Search
Uzodinma Iweala
Author
Uzodinma (Uzo) Iweala is the author of Beasts of No Nation. The novel, his debut, came out of his undergraduate thesis work at Harvard and was conducted under the supervision of writer Jamaica Kincaid. Iweala, born in 1982, hails from Washington, D.C. and Nigeria. Beasts of No Nation, which depicts a child soldier in an unnamed African country,was published in 2005 to considerable critical acclaim. In 2007, Iweala was named one of Granta magazine's 20 best young American novelists. Iweala's mother, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, is the former Finance Minister and Foreign Minister of Nigeria. Iweala is now a medical student at Columbia University.
Read Less
26mins
Uzodinma Iweala describes how affected people have come to understand HIV/AIDS as something that is “livable, tangible and real.”
3mins
Iweala would like to hear more African voices, not reporters, talking about the good that is happening in Africa.
1mins
Iweala wonders why we turn to violence as the arbiter of our disputes.
3mins
Iweala talks about why this issue may be misunderstood, as well as the dangers China presents.
1mins
Iweala would rather see as many parties as possible come to the table to look at Africa’s problems.
1mins
Iweala hopes that more new voices are added to the list of those working on development in Africa.
5mins
South Africa’s constitution, Botswana’s economy and Nigeria’s role in Africa all make Uzodinma Iweala’s list.
3mins
Iweala would like people to realize that Africa is everyone’s problem.
2mins
Iweala believes that celebrities can help but that a deeper understanding is needed.
5mins
Iweala talks about how Africans are portrayed in media and the lack of acknowledgement that nations are responsible for many of the problems in Africa.
3mins
Iweala talks about the legacy of colonialism, US foreign policy and how westerners view other societies.
4mins
Iweala talks about living by the principles of equality and striving to be the best.
1mins
Iweala talks about Beckket, Malloy, Morrison and Achebe and how our culture is too saturated with information to engage with their works.
4mins
Iweala talks about how his interactions with people inspire him and why he thought he could write in the voice of a child soldier.
3mins
Iweala talks about the struggle to get published, his advice to other young authors and the impact of his work.
1mins
Just as Africa is often looked at a homogenous whole, Black America is too often described as a uniform identity.
3mins
Iweala talks about the perspective his parents gave him as well as the duality of being a Nigerian American and a black American.