Albert Wendt Biography and List of WorksBooks by Albert Wendt | Shop used books at Biblio.com Samoan novelist, poet, and educator, who has promoted creative writing across the Pacific. Albert Wendt is probably the best-known writer in the South Pacific. Although his works are deeply rooted in the heritage of Oceanic culture, they also reflect the common experience of people everywhere. Inside us the dead, like sweet-honeyed tamarind pods That will burst in tomorrow's sun, or plankton fossils in coral alive at full moon dragging virile tides over coy reefs into yesterday's lagoons. (from 'Inside Us the Dead' in Lali, 1980) Albert Wendt was born in Apia, Western Samoa, of mixed German and Polynesian ancestry. In his childhood Wendt was fascinated by his grandmother Mele's storytelling - stories, poems, chants, legends and myths of his own people. He won a government scholarship to study in New Zealand, and attended high school in New Plymouth, where he began writing for himself. In his writing aspirations he was encouraged by the example of Robert Louis Stevenson, who spent the last years of his life on Wendt´s native island. Wendt studied at Ardmore Teacher's College near Auckland and at the Victoria University of Wellington, where he gained an M.A. in history. Before returning in 1965 to Western Samoa with his wife Jenny, a white New Zealander, Wendt worked for a while as a schoolteacher in New Zealand. He became principal of Samoa College and in 1974 he moved to Fiji, where he worked at the University of the South Pacific. While teaching he wrote Sons for the Return Home (1973), an autobiographical work about a cross-racial romance. The protagonist, an unnamed young man from Samoa at university in New Zealand, is the first of a number of Wendt's existentialist heroes. Flying Fox in a Freedom Tree (1974) depicts the colourful, degraded world of street Samoan English. Inside Us the Dead (1976) is an ironic self-examination. Pouliuli (1977) is the tragedy of an old village chieftain, sickened by materialist greed, haunted by his past, and forced to encounter Western ways. In Fiji Wendt published such essays as "Toward a New Oseania" and "In a Stone Castle in the South Seas" in which he examines Pacific literature, and his own role as a writer. In 1977 Wendt returned home to set up the University of the South Pacific Centre in Samoa. He worked closely with Mana, a literature magazine and in 1975 edited collections of poems from Fiji, Western Samoa, the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu), and the Salomons. Leaves of the Banyan Tree (1979), Wendt's epic saga of Western Samoan life, won the New Zealand Wattie Book of the Year Award, and is considered a classic of Pacific literature. In the story Wendt mixes personal metaphysics with mythic symbols arising from the Samoan landscape and Polynesian traditions. Tauilopepe, the grandfather, struggles to acquire wealth, power, and prestige. His rebellious son, Pepe, dies of tuberculosis and leaves behind a son, Lalolagi, who is taken away from his mother by Tauilopepe and sent to a New Zealand boarding school. Lalolagi rejects the Samoan language in favour of English, and falls in with businessmen to exploit the independent country's resources. The book provides a powerfully written account of the psychological effects of colonialism before and after the country's independence from New Zealand. Wendt sees the possibility of achieving liberation in the traumatic fusion of cultures through an existentialist individualism. Wendt was awarded the first chair in Pacific literature at University of the South Pacific in Suva. In 1988 he took up a professorship of Pacific studies at the University of Auckland. In 1999 Wendt was visiting Professor of Asian and Pacific Studies at the University of Hawaii. In the 1990s Wendt examined the effects of globalisation. Ola (1991) reveals prevailing racism and sexism, and opposes modern selfishness with the traditional moral values. According to Wendt, a racist language is used not only by politicians and business leaders, but former academics and so-called pundits and journalists. Black Rainbow (1992) is an attack on French nuclear testing in the Pacific. The political fable uses the framework of the science fiction / detective genre. While Wendt draws on traditional Polynesian culture, he takes the view that its disintegration under European influences has given the artist a new freedom to develop a personal style. Wendt's world is inhabited by real and semi-mythological beings; he uses European literature and history as well as images from Polynesian myths. He has also acknowledges the influence of both Camus and Faulkner on his writing. Wendt's work reacts against the idealized and distorted images Western writers create of his culture. Among his major themes is racism against Maoris and other ethnic minorities. For further reading: Encyclopaedia of World Literature in the 20th Century, ed. by Steven R. Serafin (1999, vol. 4); - Searching for Identity by Alexander Mart (1995); "A Tribute to the fa´a Samoa by Valerie O'Rourke (1992, in World Literature Today); Comparative Literature East and West, ed. by Cornelia N. Moore (1989); "Albert Wendt and the Faa-Samoa". In Essays on Contemporary Post-Colonial Fiction, ed. by Bock, Hedwig Bock and Albert Wertheim (1986); "Order, Disorder, and Rage in the Islands: The Novels of V.S. Naipaul and Albert Wendt" by M.S. Martin (1984, in Perspectives on Comparative Literature) - See also: Return to Exile: Locating Home by Juniper Ellis (in Jouvert: a journal of postcolonial studies, volume 2, issue 2, 1998 Free shipping on select books. No minimum purchase
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