By
Nduka Otiono
Africa ’s foremost scholar of Oral Literature and award-winning novelist,
Isidore Okpewho, has passed on at 74. He was a prolific author, co-author and
editor of about 14 books, dozens of articles and a seminal booklet, A
Portrait of the Artist as a Scholar.
Prof Isidore Okpewho |
Prof. Okpewho
died peacefully at a hospital in Binghamton ,
a town in Upstate New York where he had lived and taught since 1991. His
teaching career spanned University of New York at Buffalo
(1974-76), University of Ibadan (1976-90), Harvard
University (1990-91), and State
University of New York at Binghamton .
According to family sources, the Distinguished Professor at State University of New York,
Born on November
9, 1941 in
Agbor, Delta State , Nigeria , Okpewho grew up in Asaba,
his maternal hometown, where he attended St Patrick’s College, Asaba. He
proceeded to the University College , Ibadan ,
for his university education. He graduated with a First Class Honours in
Classics, and moved on to launch a glorious career: first in publishing at
Longman Publishers, and then as an academic after obtaining his PhD from the
University of Denver, USA. He crowned his certification with a D.Litt from University of London .
With his two earliest seminal academic monographs, The Epic in Africa: Toward a Poetics of the Oral Performance (1979) and Myth in Africa: A Study of Its Aesthetic and Cultural Relevance (1983), Okpewho quickly established his reputation as a first-rate scholar and a pioneer of Oral Literature in