Adamou Idé

Adamou Idé[1] (22 November 1951 - )[2] is a Nigerien poet and novelist. A native speaker of the Zarma language, Idé left his home in Niamey to study public administration in France, receiving degrees from The Sorbonne (Université de Paris I) and the Institut international d'administration publique in Paris, serving as an official in the Government of Niger and in international organizations. Idé published his first collection of poems, Cri Inachivé (The Unfinished Cry) in 1984, and his first novel in 1987. He has published both in French and in Zarma. Idé won the first Nigerien National Poetry Prize (Prix national de Poésie) in 1981 And the Grand Prix Littéraire Boubou Hama du Niger in 1996. He has served as a jury member for the Grand prix littéraire d'Afrique noire in 1991 and received the Chevalier de l'Ordre du Mérite ("Knight of the Order of Merit") of Niger. He has served as the president of the "Societé des Gens du Lettres du Niger"[2] and the 3rd African Forum of Documentary Film (Niamey, 2008.)[3]

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References

  1. His family name is Adamou, listed first in Zarma tradition. See Gikandi (2003), p. 10
  2. 1 2 Biography at the festival de poesia de Medellin (2005)
  3. Fin de la 3ème édition du forum africain du film documentaire : plusieurs œuvres nigériennes primées Archived July 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.. Oumarou Moussa. Le Sahel (Niamey), 15 December 2008 .
  4. The phrase "donner le cafard", literally "gives you the cockroach", is a French language idiom meaning "to make depressed".
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