Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 85 of
85
with 100 triples per page.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina abstract "Ny Avana Ramanantoanina (1891-1940) is among the most celebrated literary artists of Madagascar. He is principally renowned for his poetry, but also wrote stories and plays. He wrote during the colonial period and is considered to have been the first Malagasy writer to weave political messages into his work. He wrote primarily in the Malagasy language. A contemporary of Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo, who is commonly cited as the first African poet to write according to Western conventions, Ramanantoanina was highly critical of the French colonial authority. He was a member of the secret nationalist organization Vy Vato Sakelika, and was exiled to Mayotte in the Comoros when the organization was banned by the French colonial authority in 1917. His writings were consequently banned and were not reprinted until the 1980s in Madagascar. As a result, his writings are relatively less well known in international literary circles than those of Rabearivelo.Ramanantoanina was born in 1891 in Ambatofotsy, a suburb of Antananarivo in central Madagascar, to a family that belonged to the former Merina aristocracy that had been dissolved upon French colonization in 1896. After completing his education in a private Protestant school, Ramanantoanina began writing and publishing his work in several local literary journals at the age of 16 under the pen name Ny Avana (rainbow). He gained popularity with his early publication Chant de fiancailles (Wedding Engagement Song) in 1907.Ramanantoanina was among the first generation of Malagasy poets to attempt to develop a structure and theory of Malagasy language poetry, who would be termed Ny Mpanoratra zokiny (The Elders) by later generations of Malagasy literary artists. His work drew upon the traditional Malagasy poetic form of hainteny, integrating standard characteristics the form such as embona (nostalgia) and hanina (longing) into his poems as a means to promote the unity of the Malagasy people and encourage a return to traditional values.After returning from exile in Comoros in 1922, he was excluded from opportunities for a lucrative career with the colonial government, and instead earned a modest living as a clerk in a book shop in the capital city. His works during this period became increasingly characterized by themes of disillusionment. He founded a literary movement called Mitady ny Very (Search for Lost Values), and on 5 August 1931 he launched a literary journal called Fandrosoam-baovao (New Progress) with fellow writers Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo and Charles Rajoelisolo. He died in 1940 in Antananarivo.After national independence in 1960, his writings were promoted nationally as evidence of the nationalist sentiment of the Malagasy elite in Antananarivo during colonization. There is a street named after him in Antananarivo.".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina birthPlace Ambatofotsy.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina birthPlace Madagascar.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina deathPlace Antananarivo.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina deathPlace Madagascar.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina influenced Elie_Rajaonarison.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina influenced Jean-Joseph_Rabearivelo.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina nationality Malagasy_people.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageID "43149377".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageLength "7759".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageOutDegree "33".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageRevisionID "630486406".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Aimé_Césaire.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Ambatofotsy.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Andriana.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Antananarivo.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Category:1891_births.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Category:1940_deaths.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_dramatists_and_playwrights.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_poets.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Category:Malagasy_dramatists_and_playwrights.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Category:Malagasy_poets.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Antananarivo.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Christianity_in_Madagascar.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Dox_(poet).
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Education_in_Madagascar.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Elie_Rajaonarison.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink French_Madagascar.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Hainteny.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Harlem_Renaissance.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Jacques_Rabemananjara.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Joseph_Rabearivelo.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Léon_Damas.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Madagascar.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Malagasy_language.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Malagasy_people.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Merina_people.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLink Vy_Vato_Sakelika.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ny Avana Ramanantoanina".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina birthDate "1891".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina birthPlace Ambatofotsy.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina birthPlace Madagascar.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina deathDate "1940".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina deathPlace "Antananarivo, Madagascar".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina hasPhotoCollection Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina influenced Elie_Rajaonarison.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina influenced Jean-Joseph_Rabearivelo.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina name "Ny Avana Ramanantoanina".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina nationality Malagasy_people.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina occupation "Poet, writer".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_writer.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Portal.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Sfn.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina subject Category:1891_births.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina subject Category:1940_deaths.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina subject Category:20th-century_dramatists_and_playwrights.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina subject Category:20th-century_poets.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina subject Category:Malagasy_dramatists_and_playwrights.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina subject Category:Malagasy_poets.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina subject Category:People_from_Antananarivo.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Agent.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Person.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Writer.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Person.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Agent.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type NaturalPerson.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Thing.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Q215627.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Q36180.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Q5.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina type Person.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina comment "Ny Avana Ramanantoanina (1891-1940) is among the most celebrated literary artists of Madagascar. He is principally renowned for his poetry, but also wrote stories and plays. He wrote during the colonial period and is considered to have been the first Malagasy writer to weave political messages into his work. He wrote primarily in the Malagasy language.".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina label "Ny Avana Ramanantoanina".
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina sameAs m.01118n5g.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina sameAs Q18355453.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina sameAs Q18355453.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina wasDerivedFrom Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina?oldid=630486406.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina isPrimaryTopicOf Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina.
- Ny_Avana_Ramanantoanina name "Ny Avana Ramanantoanina".