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Merna Wilson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Daphne Merna Wilson, who wrote as Merna Wilson, was a Zimbabwean journalist, poet and novelist.[1] She became active as a writer in pre-independence Rhodesia.

Life

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Merna Wilson was born in Kwekwe and educated at Mutare High School.[2] She was a correspondent for African World from 1965 to 1967, and later worked as a buyer.[1]

The plot of Wilson's first novel Explosion (1966) depicted nationalist politics playing out in a mining compound. The novel, typically for white Rhodesians at the time, treated nationalist leaders as cynically power-hungry rather than having popular legitimacy.[3] The book gave a fictional portrayal of Terrence Ranger as 'Professor Granger', a pro-Communist manipulator of liberal opinion outside Rhodesia.[4]

Wilson won the Rhodesian P.E.N. award in 1978. She was on the editorial board of Two Tone.[2]

Works

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  • Explosion. London: Robert Hale, 1966. Novel.
  • Turn the Tide Gently. London: Robert Hale, 1967. Novel.
  • Reap the Whirlwind. London: Robert Hale, 1968. Novel.
  • 'The Muriel Mine and those who built it', Rhodesiana, No. 21 (December 1969), pp.55-60
  • A Ring Has No End. Salisbury: Gazebo Books, 1977. Poetry.
  • Python Cave. Gwelo: Modern Press, 1977. Children's story. (First serialised without the author's permission in The Children's Newspaper, 1973.[5])
  • The Country of the Mind. Salisbury: Kailani Books, 1981. Poetry.
  • (ed.) The Wilder Shores of Love. Harare: Gemini, 1984. Poetry anthology.

References

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  1. ^ a b "WILSON, Daphne Merna". Who's who of Southern Africa. 1986. p. 603.
  2. ^ a b Style, Colin; Style, O-lan, eds. (1986). Mambo Book of Zimbabwean Verse in English. Mambo Press. p. 402. ISBN 0869223674.
  3. ^ Chennells, Anthony (2008). "White Rhodesian Fiction". In Roscoe, Adrian A. (ed.). The Columbia Guide to Central African Literature in English Since 1945. Columbia University Press. pp. 77–8.
  4. ^ McCracken, John (June 1997). "Terry Ranger: A Personal Appreciation". Journal of Southern African Studies. 23 (2): 176. JSTOR 2637616.
  5. ^ "Annual bibliography of Commonwealth literature". The Journal of Commonwealth Literature. 13: 12. 1978.