9 April 2018) "The Affective Politics of Resistance in the Work of Opal Palmer Adisa". Contemporary Women's Writing 12 (1): 11–30. DOI:10.1093/cwwrit/vpx016. ISSN 1754-1484.