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Frank Kobina Parkes (8 March 1932 – 23 May 2004) was a Ghanaian journalist, broadcaster and poet. He was the author of one book, Songs from the Wilderness (University of London Press, 1965), but is widely anthologised and is perhaps best known for his poem "African Heaven", which echoes the title of Carl Van Vechten's controversial 1926 novel Nigger Heaven, and was selected by Langston Hughes for inclusion in the groundbreaking anthology of African writing (1960). Parkes' poetic style, an intelligent, rhythmic free verse brimming with confidence and undercut with humour, is believed to owe much to the Senegalese poet David Diop, one of the pioneers of the négritude movement. Reviewing Songs from the Wilderness, Mbella Sonne Dipoko said: "Mr Parkes is one of the fine poets writing today ab

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  • Frank Ernest Kobina Parkes (* 1932 in Accra; † 23. Mai 2004 ebenda) war ein ghanaischer Journalist, Rundfunksprecher und Autor. Seine Ausbildung fand in Accra (Ghana) sowie in Freetown (Sierra Leone) statt. Seine Tätigkeit begann er bei einer Zeitung, um jedoch schnell zu als Rundfunksprecher zu wechseln (1955). In der Folgezeit wurde er Vorsitzender der Ghana society of writers (ghanaische Gesellschaft für Schriftsteller). Sein erstes Werk waren Gedichte in einem Gedichtband aus dem Jahr 1965 unter dem Titel Songs from the Wilderness. Seine Arbeit hat eine Tendenz zur romantischen Ausdrucksweise und basiert auf dem Leben in Afrika, umschreibt die Tänze, die Kultur aber auch die Last der kolonialen Vergangenheit. Einige sehen seine Arbeit beeinflusst von dem senegalesischen Schriftsteller . Seine Arbeiten wurden lediglich unter seinem Namen nur in einem Gedichtband veröffentlicht und ansonsten in Sammlungen ghanaischer und afrikanischer Schriftsteller, von denen Kachikali (1971) und Messages (1971) die bekanntesten sind. In den 1970ern arbeitete Parkes für das ghanaische Ministerium für Information in Accra. (de)
  • Frank Kobina Parkes (8 March 1932 – 23 May 2004) was a Ghanaian journalist, broadcaster and poet. He was the author of one book, Songs from the Wilderness (University of London Press, 1965), but is widely anthologised and is perhaps best known for his poem "African Heaven", which echoes the title of Carl Van Vechten's controversial 1926 novel Nigger Heaven, and was selected by Langston Hughes for inclusion in the groundbreaking anthology of African writing (1960). Parkes' poetic style, an intelligent, rhythmic free verse brimming with confidence and undercut with humour, is believed to owe much to the Senegalese poet David Diop, one of the pioneers of the négritude movement. Reviewing Songs from the Wilderness, Mbella Sonne Dipoko said: "Mr Parkes is one of the fine poets writing today about Africa and the world." The book was hailed as "...a landmark not only in Ghanaian poetry but in African poetry as a whole". (en)
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  • 2004-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • 1960-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • 1932-03-08 (xsd:date)
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  • Francis Ernest Kobina Parkes (en)
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  • 2004-05-23 (xsd:date)
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  • 1932-03-08 (xsd:date)
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  • Francis Ernest Kobina Parkes (en)
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  • 2004-05-23 (xsd:date)
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  • Korle Bu, Accra, Ghana (en)
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  • Poetry (en)
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  • Negritude (en)
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  • Frank Kobina Parkes (en)
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  • "African Heaven" (en)
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  • Writer (en)
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  • 1960 (xsd:integer)
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  • Frank Kobina Parkes (8 March 1932 – 23 May 2004) was a Ghanaian journalist, broadcaster and poet. He was the author of one book, Songs from the Wilderness (University of London Press, 1965), but is widely anthologised and is perhaps best known for his poem "African Heaven", which echoes the title of Carl Van Vechten's controversial 1926 novel Nigger Heaven, and was selected by Langston Hughes for inclusion in the groundbreaking anthology of African writing (1960). Parkes' poetic style, an intelligent, rhythmic free verse brimming with confidence and undercut with humour, is believed to owe much to the Senegalese poet David Diop, one of the pioneers of the négritude movement. Reviewing Songs from the Wilderness, Mbella Sonne Dipoko said: "Mr Parkes is one of the fine poets writing today ab (en)
  • Frank Ernest Kobina Parkes (* 1932 in Accra; † 23. Mai 2004 ebenda) war ein ghanaischer Journalist, Rundfunksprecher und Autor. Seine Ausbildung fand in Accra (Ghana) sowie in Freetown (Sierra Leone) statt. Seine Tätigkeit begann er bei einer Zeitung, um jedoch schnell zu als Rundfunksprecher zu wechseln (1955). In der Folgezeit wurde er Vorsitzender der Ghana society of writers (ghanaische Gesellschaft für Schriftsteller). In den 1970ern arbeitete Parkes für das ghanaische Ministerium für Information in Accra. (de)
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  • Frank Kobina Parkes (de)
  • Frank Kobina Parkes (en)
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  • Frank Kobina Parkes (en)
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