Mabel Segun

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Mabel segun
Mmádu
ụdịekerenwanyị Dezie
mba o sịNaijiria Dezie
Aha enyereMabel Dezie
Ụbọchị ọmụmụ ya1930 Dezie
Ebe ọmụmụȮra Ondo Dezie
asụsụ ọ na-asụ, na-ede ma ọ bụ were na-ebinye akaBekee, pidgin Naịjirịa Dezie
Ọrụ ọ na-arụonye mgbasa-ozi, Onye ntaakụkọ, Odee akwụkwọ, odee uri, children's writer Dezie
ebe agụmakwụkwọMahadum nke Ibadan Dezie
agbụrụNdi Yoruba Dezie
nnọchiaha nkeonweL484 Dezie

Mabel Segun (born 1930) is a Nigerian poet, playwright and writer of short stories and children's books. She has also been a teacher, broadcaster, and a sports woman.

Biography[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

Born in Ondo City, Nigeria, she had her secondary school education at CMS Girl's School Lagos. She attended the University of Ibadan, graduating in 1953 with a BA in English, Latin and History. She taught these subjects in Nigerian schools, and later became Head of the Department of English and Social Studies and Vice-Principal at the National Technical Teachers' College, Yaba (Now Yaba College of Technology). Her first book, My Father's Daughter (1965), published in 1965, has been widely used as a literature text in schools all over the world, and her books have been translated into German, Danish, Norwegian and Greek. Her work is included in the anthology Daughters of Africa (1992).

Segun has championed children's literature in Nigeria through the Children's Literature Association of Nigeria, which she founded in 1978, and the Children's Documentation and Research Centre, which she set up in 1990 in Ibadan. She is also a fellow of the International Youth Library in Munich, Germany.

Awards and honours[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

As a broadcaster, Segun won the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation 1977 Artiste of the Year award.

In 2009, she received the Nigerian National Order of Merit Award for lifetime achievements.

In 2015, the Society of Young Nigerian Writers under the leadership of Wole Adedoyin founded the Mabel Segun Literary Society (www.mabelsegunaliterarysociety.blogspot.com), aimed at promoting and reading the works of Mabel Segun.

In 2007, Segun was awarded the LNG Nigeria Prize for Literature.

Selected bibliography[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

  • My Father's Daughter (1965)
  • Under the Mango Tree (co-edited) (1979)
  • Youth Day Parade (1984)
  • Olu and the Broken Statue (1985)
  • Sorry, No Vacancy (1985)
  • Conflict and Other Poems (1986)
  • My Mother's Daughter (1986)
  • Ping-Pong: Twenty-Five Years of Table Tennis (1989)
  • The First Corn (1989)
  • The Twins and the Tree Spirits (1990)
  • The Surrender and Other Stories (1995)
  • Readers' Theatre: Twelve Plays for Young People (2006)
  • Rhapsody: A Celebration of Nigerian Cooking and Food Culture (2007)

References[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

External links[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

  • "Mabel Segun 1930 to the Present", Facebook, 20 August 2012.


Ụdàkọ

Nigeria Prize for Literature winners

St Anne's School, Ibadan alumni

Yoruba women writers

20th-century Nigerian poets

Recipients of the Nigerian National Order of Merit Award

Nigerian women children's writers

Writers from Ondo State

Nigerian children's writers

Nigerian women poets

Yoruba poets

English-language writers from Nigeria

Yoruba educators

Nigerian women educators

20th-century Nigerian women writers

University of Ibadan alumni

People from Ondo City

Yoruba children's writers

Living people

1930 births

1 ụdàkọ

Mabel Segun