Aristote Kavungu
Aristote Kavungu is a Canadian writer.[1]
Background
[edit]He was born in the Democratic Republic of the Congo to parents from Angola, with his father spending time imprisoned at Stanleyville during the Simba rebellion.[2] He later pursued university education at Sorbonne Paris North University in France before moving to Canada, where he took screenwriting classes at the Institut national de l'image et du son.
Career
[edit]He published his debut novel, L'Adieu à San Salvador, in 2001.[3] The book was shortlisted for the Prix Anne-Hébert that year.[1] He wrote the screenplay for the 2002 short film Pour l'amour d'Aicha, directed by Izabel Barsive.
He followed up in 2003 with Un Train pour l'Est, which was the winner of the Prix Christine-Dumitriu-Van-Saanen from the Salon du livre de Toronto.[4]
He published the novels Une petite saison au Congo in 2010[5] and Il ne s'est presque rien passé ce jour-là in 2015. In 2016 he published the poetry collection C'est l'histoire d'un enfant qu'on ne raconte pas aux enfants and the short story collection Dame-pipi blues.[6]
In 2019 he published Mon père, Boudarel et moi, a semi-autobiographical novel based in part around his own real-life experiences when, while living in Paris, he found and returned the lost briefcase of accused war criminal Georges Boudarel, and was left pondering how a man who seemed so kind and ordinary to him could have been pushed to commit the crimes Boudarel had been accused of.[7] The novel was shortlisted for the Trillium Book Award, French in 2020;[8] writer Téa Mutonji, a former student of his, was a nominee in the English category in the same year.[2]
In 2020 he published Quand j'étais nègre, a novella whose title deliberately played on the dual meaning of the French word "nègre" as both the racially-loaded term for negro and the occupational term for ghostwriter.[6]
His newest novel, L'Accordéoniste, was published in 2021.[4]
He teaches French literature at the École secondaire catholique Saint-Charles-Garnier in Whitby, Ontario,[1] and has been a host on the Greater Toronto Area's francophone community radio station CHOQ-FM.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Sébastien Pierroz, "Aristote Kavungu, ou 30 ans après la rencontre marquante d’une vie". TFO, February 27, 2021.
- ^ a b "Aristote Kavungu, finaliste francophone des Prix Trillium 2020". y'a pas deux matins pareils (CJBC (AM)), May 13, 2020.
- ^ Yvon Paré, "Il en est des lieux comme des êtres humains". Lettres québécois, Number 104, Winter 2001. pp. 39-40.
- ^ a b Paul-François Sylvestre, "Aristote Kavungu : goût jubilatoire pour le corps d’une femme". L'Express, November 11, 2021.
- ^ Paul-François Sylvestre, "Une plume alerte au service d’un Congo méconnaissable". L'Express, April 4, 2019.
- ^ a b Winfried Siemerling, Les écritures noires du Canada: L'Atlantique noir et la présence du passé. University of Ottawa Press, 2022. ISBN 9782760337343.
- ^ Paul-François Sylvestre, "Aristote Kavungu, fin psychologue et sociologue". L'Express, September 17, 2019.
- ^ "Trillium Book Awards Announce 2020 Shortlist". Open Book, May 14, 2020.
- 1962 births
- Living people
- 21st-century Canadian novelists
- 21st-century Canadian poets
- 21st-century Canadian screenwriters
- 21st-century Canadian short story writers
- 21st-century Canadian male writers
- Canadian male novelists
- Canadian male poets
- Canadian male screenwriters
- Canadian male short story writers
- Canadian novelists in French
- Canadian poets in French
- Canadian screenwriters in French
- Canadian short story writers in French
- Canadian radio hosts
- Black Canadian broadcasters
- Black Canadian writers
- Franco-Ontarian people
- Democratic Republic of the Congo emigrants to Canada
- Canadian people of Angolan descent
- People from the Regional Municipality of Durham
- Canadian schoolteachers