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Moyez G. Vassanji (born 30 May 1950 in Kenya) is a Canadian novelist and editor, who writes under the name M. G. Vassanji. Vassanji's work has been translated into several languages. As of 2020, he has published nine novels, as well as two short-fiction collections and two nonfiction books. Vassanji's writings, which have received considerable critical acclaim, often focus on issues of colonial history, migration, diaspora, citizenship, gender and ethnicity.
Neloufer de Mel Neloufer de Mel is a professor of English at the University of Colombo in Sri Lanka and a feminist scholar. As a child, she attended Bishop's College, a private girls' school in Colombo. She holds a PhD from the University of Kent, where her 1990 ...
, "Mediating Origins: Moyez Vassanji and the Discursivities of Migrant Identity," in Essays on African Writing: vol 2, Contemporary Literature, ed. Abdulrazak Gurnah (Portsmouth, N.H.: Heinemann, 1995): 159–177


Early life and education

M. G. Vassanji was born in Kenya to Indian immigrants and raised in Tanganyika (now Tanzania). He attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Pennsylvania, where he specialised in nuclear physics, before moving to Canada as a postdoctoral fellow in 1978.


Career

From 1980 to 1989 Vassanji was a research associate at the University of Toronto. During this period he developed an interest in medieval Indian literature and history, co-founded and edited a literary magazine (''The Toronto South Asian Review'', later renamed ''The Toronto Review of Contemporary Writing Abroad''), and began writing fiction. Between 1989 and 2012, Vassanji published six novels, two collections of short stories, a memoir of his travels in India, and a biography of Mordecai Richler. In 1989, after the publication of his first novel, ''The Gunny Sack'', Vassanji was invited to spend a season at the International Writing Program of the University of Iowa. ''The Gunny Sack'' won a regional Commonwealth Writers Prize in 1990. He won the inaugural Giller Prize in 1994 for ''The Book of Secrets''. That year, he also won the Harbourfront Festival Prize in recognition of his "achievement in and contribution to the world of letters," and was one of twelve Canadians chosen for '' Maclean's Magazine''s Honour Roll. In 1996 he was a Fellow of the Indian Institute of Advanced Study in Shimla, India. He again won the Giller Prize in 2003 for ''The In-Between World of Vikram Lall'', the first writer to win this prize twice.Charles Foran
"M.G. Vassanji travels back to Tanzania"
''Maclean's'', October 19, 2014
In 2006, ''When She Was Queen'' was shortlisted for the
City of Toronto Book Award The Toronto Book Awards are Canadian literary awards, presented annually by the City of Toronto government The municipal government of Toronto ( incorporated as the City of Toronto) is the local government responsible for administering the city ...
. ''
The Assassin's Song ''The Assassin's Song'' is a novel by M. G. Vassanji, published in 2007 by Doubleday Canada. It is the story of a young Indian boy (Karsan Dargawalla) whose dream is to escape his family's religious legacy. He wants to be ordinary: to go to school ...
'', released in 2007, was short-listed for the 2007 Giller Prize, the Rogers Prize, and the Governor General's Prize in Canada, as well as the Crossword Prize in India. In 2009 his travel memoir, ''A Place Within: Rediscovering India'', won the Governor-General's Prize for nonfiction. He has also been awarded the Commonwealth Regional Prize (Africa). His novel ''The Magic of Saida'', set in Tanzania, was published in Canada in 2012, and in 2014 he published his memoirs, ''Home Was Kariakoo'', based on his childhood and recent travels in East Africa. and in 2016 he published another novel, ''Nostalgia''. In 2019, his ninth novel ''A Delhi Obsession'' was published to wide acclaim. He is a member of the Order of Canada and has been awarded several honorary doctorates. In 2016, he received the Canada Council Molson Prize for his career achievement.


Themes

Vassanji's works have been extensively reviewed by literary critics, such as in works edited by 2021 Nobel prize winner Abdulrazak Gurnah. Several themes emerge. Mainly, his characters are the Asians of East Africa (Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania), whose historical record, as of that region as a whole, is sparse. In telling the story of his subjects, in his earlier novels he has used memory, written record, and folklore, in an intersection of oral and written histories. Thus in ''The Gunny Sack'', his first novel, he starts with many memories, but his narrator has to delve into written history, primarily through colonial journals and travelogues, to complete and give shape to his created history. His third novel, ''The Book of Secrets'' starts with the journal of a colonial administrator at the border between German and British East Africa and brings to his creation memories and archival material. In ''The In-between World of Vikram Lal''l, he looks at the condition and involvement of the Asians of Kenya during the Mau Mau War of the 1950s. The past and unresolved issues cast strong shadows in his works. In his other works, for example No New Land, his characters have undergone a second migration, starting in the 1970s, to Europe, Canada, or the United States. Vassanji then examines how the lives of these characters are affected by their migrations. Though few of his African Asian characters ever return to India, the country's presence looms throughout his work. His 2007 novel ''The Assassins Song'', inspired by the devotional, mystical songs of his Khoja Ismaili community, which deeply influenced him in childhood, is set almost entirely in India, where it was received as an Indian novel and short-listed for the Crossword Prize. His second novel, ''No New Land,'' describes the travails of Asian immigrants arrived in Canada from Tanzania; as the title implies, there is no new land, the characters continue in their minds to lead the same lives. In the dystopic novel ''Nostalgia Vassanji'' tackles the topic of assimilation, in which characters can have their memories erased and replaced by new ones in order to be better integrated. But, the novel asks, is the process of erasure perfect? Vassanji writes about the effects of history and the interaction between personal and public histories, including folk and colonial history. Vassanji's narratives follow the personal histories of his main characters; the historical perspective provided often leaves mysteries unsolved. The colonial history of Kenya and Tanzania serves as the backdrop for much of his work; in the ''Assassin's Song'', however, he tackles Indian folk culture and myths.


Bibliography


Novels

* ''The Gunny Sack'' (1989) * '' No New Land'' (1991) * '' The Book of Secrets'' (1994) * ''Amriika'' (1999) * '' The In-Between World of Vikram Lall'' (2003) * ''
The Assassin's Song ''The Assassin's Song'' is a novel by M. G. Vassanji, published in 2007 by Doubleday Canada. It is the story of a young Indian boy (Karsan Dargawalla) whose dream is to escape his family's religious legacy. He wants to be ordinary: to go to school ...
'' (2007) * ''The Magic of Saida'' (2012) * ''Nostalgia'' (2016) Zane Schwartz
"M.G. Vassanji delivers a dystopian story"
''Maclean's'', October 1, 2016
* ''A Delhi Obsession'' (2019)


Short story collections

* ''Uhuru Street'' (1992) inspired by Naipaul's Miguel Street. * ''When She Was Queen'' (2005)


Non-fiction collections

* ''A Place Within'' (2008) * ''Extraordinary Canadians: Mordecai Richler'' (2008) * ''And Home Was Kariakoo: A Memoir of East Africa'' (2014)


References


External links

*
M. G. Vassanji's
entry at The Canadian Encyclopedia
M.G. Vassanji
Emory University, Department of English
Interview and excerpt from ''The Assassin's Song'', online from CBC Words at Large


THECOMMENTARY.CA, 26 September 2007
The autor's item
at
Athabasca University Athabasca University (AU) is a Canadian public research university that primarily operates through online distance education. Founded in 1970, it is one of four comprehensive academic and research universities in Alberta, and was the first ...
, English-Canadian Writers, by Lee Skallerup
Interview on A Delhi Obsession
The Open Magazine
Interview with Financial Express on A Delhi Obsession
The Financial Express {{DEFAULTSORT:Vassanji, M.G. 1950 births Living people Canadian male novelists Tanzanian novelists Canadian people of Indian descent Kenyan emigrants to Canada Canadian writers of Asian descent Canadian expatriates in the United States Canadian people of Gujarati descent Canadian Ismailis Kenyan Ismailis MIT Department of Physics alumni Members of the Order of Canada Naturalized citizens of Canada Tanzanian emigrants to Canada University of Nairobi alumni University of Pennsylvania alumni Harbourfront Festival Prize winners Governor General's Award-winning non-fiction writers International Writing Program alumni Canadian male non-fiction writers