Albert Wendt

Samoan writer
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Quick Facts
Born:
October 27, 1939, Apia, Western Samoa [now Samoa] (age 85)

Albert Wendt (born October 27, 1939, Apia, Western Samoa [now Samoa]) is a Samoan novelist and poet who wrote about present-day Samoan life. Perhaps the best-known writer in the South Pacific, Wendt sought to counteract the frequently romanticized, often racist literature about Polynesians written by outsiders.

Wendt was born into a Samoan family with German and English ancestry. After attending Ardmore Teacher’s College (1958–59) and Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand (M.A., 1964), he taught (1965–69) at Samoa College, a secondary school, and later became its principal (1969–73). In 1974 Wendt accepted a professorship at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji, and three years later he established a branch of the university in Western Samoa (now Samoa), serving as a professor and administrator. Through satellite television, classes and lectures were broadcast throughout the southern Pacific region. He later became a professor at the University of Auckland (1988–2006) and held the Citizen’s Chair at the University of Hawaii (2004–08).

Wendt synthesized Polynesian history, myths, and other oral traditions with contemporary written fiction, unifying them with his unique vision. His fiction portrays the traditions and mores of the papalagi (people descended from Europeans) and depicts their effect on Samoan culture. An early example of this theme appears in Sons for the Return Home (1973; film 1979), his first novel, a roman à clef about a romance between a Samoan man and a white woman.

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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Wendt’s other novels included Pouliuli (1977), which is a Polynesian version of King Lear, and a Samoan family saga, Leaves of the Banyan Tree (1979). His later fiction included Ola (1991), about a woman taking her father to Israel; Black Rainbow (1992), a dystopian thriller set in New Zealand; and The Mango’s Kiss (2003), a wide-reaching story centring on a Samoan pastor’s daughter. The Adventures of Vela (2009), a mythologically rooted epic, won the 2010 Commonwealth Writers’ Prize (later the Commonwealth Book Prize) for best book in the Southeast Asia and South Pacific category. Wendt’s later novels included Breaking Connections (2015). The play The Songmaker’s Chair (2004) focuses on Polynesian family relations in New Zealand.

Wendt’s short-story collections included Flying-Fox in a Freedom Tree (1974; title story filmed 1989), The Birth and Death of the Miracle Man (1986), and Ancestry (2012). His poetry is collected in Inside Us the Dead: Poems 1961 to 1974 (1976), Shaman of Visions (1984), Photographs (1995), The Book of the Black Star (2002), and From Mānoa to a Ponsonby Garden (2012).

Wendt edited or coedited the poetry collections Lali: A Pacific Anthology (1980), Whetu Moana (2003), and Mauri Ola (2010) as well as the prose and poetry compendium Nuanua: Pacific Writing in English Since 1980 (1995). Out of the Vaipe, the Deadwater: A Writer’s Early Life (2015) is a memoir.

Wendt received the New Zealand Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement for Fiction in 2012 and the Order of New Zealand in 2013. His life was chronicled in the documentary The New Oceania (2005).

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