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Narrative Landscape Press has announced the acquisition of two groundbreaking books: How...
Following a successful reading in Abuja, acclaimed author Niran Adedokun, is set...
Santa Fe Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer has dismissed actor Alec Baldwin’s involuntary...
The Wole Soyinka International Cultural Exchange (WSICE) programme, which took off on...
Longlegs, the latest horror film from director Osgood Perkins, has taken the...
Elisha K has released his latest EP, Days of Elisha – Epistle...
1. Enigmata. You hated fruitless journeys abroad, yet Aligned into a...
Even at 90, Wole Soyinka whose famous quote is “the man dies in all who keep silent in the face of tyranny” continues to write and live out the essence of what the Swedish Academy described as one "who in a wide cultural perspective and with poetic overtones fashions the drama of existence
The Man Died is important as a historical testament of a nation told from the point of view of a writer, activist and politically engaged intellectual who has interrogated the failings of the Nigerian state for over a half century.
Ultimately, the Soyinka versus Obidients rift is mostly an intergenerational spat even as their derision of Soyinka’s Nobel Prize for Literature continues. Many, including Obidients, will argue, however, that it’s a fight for justice
The documentary’s biggest achievement lies in the way it humanises Wole Soyinka by shining a bright light on the Nobel laureate’s private life away from his books
The Advisory Board for The Nigeria Prize for Literature has unveiled the...

















