Sarah Mkhonza

Sarah Mkhonza (born Sarah Thembile Du Pont; 7 May 1957) is a Swazi writer, educator and women's rights activist living in the United States.

Mkhonza received a PhD from Michigan State University. She worked as a journalist for the Times of Swaziland and The Swazi Observer and taught English and Linguistics at the University of Swaziland. Because her writing was critical of the authorities in Swaziland, she was ordered to stop writing. Subsequent threats and assaults led her to seek political asylum in the United States in 2005.[1]

Mkhonza co-founded the Association of African Women and the African Book Fund Group at Michigan State University. She has taught at the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University, at Boston University and at Stanford University.[2]

In 2002, she received a Hammett-Hellman Award from Human Rights Watch. Mkhonza has also received an Oxfam Novib/PEN Award.[3]

Selected works[2]

  • What the Future Holds (1989)
  • Pains of a Maid (1989)
  • Two Stories (2007)
  • Woman in a Tree (2008)
  • Weeding the Flowerbeds (2008)
gollark: I don't think "you need to experience it" is a very good argument, though, inasmuch as I really wouldn't want to experience some political systems I'm pretty sure would go badly.
gollark: Also, people seem to be inconsistent on what it actually is.
gollark: Which will *hopefully* go away after this, but I kind of doubt it.
gollark: Crises are always an excuse for governments to grab power. We got ridiculous privacy invasion and useless airport security after 9/11 and whatnot, and governments now are declaring bucketloads of emergency powers.
gollark: It's not like doing something is always a net positive.

References

  1. "Sarah Mkhonza: Fighting For Swaziland". The Culture Trip.
  2. "Sarah Mkhonza". Ithaca City of Asylum.
  3. "Dissident and novelist from African autocracy finds sanctuary at Cornell". Cornell Chronicle. September 12, 2006.
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