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Death and the King's Horseman:

A Play
Front Cover
41 Reviews
W W Norton & Company Incorporated, 2002 - Drama - 77 pages
Based on events that took place in Oyo, an ancient Yoruba city of Nigeria, in 1946, Wole Soyinka's powerful play concerns the intertwined lives of Elesin Oba, the king's chief horseman; his son, Olunde, now studying medicine in England; and Simon Pilkings, the colonial district officer. The king has died and Elesin, his chief horseman, is expected by law and custom to commit suicide and accompany his ruler to heaven. The stage is set for a dramatic climax when Pilkings learns of the ritual and decides to intervene and Elesin's son arrives home. "Soyinka both entertains and asks subtle questions about mass psychology, individual psychology, and universal human struggles of the will."—Chicago Tribune

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Review: Death and the King's Horseman: A Play

User Review  - Robert Wechsler - Goodreads

An incredible modern tragedy. It works especially well because most of its protagonists are living in a traditional world full of myths and superstitions, more classical than Shakespearean. And yet ... Read full review

Review: Death and the King's Horseman: A Play

User Review  - Sarah - Goodreads

I thought this was an ace play. I think it can be hit and miss when you 'read' a play, sometimes you miss the real action of it.. It's never the same as seeing it and hearing it. But! I really enjoyed the socks off this one. Read full review

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From Google Scholar

Self-Sacrifice and Human Sacrifice in Soyinka's" Death and the ...
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Elesin's Homecoming: The Translation of" The King's Horseman"
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The Pervasive Force of Music in African, Caribbean, and African ...
Donald M Morales - 2003 - Research in African Literatures
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References from web pages

planetpapers - Wole Soyinka: Death and the King's Horseman
In his play, Death and the King's Horseman, Wole Soyinka would have us examine every clash and conflict, save for the one involving culture. ...
www.planetpapers.com/ Assets/ 1463.php

Literary and Cultural Theory: "Death and the King's Horseman"
Perhaps partly because of its generic title, Eldred Durosimi Jones's "Death and the King's Horseman" does not strike me as particularly profound criticism ...
literaryculturaltheory.blogspot.com/ 2008/ 03/ death-and-kings-horseman_29.html

Death and the King's Horseman - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Death and The King's Horseman, which many consider Wole Soyinka's greatest play, is based on a real incident that took place in Nigeria during British ...
en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/ Death_and_the_King's_Horseman

Death and the King's Horseman: Information and Much More from ...
Death and the King’s Horseman Contents: Author Biography Plot Summary Characters Themes Style Historical Context Critical Overview Criticism Sources
www.answers.com/ topic/ death-and-the-king-s-horseman

STAGE: SOYINKA'S 'DEATH AND THE KING'S HORSEMAN' - New York Times
LEAD: THERE'S a lot of reading material available to those unsuspecting theatergoers who stumble into Wole Soyinka's ''Death and the King's Horseman'' at ...
query.nytimes.com/ gst/ fullpage.html?res=9B0DE5D81331F931A35750C0A961948260

stltoday - Death and the King's Horseman
With an ambitious new production of "Death and the King's Horseman" by Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, the Black Rep flexes its artistic and intellectual ...
www.stltoday.com/ stltoday/ entertainment/ reviews.nsf/ stage/ story/ 64646D37572105838625741700569DDE?OpenDocument

Death and the King's Horseman Summary and Analysis: Act I
Death and the King's Horsemen Summary and Analysis: Act I
www.enotes.com/ death-kings/ summary-analysis-act

Just Read Death and the King's Horseman by Wole Soyinka The ...
The Book Club is meeting next week to discuss Death and the King's Horseman, a play by the Nobel prize winner Wole Soyinka. I'm going to email the book club ...
www.xanga.com/ mtorta/ 636760795/ item.html

Literary Encyclopedia: Death and the King's Horseman
"Death and the King's Horseman." The Literary Encyclopedia. 22 Mar. 2004. Accessed 16 April 2008. <http://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&uid=5727> ...
www.litencyc.com/ php/ sworks.php?rec=true& UID=5727

Soyinka Horseman Death Essays -- Wole Soyinka's Death and the ...
In his play, Death and the King's Horseman, Wole Soyinka would have us examine every clash and conflict, save for the one involving culture. ...
www.123helpme.com/ preview.asp?id=97038

About the author (2002)

The first African writer to win the Nobel Prize for Literature (1986), Wole Soyinka, a Yoruba from western Nigeria, is a distinguished playwright, poet, novelist, essayist, social critic, political activist, and literary scholar. Although his literary oeuvre is varied, Soyinka is best known internationally for his politically provocative plays, which invariably are social commentaries on the day-to-day problems of Nigeria and the wider African world. In a recent interview with Henry Louis Gates, Jr., with whom he revived Transition magazine as an intellectual medium for a wider African and African-diasporic expression and readership, Soyinka said, "I cannot conceive of my existence without political involvement" (N.Y. Times Book Review). Soyinka's political commitment resulted in his imprisonment during the Nigerian civil war. Accused of treason, he was held in solitary confinement during most of this period. Two of his works, The Man Died: Prison Notes of Wole Soyinka (1988) and Poems from Prison (1969), were secretly written on toilet paper and smuggled out of prison. Soyinka's pioneering efforts and creative talents have been a major influence on the development of Nigerian drama. In the 1960s, he founded two Nigerian theater groups:the 1960 Masks and the Orisun Theatre. Since then, his plays have been widely performed in university and public theaters in Nigeria, elsewhere in Africa, as well as in Europe and the United States. Some of the most widely staged of his plays have been his adaptation of The Bacchae of Euripides (1973), his parody of African dictators, A Play for Giants (1984), and his topical and symbolic recreation of the political intrigues in a typical Yoruba kingdom, Death and the King's Horsemen (1976). To date Soyinka has published two stylistically challenging novels, The Interpreters (1965), winner of the 1968 Jock Campbell Literary Award, and Season of Anomy (1973). The former is about a group of young Nigerian intellectuals frustrated by their society, and the latter is an allegory on the Nigerian civil war. More stylistically challenging but far less opaque than his novels is Soyinka's poetry, which is deeply rooted in Yoruba mythology. While most of his poems are symbolic reflections on universal philosophical questions about human and transhuman existence, others, like those collected in A Shuttle in the Crypt (1972) and more recently in Mandela's Earth and Other Poems (1988), deal with the more pressing issues in Nigerian and pan-African politics in much the same vein as his plays. When his autobiography Ake: The Years of Childhood was published in 1982, it was hailed by the New York Times as one of the 12 best books of the year. A charming memoir of Soyinka's first 11 years, the book offers insights into Yoruba culture and its influence on his childhood. Born in Abeokuta, Ogun State of Nigeria, Soyinka was educated at the University College, Ibadan, and at the University of London and Leeds University in England, where he moved in 1954. He has held research and teaching appointments in several universities both at home and abroad, including the University of Ibadan, the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) at Ile-Ife, and Cornell University. Just before he won the Nobel Prize for literature, he had retired as professor of comparative literature at Ieft to devote himself to writing, occasional lecturing, and voluntary public service. His first voluntary public service was as chairman of the National Road Safety Commission, from which he was recently forced to resign because he disagreed with the constant change of direction of Babanginda's military government.

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