Difference between revisions of "Sheila Roberts"

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Born in Johannesburg in 1937 and educated in Potchefstroom and through [[Unisa]]. For a while in the 1970s was the literary advisor to [[PACT]], later (1977) appointed associate professor of South African and Commonwealth Literature at Michigan State University. Author of poems, stories  and novels, including the prize winning collection ''[[Outside Life's Feast]]'' (1975).  
 
Born in Johannesburg in 1937 and educated in Potchefstroom and through [[Unisa]]. For a while in the 1970s was the literary advisor to [[PACT]], later (1977) appointed associate professor of South African and Commonwealth Literature at Michigan State University. Author of poems, stories  and novels, including the prize winning collection ''[[Outside Life's Feast]]'' (1975).  
  
She passed away in the USA in August 2009.
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She made frequent return trips to friends and family and many grandchildren.
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She passed away in the USA on 11 August 2009.
  
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
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[[ESAT Bibliography Ar-Az|Astbury]] 1979.
 
[[ESAT Bibliography Ar-Az|Astbury]] 1979.
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Obituary written by [[Stephen Gray]], ''[[Mail and Guardian]]'', 3 September 2009.
  
 
== Return to ==
 
== Return to ==

Revision as of 12:28, 31 December 2018

Sheila Roberts (1937-2009). Academic, poet, writer of novels, short stories and plays. Some sources state her year of birth incorrectly as 1942.

Biography

Born in Johannesburg in 1937 and educated in Potchefstroom and through Unisa. For a while in the 1970s was the literary advisor to PACT, later (1977) appointed associate professor of South African and Commonwealth Literature at Michigan State University. Author of poems, stories and novels, including the prize winning collection Outside Life's Feast (1975).

She made frequent return trips to friends and family and many grandchildren.

She passed away in the USA on 11 August 2009.

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

Also the author of the play It’s My Weekend, Too, which (along with Wilma Stockenström’s Die Laaste Middagmaal) won the one-act play competition which was held at The Space in 1972/3 and was performed by them. It was later published as Weekend in **??

She wrote at least two more plays: The Tenants and The House.

Sources

Gosher, 1988. [JH]

Book SA [1].

Various entries in the NELM catalogue.

Astbury 1979.

Obituary written by Stephen Gray, Mail and Guardian, 3 September 2009.

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