Usman Awang

This is a Malay name; the name Awang is a patronymic, not a family name, and the person should be referred to by the given name, Usman.
Usman Awang.

Usman Awang (12 July 1929 in Kuala Sedili, Johore – 29 November 2001 in Kuala Lumpur) was a Malaysian poet, playwright, novelist and Malaysian National Laureate (1983).

Biography

He was born into a penniless family in Johore, and had worked as a coolie and served as a policeman when he was young. He was good at writing traditional Pantun poems. His career began in 1946, and he was a nucleus member of Angkatan Asas 50.[1] Usman Awang died of heart attack on 29 November 2001 in Kuala Lumpur. He was buried at Bukit Kiara Muslim Cemetery, Kuala Lumpur.

Literary criticism

The prominent Malaysian critic Syed Husin Ali, one of his closest friends, wrote this about him: "Usman is popularly considered, and most justifiably too, as perhaps the best poet in the Malay language. Most important, he is accepted without question as a people’s poet. Writing since 1955, Usman did not produce a very large corpus of poetry, only about 200 of them. But the man, his personality, his poetry and his ideas have a much deeper and wider influence than that number would suggest. Much of his poems are simple, clear, often romantic, and just beautiful. He is a master at weaving words into striking phrases, sentences and verses that are of exceptional classical beauty and sometimes appear to be nostalgic and even escapist."[2]

Legacy

Several places and honours were named after him, including:

References

  1. Syed Husin Ali. "Asas 50 dan cita-cita kemasyarakatannya" – Bengkel Asas 50 dan Sastera Melayu Moden (22–23 Aug 1980). Kuala Lumpur: DBP, 1980
  2. http://nursamad.blogspot.com/2007/07/in-memory-usman-awang-july-12-1929-nov.html

Bibliography

External links

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