Amelia Blossom Pegram

Amelia Blossom Pegram (3 October 1935 or 1938),[1] also known as Amelia Blossom House, is a South African writer and performer, who began her working life as a teacher and has also been an actor and model.[2]

Biography

She was born in Wynberg, Cape Town,[3] to Henry Bowman-Pegram and Evelyn Minnie West and on 3 October, although there is a discrepancy as to the year of her birth. Pegram has explained: "I was born in the spring time, and that's why my name is Blossom. Spring time in South Africa is October....I have two birth certificates, and that sounds kind of crazy, but one says '38, the other one says '35....It came about through record keeping in South Africa."[4]

After graduating in 1961 from the University of Cape Town[3] with a BA in history and English, she began a career as a teacher but in 1963 left South Africa for political reasons, eventually settling London, England, where she studied drama at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama,[5] later acting on stage, television, radio and in film.[6] In 1972 she moved to the United States, living and teaching in Fort Knox,[7] and she earned a master's degree from the University of Louisville in 1977, writing her dissertation her dissertation on Dennis Brutus.[3]

Her short stories, poems and essays have been published in many journals, among them Staffrider, Presence Africaine, Callalloo, The Gar, and Essence, and she has read and performed her poetry internationally.[6] She is author of several books, including Our Sun Will Rise: Poems from South Africa (1989), and is included in the anthology Daughters of Africa, edited by Margaret Busby (1992), and in Conversations with Kentucky Writers II (2015).[8]

Honours

Recognition that Pegram has received for her work includes a research grant from the Kentucky Foundation for Women, the Kwanzaa Honors List, Woman of the Year, the Louisville Board of Alderman Literary Award, inauguration into the Pan African Writers Association, and the South African Women for Women (SAWW) Arts and Literature award.[9]

Selected bibliography

  • Checklist of Black South African Women Writers in English, 1980.
  • Deliverance, 1986.
  • Our Sun Will Rise: Poems for South Africa, 1989.
  • Nelson Mandelamandla (with Cosmo Pieterse), 1989.
  • Echoes Across a Thousand Hills, 1994.
  • Beneath the Baobab, 2005.
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References

  1. Beattie, L. Elisabeth, ed. (2015). "Amelia Blossom Pegram". Conversations with Kentucky Writers II. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 155−156. ISBN 9780813159089.
  2. "Amelia Blossom Pegram". 1999 • Arts and Literature Award. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  3. Seattle Coalition Against Apartheid (June 1985). "AMELIA BLOSSOM HOUSE - DELIVERANCE: sisterhood is universal". Seattle, Washington: African Activist Archive. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  4. Beattie (2015), "Amelia Blossom Pegram", Conversations with Kentucky Writers II, pp. 155−156.
  5. "Amelia Blossom Pegram". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  6. "Amelia Blossom House". Daughters of Africa. London: Jonathan Cape. 1992. pp. 630−631.
  7. "Interview with Amelia Blossom Pegram, June 5, 1992". Project: Kentucky Writers Oral History Project. Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, University of Kentucky Libraries. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  8. "Pegram, Amelia Blossom". NKAA, Notable Kentucky African Americans Database. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  9. "1999 • 3rd Annual SAWW Awards". SAWW ANNUAL AWARDS. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
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