Difference between revisions of "Dennis Walder"

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Among his key publications have been the books ''Post-Colonial Literatures: History, Language, Theory'' and ''Athol Fugard'', as well as three volumes of Fugard plays, edited for Oxford University Press.  
 
Among his key publications have been the books ''Post-Colonial Literatures: History, Language, Theory'' and ''Athol Fugard'', as well as three volumes of Fugard plays, edited for Oxford University Press.  
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His collection of papers on [[Athol Fugard]] and South African theatre  has been lodged as an archive at the Lilly Library, Indiana University.
  
 
See the '''[[ESAT Bibliography]]''' section for more on his publications.
 
See the '''[[ESAT Bibliography]]''' section for more on his publications.

Revision as of 09:21, 15 April 2017

Dennis Walder (19**-) is an academic, theatre historian and critic.


Biography

Born in South Africa,

Completed his graduate studies at the Universities of Cape Town and Edinburgh, where he was a Research Fellow in English. He began teaching while completing his PhD. After a spell as Staff Tutor for the Open University in Scotland, he was appointed lecturer and Chair of the Nineteenth Century Novel course at the Open University in London. He introduced postcolonial literature to the Open University curriculum and was founding Director of the Post-Colonial Research Group and a director of The Ferguson Centre for African and Asian Studies. He was promoted to a Chair in 1999 and to Emeritus Professor of Literature in 2010. at the Open University, UK.

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

Besides having acted as external examiner for many South African studies, and supervised studies on South African theatre, he is a founding member of the editorial board of the South African Theatre Journal, and is Co-editor of the Journal of Southern African Studies.

Among his key publications have been the books Post-Colonial Literatures: History, Language, Theory and Athol Fugard, as well as three volumes of Fugard plays, edited for Oxford University Press.

His collection of papers on Athol Fugard and South African theatre has been lodged as an archive at the Lilly Library, Indiana University.

See the ESAT Bibliography section for more on his publications.

Sources

http://www.open.ac.uk/people/dw23


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