Birth Place: | Entebbe, Uganda |
Occupation: | Writer |
Nationality: | Ugandan |
Alma Mater: | Makerere University andUniversity of Maryland, College Park. |
Genre: | Fiction |
Notableworks: | Tropical Fish (2005) |
Doreen Baingana (born 1966) is a Ugandan writer. Her short story collection, Tropical Fish, won the Grace Paley Award for Short Fiction in 2003 and the Commonwealth Writers' Prize for best first book, Africa Region in 2006. Stories in it were finalists for the Caine Prize in 2004 and 2005. She was a Caine Prize finalist for the third time in 2021 and has received many other awards listed below.[1]
Raised in Entebbe, Doreen Baingana attended Gayaza High School and obtained a law degree from Makerere University and an MFA in creative writing from the University of Maryland, College Park. Immediately thereafter, she was appointed writer-in-residence at the Jiménez-Porter Writers House. She embarked on a PhD in Creative Writing at the University of Queensland in 2023.
Baingana won the Grace Paley Prize for Short Fiction in 2003 for her collection Tropical Fish. It was published by the University of Massachusetts Press and Broadway Books in the US, Oshun Books in South Africa, and Cassava Republic Press in Nigeria. It has been translated into Swedish and Spanish. It is forthcoming in French. The linked stories, which explore the lives of three sisters growing up in Entebbe after the fall of Idi Amin, have been described by Publishers Weekly as "richly detailed stories" that are "lush with cultural commentary."[2]
Baingana has published two children's books as well as short stories, essays, and articles in numerous journals and magazines including; The Georgia Review, The Evergreen Review, The African American Review, Chelsea, Glimmer Train, Callaloo, Agni, The Caravan: A Journal of Politics and Culture, Transition, The Guardian, Chimurenga, Kwani?, Farafina and Ibua. Her stories have been broadcast on Voice of America and BBC and have been included in many anthologies including Gods and Soldiers: The Penguin Anthology of Contemporary African Writing;[3] The Granta Anthology of African Fiction,[4] Cultural Transformations (OneWorld), New Daughters of Africa (edited by Margaret Busby, 2019).[5] and Joyful, Joyful: Stories Celebrating Black Voices.
Baingana was a contractor with Voice of America for a decade and taught at the Writer's Center, Bethesda, MD before returning to Uganda. She was a managing editor of Storymoja Africa, a Kenyan publisher, and chairperson of FEMRITE, the Uganda Women Writers Association. She co-founded and directs the Mawazo Africa Writing Institute[6] and leads creative writing workshops across Africa.[7]
The title story of Baingana's award-winning collection Tropical Fish has been adapted to the stage and performed at the Kampala International Theatre Festival (KITF 2016)[8] and four other venues in Kampala, as well as the AfriCologne Theatre Festival in Cologne, Germany, in 2017.[9] Another of Baingana's short stories, "Hills of Salt and Sugar", was adapted and staged at KITF 2018.[10]
Baingana has been a judge for prizes including; The Afritondo Short Story Prize,[11] the 9mobile Prize for Literature,[12] the Commonwealth Short Story Prize,[13] the Golden Baobab Prize[14] and the Hurston-Wright Prize for Debut Fiction.
Title | Year | First published | Reprinted/Collected/Broadcast | |
---|---|---|---|---|
“Her Generous Body” | 2022 | The Georgia ReviewPotomac Review, | ||
“Family is Family" | 2022 | Joyful, Joyful: Stories Celebrating Black Voices Two Hoots/Pan Macmillan UK | ||
"Lucky" | 2021 | Ibua Journal | Evergreen Review, Fall/Winter 2021 | |
"Una Ragazza" ("A Girl") | 2018 | Grace and Gravity: Fiction by Washington Area Women, Paycock Press, October 2004 | As "Holy Shit!", Kwani? 04, 2007 | |
"The Exam" | 2014 | Broadcast on BBC4, March 2014 | ||
"Gorging" | 2013 | The Caravan: A Journal of Politics & Culture, India (Online), May 2013 | ||
"Man and Son" | 2012 | Africa Inside Out, University of Kwazulu-Natal Press, SA, March 2012 | ||
"The Messenger" | 2011 | Transition, 50th Anniversary edition, November 2011 | ||
"Christianity Killed the Cat | 2007 | Cain Prize Anthology | Gods and Soldiers: The Penguin Anthology of Contemporary African Writing, April 2009 -Republished in St. Petersburg Review, 2008 -Republished in Air Uganda Inflight Magazine, Oct. – Dec. 2008 | |
"Anointed" | 2010 | AGNI, November 2010 | Gods and Soldiers: The Air Uganda Inflight Magazine, October–December 2008 | |
"Eden Burning" | 2008 | Chimurenga 12, March 2008 | The Manchester Review, July 2017 | |
"Kadongo Kamu – One Beat" | 2005 | Story Quarterly, Fall 2005 | The Sunday Monitor, February 2006 | |
"One Woman’s Body" | 2005 | Seventh Street Alchemy, Jacana Press, 2005 | Macmillan Anthology of Short Stories for East Africa | |
"Afterward" | 2004 | L’Officiel Italia, September 2018 | ||
"Depth of Blue" | 2004 | Gargoyle #48, Fall 2004 | ||
"A New Kind of Blue" | 2003 | Voice of America, 2003 | ||
"Fallen Fruit" | 2002 | Spring/Summer 2002 | Voice of America, May 2004 |