Xabiso Vili

Last updated

Xabiso Vili is a South African poet, new media artist, author, and speaker who has performed his poetry nationally and internationally. He earned the title of World Slam Poetry Champion in Brussels in 2022. [1] He is also noted for his poetry, which has been published in various anthologies, and his interactive multi-media projects. Owing to the work he has done in the arts sector of South Africa, he was named one of the Mail & Guardian 200 Young South Africans in 2022. [2]

Contents

Biography

Vili spent his early childhood in a rural area in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, although he has also lived in Pretoria and Cape Town, South Africa. [3] His first poems were composed at the age of 12. He continued writing poems throughout his high school career, some of which were published in English Alive, an annual anthology which showcases the work of South African high school students. [4] In 2008, he was elected head boy at Cedar House School in Cape Town. After completing his secondary education, he studied at Rhodes University for three years and worked as an assistant teacher at Cedar House School for a year, but soon moved back to Pretoria. [3] He has also embarked on postgraduate studies in applied theatre at the University of the Witwatersrand. [2]

Performance

In 2015, Vili was named the champion of the inaugural Tshwane Speak Out Loud youth poetry competition. As one of the top 5 finalists, Vili travelled to Washington DC, USA the following year to perform his poetry during the Split This Rock Poetry Festival. [5]

In 2017, Vili embarked on a 6-week of tour of India. [3] During this time, he performed "Black Boi Be", a piece which Vili himself has described as “a combination of poems that come from personal stories”. [6]

In 2022, Vili was one of 40 poets from 37 countries who gathered in Brussels to compete for the title of World Slam Poetry Champion. For the final round of the competition, he performed a poem titled "Forget How to Die". [1]

Other activities

Vili is a new media artist who works with augmented and virtual reality, because of the ways in which it allows for creative forms of storytelling. [2] To continue his work in these fields, he has been awarded multiple grants. The first notable grant was awarded in 2019 by Digital Lab Africa in the Web Creation category, for Vili’s interactive project titled Re/Member Your Descendants. This project combines oral interviews, works of poetry, and art in a fusing of genres. [7] He was also awarded the 2022 Future Africa grant by Meta as part of the Future Africa: Telling Stories, Building Worlds programme. [8] Vili’s Black Boi meets Boogeyman, an interactive 360° visual album, formed part of an XR (Extended Reality) exhibition showcasing the works of Meta’s Future Africa grant recipients. [8]

Awards and honours

Publications

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pretoria</span> Executive Capital of South Africa

Pretoria is South Africa's administrative capital, serving as the seat of the executive branch of government, and as the host to all foreign embassies to South Africa.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Poetry slam</span> Competition arts event

A poetry slam is a competitive art event in which poets perform spoken word poetry before a live audience and a panel of judges. While formats can vary, slams are often loud and lively, with audience participation, cheering and dramatic delivery. Hip-hop music and urban culture are strong influences, and backgrounds of participants tend to be diverse.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Poetry reading</span> Public oral recitation of poetry

A poetry reading is a public oral recitation or performance of poetry. Reading poetry aloud allows the reader to express their own experience through poetry, changing the poem according to their sensibilities. The reader uses pitch and stress, and pauses become apparent. A poetry reading typically takes place on a small stage in a café or bookstore where multiple poets recite their own work. A more prominent poet may be chosen as the "headliner" of such an event and famous poets may also take the stage at a bigger venue such as an amphitheater or college auditorium.

Mzi Mahola is a South African writer, author and poet. He was born on 12 February 1949, in Claremont near Durban. He grew up between Lushington near Seymour and Port Elizabeth, living the Eastern Cape as Mzikayise Winston Mahola. Mzi Mahola is his pen name.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Patricia Smith (poet)</span> American poet

Patricia Smith is an American poet, spoken-word performer, playwright, author, writing teacher, and former journalist. She has published poems in literary magazines and journals including TriQuarterly, Poetry, The Paris Review, Tin House, and in anthologies including American Voices and The Oxford Anthology of African-American Poetry. She is on the faculties of the Stonecoast MFA Program in Creative Writing and the Low-Residency MFA Program in Creative Writing at Sierra Nevada University.

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature.

Bao Phi is a Vietnamese-American spoken word artist, writer and community activist living in Minnesota. Bao Phi's collection of poems, Sông I Sing, was published in 2011 and, Thousand Star Hotel, was published in 2017 by Coffee House Press. He has written three children’s books published by Capstone Press. First book, A Different Pond received multiple awards, including the Caldecott Award, Charlotte Zolotow Award, the Asian/Pacific American Awards for Literature for best picture book, the Minnesota Book Award for picture books.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Patrick Cullinan</span> South African poet

Patrick Roland Cullinan was a South African poet and biographer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Taylor Mali</span> American poet

Taylor McDowell Mali is an American slam poet, humorist, teacher, and voiceover artist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shaggy Flores</span> American poet

Jaime "Shaggy" Flores is a Nuyorican poet, writer and African Diaspora scholar who forms part of the Nuyorical literary movement.

The Canadian Festival of Spoken Word is an annual festival produced by Spoken Word Canada and planned by a local Festival Organizing Committee in each host city.

Johann de Lange is an Afrikaans poet, short story writer and critic. He is renowned for being one of the foremost gay writers in Afrikaans, his most controversial book being Nagsweet.

Charl Jean Francois Cilliers is a South African author and poet. His published works include "West-falling Light" (1971), "Has Winter No Wisdom" (1979).

M. Ayodele Heath is an American poet, spoken-word performer, and fiction writer.

A project of the Badilisha Poetry X-Change Badilisha Poetry Radio is an online platform created to appreciate, celebrate and discover contemporary Pan-African poetry. Badilisha Poetry Radio focuses on weekly podcasts featuring poets from the African Continent and its Diaspora. It is a space dedicated to the exposure and growth of previously unheard and unknown poetry voices from the continent, and an archive of historical poets from the continent and beyond.

Cosmo George Leipoldt Pieterse is a South African playwright, actor, poet, literary critic and anthologist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amitabh Mitra</span>

Amitabh Mitra is an Indian-born South African physician, poet and artist, whose paintings depict dramatised stick figures.

Phillippa Yaa de Villiers is a South African writer and performance artist who performs her work nationally and internationally. She is noted for her poetry, which has been published in collections and in many magazines and anthologies, as well as for her autobiographical one-woman show, Original Skin, which centres on her confusion about her identity at a young age, as the bi-racial daughter of an Australian mother and a Ghanaian father who was adopted and raised by a white family in apartheid South Africa. She has written: "I became Phillippa Yaa when I found my biological father, who told me that if he had been there when I was born, the first name I'd have been given would be a day name like all Ghanaian babies, and all Thursday girls are Yaa, Yawo, or Yaya. So by changing my name I intended to inscribe a feeling of belonging and also one of pride on my African side. After growing up black in white South Africa, internalising so many negative 'truths' of what black people are like, I needed to reclaim my humanity and myself from the toxic dance of objectification." She has also said: "Because I wasn't told that I was adopted until I was twenty, I lacked a vocabulary to describe who I am and where I come from, so performing and writing became ways to make myself up." As Tishani Doshi observes in the New Indian Express: "Much of her work is concerned with race, sexuality, class and gender within the South African context."

Bolaji S. Ramos is a Nigerian poet, writer, analyst and lawyer.

Duncan Livingstone was a Scottish Gaelic Bard from the Isle of Mull, who lived most of his life in South Africa.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Southwell, Anna (2022-10-07). "New word order – SA slam poet Xabiso Vili's 'battle cry' conquers the globe". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  2. 1 2 3 Haffejee (2022-06-29). "Xabiso Vili, 30". Mail & Guardian 200 Young South Africans. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  3. 1 2 3 Farrell, Melanie (2017-06-04). "Xabiso Vili uses his poetry as a form of social activism". Sunday Times. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  4. "2010 English Alive". English Alive. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  5. 1 2 Mahope, Reitumetse (2016-04-11). "Wordsmiths to ignite excellence in Washington DC, USA". Pretoria Rekord. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
  6. Banerjee, Kaushani (2017-07-04). "There is poetry in life and my job is to see it: South African poet Xabiso Vili". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  7. 1 2 Knox, Katelyn (2020). "Digital Lab Africa, 2016–19: Emerging Contours of African New Media Narrative Publishing Landscapes". Research in African Literatures. 51 (3): 143.
  8. 1 2 3 Patel, Faizel (2022-10-10). "XR exhibition showcases winners of Future Africa grant". The Citizen. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
  9. Siddiqi, Bash (2022-09-30). "South African Xabiso Vili crowned World Poetry Slam Champion. • Poetry Africa". Poetry Africa. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  10. Jenkins, Myesha, ed. (2017). To breathe into another voice: a South African anthology of jazz poetry. Johannesburg: Real African Publishers. ISBN   9781928341321.
  11. Gantsho, Vangile, ed. (2020). Yesterdays and imagining realities: an anthology of South African poetry. Tshwane: Impepho Press. ISBN   9781990998782.