Niyi Osundare is a Nigerian poet, dramatist, linguist, and literary critic. Born on 12 March 1947, in Ikere-Ekiti,[1] Nigeria, his poetry is influenced by the oral poetry of his Yoruba culture, which he hybridizes with other poetic traditions of the world, including African-American, Latin American, Asian, and European.
In 1997, he accepted a teaching and research post at the University of New Orleans. In 2005 Osundare was caught in Hurricane Katrina, and he and his wife were stuck in their attic for 26 hours. Their neighbour, who at the time was driving by in his boat, heard their shouts for help. They were rescued and bounced around from rescue shelters until they ended up in Rindge, New Hampshire, where Osundare could get a teaching job as a professor at Franklin Pierce College and things settled down.[2]
Thread in the Loom: Essays on African Literature and Culture (2002)
The Word is an Egg (2002)
Pages from the Book of the Sun: New and Selected Poems (2002)
The State Visit (2002, play)
Early Birds: Poems for Junior Secondary, Book One, Book Two, Book Three (2004)
Two Plays (2005)
Tender Moments: Love Poems (2006)
City Without People: The Katrina Poems (2011)
Random Blues (2011)
Only If the Road Could Talk (2017)
Snapsongs: Homegroans and Foreignflares (2021)
Green: Sighs of Our Ailing Planet (2022)- (a sequel to The Eye of the Earth, 1986)
Documentary
In 2016, Osundare, along with his lifelong friend, the Sierra Leonean poet Syl Cheney-Coker, was the subject of a documentary called The Poets, by director Chivas DeVinck.[5] The film follows Osundare and Cheney-Coker on a road-trip through Sierra Leone and Nigeria as they discuss their friendship and how their life experiences have shaped their art.
Ayinuola, Fortress Isaiah, and Onwuka Edwin. "Yoruba eco-proverbs in English: An eco-critical study of Niyi Osundare's midlife and horses of memory." Journal of Literary Society of Nigeria 6 (2014): 29-40.
Okunowo, Yomi. "Proverbs as Aesthetics of Meaning in Osundare’s Poetry." The Criterion 3.1:1-21, (2012). Online access