Joseph Diescho
Joseph Diescho | |
---|---|
Born | Andara, South West Africa |
Occupation | Writer, political analyst |
Joseph Diescho is a Namibian writer and political analyst. In 1988, he wrote Born of the Sun, the first novel by a native-born Namibian author.[1]
Born in Andara, Kavango Region,[2] Diescho attended Fort Hare University in South Africa where he studied law and political science. During his student days he worked against the apartheid system and was imprisoned in Peddie and East London. Whilst working for a diamond mine company he helped found a worker's union. In 1984 he became a Fulbright scholar at Columbia University in New York City, where he completed his PhD in Political Science in 1992. His dissertation, entitled, "The Role of Education in the Politics of Control in Namibia: 1948–1988," explored the relationship between politics and education in Namibia.
He was an award winning television announcer for the programme South Africa Now on American public television. In 1997-8, he was the founder and presenter of The Big Picture, a weekly economic and political analysis programme on SABC 2.
His novel Born of the Sun was published in the US in 1988 and his second novel Troubled Waters was published in 1993. He is one of Namibia's very few native born novelists.
Diescho was the Executive Director of the Namibian Institute of Public Administration and Management (NIPAM) from 1 July 2013 until December 2015 when he was dismissed.
References
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- "Joseph Diescho". Contemporary Authors, Gale, 2002.
- Diescho, Joseph, with Celeste Wallin. Born of the Sun: a Namibian Novel. New York City: Friendship Press, 1988.
- Diescho, Joseph. Troubled Waters: A Novel. 1993. Windhoek, Namibia: Gamsberg Macmillan Publishers.
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- ↑ Making a Literature: The Case of Namibia Author(s): Michael Chapman Source: English in Africa, Vol. 22, No. 2 (Oct. 1995), pp. 19–28 Published by: Institute for the Study of English in Africa, Rhodes University
- ↑ Joseph Diescho Namibia Institute for Democracy
- Pages with reference errors
- EngvarB from August 2014
- Use dmy dates from August 2014
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- 1955 births
- Living people
- Namibian writers
- Humanists
- Namibian Christians
- Namibian trade unionists
- South-West Africa anti-apartheid activists
- University of Fort Hare alumni
- Columbia University alumni
- People from Kavango Region
- Namibian expatriates in South Africa
- Namibian expatriates in the United States