![]() ![]() So Long a Letter, an incandescent critique of Islamic polygyny from the point of view of a middle-aged Senegalese widow, won the first Noma Award for Publishing in Africa and was translated into many languages. The headmistress’s discernment of exceptional talent was again strikingly vindicated when Bâ, on publishing her debut novel at age fifty, became one of the first black African women to achieve international renown as an author. “You have gifts.” So Bâ took the entrance exam for the École normale and received the highest mark in French West Africa. “You are intelligent,” she told her pupil. Bâ had decided to become a secretary, but her dynamic headmistress, ambitious on her behalf, wouldn’t hear of it. Only the most academic students at Bâ’s school progressed to the École normale des jeunes filles de Rufisque: an elite teacher training college just outside Dakar, whose intake included the surrounding Francophone territories. When girls graduated from primary education in the French colonial system, the main options were enrollment in either typing or midwifery courses. ![]() ![]() Our monthly column Feminize Your Canon explores the lives of underrated and underread female authors.Īs a Muslim schoolgirl in Senegal in the forties, Mariama Bâ had to choose her life’s direction at the age of fourteen. ![]()
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