Ama Ata Aidoo: Ghana’s famous author and feminist died aged 81

June 21, 2023
BBC

Getty Images

A renowned feminist, Ama Ata Aidoo, depicted and celebrated the condition of African women in works such as The Dilemma of a Ghost, Our Sister Killjoy and Changes. She opposed what she described as a “Western perception that the African female is a downtrodden wretch”. She also served as education minister in the early 1980s but resigned when she could not make education free. Ama Ata Aidoo passed away after a short sickness.

A university professor, Ata Aidoo won many literary awards for her novels, plays and poems, including the 1992 Commonwealth Writers Prize for Changes, a love story about a statistician who divorces her first husband and enters into a polygamous marriage.

Her work, including plays like Anowa, have been read in schools across West Africa, along with works of other greats like Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe.

Ama Ata Aidoo was born in a small village in Ghana’s central Fanti-speaking region in 1942. Her father had opened the first school in the village and was a strong influence on her. At the age of 15 she decided that she wanted to be a writer and within just four years, had achieved that ambition after she was encouraged to enter a competition, which she won.

She went on to study literature at the University of Ghana and became a lecturer, publishing her first play in 1964.

**If you liked this article, don’t forget to subscribe to our newsletter and receive our articles by email.  

Leave a comment