Prof. Wole Soyinka has lost the race to be Oxford’s Professor of poetry to English poet, playwright and novelist, Simon Armitage.
What the Nobel Laureate missed out on is the second most prestigious poetry position in the UK.
Armitage, a popular poet and broadcaster, secured 1,221 votes – 301 more than his closest rival, Wole Soyinka.
Armitage was backed by 58 names, including John Carey and Melvyn Bragg. Bragg had previously supported Soyinka, but later publicly switched his allegiance to Armitage, saying the 80-year-old might not “bother to come to Oxford” if he were to win.
He said Soyinka, a US-based Nigerian who turns 81 next month, “has not written much poetry recently and I now wonder how often he would bother to come to Oxford. Soyinka is a grand man and would regard it as a grand post. I also query his age.”
Soyinka had hit back, saying: “How curious that anyone would even speculate that I would allow busy and committed people – friends, colleagues and total strangers – to waste their time nominating and campaigning on my behalf for such a prestigious position if I were not serious about contesting.”
Soyinka initially led the way with the most nominations in the early stage of the election. Candidates need to be nominated by at least 50 Oxford graduates and Soyinka had more than 90 nods.
Armitage will be expected to deliver one public lecture per term, facilitating the “art of poetry in the university” with a salary of £12,000 a year.
Source : The Voice / Vanguard
Oh,this age issue. Soyinka,you see am. You supported Buhari who is officially 72.
ReplyDeleteHe should Av supported ur clueless GEJ n watch while GEJ n his cohorts ruin dis country abi! Mumu!
DeleteWait oh, just £1,000 a month, abeg keep your coins while we keep our Prof
DeleteYes, Oxford University is right. Soyinka has not done any poetry work of late because he is now a politician. Let him come home and contest or form his own party.
ReplyDeleteAsin eeh, Ntorrr to Soyinka!
DeleteHobnobbing with polithiefcians like Bubu and Amaechi instead of concentrating on his literary works has cost him this exalted position....Ntorrr once again!
Olodo! Dumb dumb dumb! Literature as a place in politics. Negritude poets ruled their countries
DeleteU are dumber!
DeleteWhat place has literature and a literary scholar got in politics? Please tutor me! Even in Western world politics, there is a glaring separation between politicians and Academicians! If you must delve into the murky waters of politics, then do so by all means but forget the Academic world....You can't be a jack of all trade....That is the problem with Politics in Nigeria and of course, Africa as a whole....While, Academicians can be elected into political positions to resolve sensitive issues which require their expertise, it does not make them politicians automatically...No....Ask Angela Merkel, German Chancellor and FORMER research scientist (former being the operative word here).
Kids be arguing on SDK blog just for the fun of it...Shiooorrr
Actually they do.
DeleteShe mentioned Negritude.
Which ofcourse is true.
Leopold Sedar Senghor, a great African poet later became a president. Many literary scholars have towed the part of politics. Sometimes poetry and writing is for activism. Literature is a study of deep passion. Kofi Awoonor and co all had political themes and gave out their opinion on political issues. Willaim Shakespeare himself had political undertones in his work. These things are interwoven. Many reformers like Karl Marx were poets. So it's true.(though the 1st anon went overboard with emotions)
That being said, apart from the fact Soyinka isn't prolific. I don't fancy his poetry. He is a better playwright. Just as, achebe is good in prose. Apart from Abiku by Soyinka which is a classic. I find some of his other works not to be stiff, full of grandiloquence. Give me a soyinka drama anyday but for poetry, im not too sure, However they described him in a condescending manner 'a US based based Nigerian who is 81". Hez a Nobel laurette please. Nuff said
Looks like u guys have mixed sharing ones' view about politics of the day with being a bona-fide politician. Please these are clearly two different things. Soyinka is by no means a politician. He has just been overly opinionated of late about politics.. correct me if I'm wrong.
DeleteSmart people
DeleteCompared to Bona, sisi eko is not all that.
DeleteEmpress ndo. Errtrmmm..remind me, I'm not sure I understand which race we are in and what is up for grabs for the fittest??????
DeleteHappy Sunday
Nice one but I wished our own Wole had won instead anyways congrats to the winner.
ReplyDeleteThey were bothered of his age simple.
ReplyDeleteYou are already a legend sir, don't mind them.
They are right, they are not as senseless as Nigerians who respect people bases on past glory or sentiments. So wake up to reality my dear.
DeleteKingRex so right
DeleteRacists!!!!
ReplyDeleteEwu!
DeleteBecause he didn't win? Do Yorubas ever get anything on merit? Anuofia! !!
DeleteIf they are racists he wouldn't have got over 90 nods my dear.
DeleteEeya. He switched from poetry to criticising people lately. I can't forget 'squabble' with OBJ after he was analysed in that book, ' My Watch'.
ReplyDeleteYou are not informed. U don't kn d place of a critic do u. Quit being a blog butterfly n read up
DeleteI am biased so wont say a thing....Lolz
ReplyDeleteWise decision.
DeleteTry harder next time. The votes were not even up to half of the guy' s own. Well Woke Soyinka does not like honouring invites so they assumed this would be the case again.
ReplyDeleteMake sense.
DeleteArmitage, saying the 80-year-old might not “bother to come to Oxford” if he were to win.
ReplyDeleteProbably right. An elder who refuses to speak/rebuke his own when the heat was on...
You are Blessed.
DeleteFoolish u! You people hate him for saying d truth
DeleteHe might have lost, but still one of the best man for the job.
ReplyDeleteI like that he lost out. I'm gradually developing hatred for that man. I know I'm not supposed to celebrate an enemies failure but I like this his failure at least to cut his wings low and remind him that he's also human too. Cox we respect him doesn't mean he'll get away with anything he says or does. Cuss me however you like but I just aired my mind.
ReplyDeleteUche Onye adighi ya njo!
You make sense but no hate old man inugo!
DeleteGet over yourself stupid tribalist
DeleteEnemy, you say? Does he even know you? LMAO!! Be gathering fake enemies for yourself there. OK o.
DeleteEyah. Pele.. defeat cn dey pain sha
ReplyDeleteHe's a black man....
ReplyDeleteWhites always win
Ignorance
DeleteIt can be so disappointing sha.
ReplyDeleteSoyinka! You never tire?
ReplyDeleteYou need bed rest mbok.
What the heck is, 'Soyinka is a grand man,and will regard it as a grand post'?
ReplyDeleteWell, it's an honour to have gotten 90 votes from Oxford, even if he didn't win.
#WhiteDiamondOut
Hmmm!
ReplyDeleteNgwanu ooo there will always be a next time may be its not ur time Mr.
ReplyDeleteToo bad
ReplyDeleteHow can he win the race or write any poetry when he is busy poking his old nose into politics, being a Voltron for his son inlaw Amaechi and supporting his mate to become a president in a nation where intelligent youths abound. Write kor. Thankfully, Oxford is not a Yoruba University or else they would have voted him in on purely tribal grounds.
ReplyDeleteNa GEJ be the intelligent youth? Of the two people who contested, any right thinking person will support Bihari.
DeleteStella is this Saturday Laughs? Cos someone just labelled GEJ an "intelligent youth". Ahahahahahahahahahahahaha
DeleteEeyah.....sorry baba
ReplyDeletea.k.a EDWIN CHINEDU AZUBUKO said..
ReplyDelete.
He is black so he was never going to win in the first place... Fact....
.
.
***CURRENTLY IN JUPITER***
a.k.a EDWIN CHINEDU AZUBUKO said..
ReplyDelete.
He is black so he was never going to win in the first place... Fact....
.
.
***CURRENTLY IN JUPITER***
His geting old though
ReplyDeleteHe is still a legend
ReplyDeleteLesson: Soyinka and others like him need to create a chair within their respective disciplines/faculties in Naija universities by cultivating it, highlighting it and passing it on to successive generations of bright and promising scholars. Afterall, today's prominent Oxford and its positions, started from humble beginnings but by committed visionaries.
ReplyDelete