Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa

Moambican writer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroMoambican writer
A.K.A.Francisco Esaú Cossa
A.K.A.Francisco Esaú Cossa
PlacesMozambique
isWriter
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Male
Birth1 August 1957
Age67 years
The details

Biography

Francisco Esaú Cossa (pseudonym Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa, also spelled as Ungulani ba ka Khosa) is a Mozambican writer born August 1, 1957, in Inhaminga, Sofala Province. Khosa completed elementary school in Sofala, and high school in Zambezia. In Maputo he attended Eduardo Mondlane University, receiving a bachelor's degree in History and Geography. He then worked as a high school teacher.
In 1982, Khosa worked for the Ministry of Education for over a year. Six months after leaving the Ministry of Education, he was invited to work for the Writer’s Association. He initiated his career as a writer with the publication of several short stories and was one of the founders of the magazine Charrua of the Associação dos Escritores Moçambicanos (AEMO). It was his experiences in Niassa and Cabo Delgado, where poorly organized reeducation camps were located, that gave him the urge to write and expose this reality.

Literary Influences

  • Ernest Hemingway
  • William Faulkner
  • Franz Kafka
  • Gabriel García Márquez
  • Mario Vargas Llosa
  • Ousmane Sembène
  • Mongo Beti
  • Chinua Achebe
  • Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o

Awards

  • Won the Grand Prize of Mozambican Fiction in 1990 with Ualalapi
  • In 2002 Ualalapi was considered one of the best 100 African books of the twentieth century.
  • In 2007 Khosa won the José Craveirinha Award for his book Os Sobreviventes da Noite.

Published works

  • Ualalapi (1987)

Ualalapi is the name of a warrior nguni who is destined to kill Mafemane, brother of Mudungazi (later called Ngungunhane). This fictional story, a collection of six loosely related episodes, describes the life of hosi (king, emperor, in the Tsonga language) Ngungunhane, celebrity of the resistance to the Portuguese at the end of nineteenth century. Ualalapi´s telling of the story creates an epic ambience; however, an oral tradition describes the emperor as a tyrant rather than a hero. The author tracks Ngungunhane's rise to power over his murdered rivals and his eventual decline. The story is a disguised warning against tyranny. The book is not yet translated into English. It is available only in Portuguese. In 2002, Ualalapi was announced by a panel of judges in Accra, Ghana as one of Africa's 100 best books of the twentieth century.

  • Orgia dos loucos (1990)
  • Histórias de amor e espanto (1999)
  • No reino dos abutres (2002)
  • Os sobreviventes da noite (2005)
  • Choriro (2009)
  • Entre as Memórias Silenciadas (2013)

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