Elieshi Lema Explained

Elieshi Lema
Birth Place:Kilimanjaro, Tanzania
Occupation:Writer
Publisher
Genre:Poetry, Novel, Children's literature
Alma Mater:University of Dar-es-Salaam

Elieshi Lema (born 1949) is a Tanzanian writer and publisher, also active in Tanzania's civil society.

Biography

Lema was born and raised in the village of Nronga in Moshi District of Kilimanjaro Region.[1] She studied library science and worked at the national library. She continued her education by studying English literature at the University of Dar es Salaam and creative writing at San Francisco State University.[2]

Lema began writing poetry and then children's books[2] in Swahili. Her short story Mwendo dealt with cultural practices harmful to the girl child in Tanzania. In 2001, she wrote her first novel titled Parched Earth in English.[1] This novel has been translated into Swedish and French and received honourable mention for the Noma Award for Publishing in Africa. Another of her books for young adults in English, called In the Belly of Dar es Salaam, was on the shortlist for the Burt Award for African Literature.

As a co-editor, she also published works by Tanzania's first president Julius Nyerere, titled Nyerere on Education: Selected Essays and Speeches.

Lema is co-owner of the publishing house E&D Vision Publishing,[3] which also operates a book café in Dar es Salaam. E&D Vision Publishing mainly has published children's books, textbooks and titles about African history, both in Swahili as well as in English. In 1998, they published the first booklet for young readers on the history of the Dinosaurs of Tendaguru, which also became known as recommended reading in Kenyan schools.[4]

Both as a writer of young adult literature as well as a publisher and educator, Lema has focussed on books for children as the basis for a publishing industry in her country.[5] She is also a founding director for the Tanzania Cultural Trust Fund. Further, she has served on the board for the African Publishers Network, Haki Elimu, the Tanzania Gender Networking Programme, the Tanzania Media Fund and on the executive board for the Publishers Association of Tanzania, as well as the Children's Book Network.[6] [7]

In an interview about her experience about the challenges of building a sustainable reading culture in East Africa, she said:

Selected works

as author:

as editor:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Elieshi Lema . Sanaa Central.
  2. Web site: Elieshi Lema (Tanzania) . Centre for Creative Arts . 2015-08-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170624071348/http://www.cca.ukzn.ac.za/index.php/tow-past-participants/46-tow-2013/207-elieshi-lema-tanzania . 2017-06-24 . dead .
  3. Web site: E&D Vision – E&D Vision Publishing. en-US. 2020-02-10.
  4. Web site: REPUBLIC OF KENYA MINISTRY OF EDUCATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY . 2015 . Approved list of school textbooks and other instructional materials for ECDE, Primary schools and teacher training colleges . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20180127061629/http://icta.go.ke:80/pdf/approvered-list-of-books-primary-2015.pdf . 2018-01-27 . 2019-09-24 .
  5. Lema . Elieshi . 1997 . Building a book industry: Start with the children . Logos . 8 . 2 . 91–95 . 10.2959/logo.1997.8.2.91 . 0957-9656.
  6. Web site: Elieshi Lema. 2017-08-31. CODE's Burt Literary Awards. en. 2020-02-10.
  7. Web site: Publisher Elieshi Lema Discusses Private Sector Book Publishing in Africa . 2023-03-01 . Global Book Alliance . en-US.
  8. Web site: Maral‐Hanak . Irmi . 2011 . "Safari ya Prospa": a novel for children . 2023-03-01 . stichproben.univie.ac.at.
  9. Ng’umbi Yunusy Castory. 2019. “Precarity and Affiliative Relationships in Elieshi Lema’s in the Belly of Dar Es Salaam.” English in Africa 55–73. .