- DHL cargo plane crashes in Lithuania, killing one
- Le Pen meets PM as French government wobbles
- From serious car crash to IPL record for 'remarkable' Pant
- Philippine VP Duterte 'mastermind' of assassination plot: justice department
- India two wickets away from winning first Australia Test
- 39 foreigners flee Myanmar scam centre: Thai police
- As baboons become bolder, Cape Town battles for solutions
- Uruguay's Orsi: from the classroom to the presidency
- UN chief slams landmine threat days after US decision to supply Ukraine
- Sporting hope for life after Amorim in Arsenal Champions League clash
- Head defiant as India sense victory in first Australia Test
- Scholz's party to name him as top candidate for snap polls
- Donkeys offer Gazans lifeline amid war shortages
- Court moves to sentencing in French mass rape trial
- 'Existential challenge': plastic pollution treaty talks begin
- Cavs get 17th win as Celtics edge T-Wolves and Heat burn in OT
- Asian markets begin week on front foot, bitcoin rally stutters
- IOC chief hopeful Sebastian Coe: 'We run risk of losing women's sport'
- K-pop fans take aim at CD, merchandise waste
- Notre Dame inspired Americans' love and help after fire
- Court hearing as parent-killing Menendez brothers bid for freedom
- Closing arguments coming in US-Google antitrust trial on ad tech
- Galaxy hit Minnesota for six, Orlando end Atlanta run
- Left-wing candidate Orsi wins Uruguay presidential election
- High stakes as Bayern host PSG amid European wobbles
- Australia's most decorated Olympian McKeon retires from swimming
- Left-wing candidate Orsi projected to win Uruguay election
- UAE arrests three after Israeli rabbi killed
- Five days after Bruins firing, Montgomery named NHL Blues coach
- Orlando beat Atlanta in MLS playoffs to set up Red Bulls clash
- American McNealy takes first PGA title with closing birdie
- Chiefs edge Panthers, Lions rip Colts as Dallas stuns Washington
- Uruguayans vote in tight race for president
- Thailand's Jeeno wins LPGA Tour Championship
- 'Crucial week': make-or-break plastic pollution treaty talks begin
- Israel, Hezbollah in heavy exchanges of fire despite EU ceasefire call
- Amorim predicts Man Utd pain as he faces up to huge task
- Petrol industry embraces plastics while navigating energy shift
- Italy Davis Cup winner Sinner 'heartbroken' over doping accusations
- Romania PM fends off far-right challenge in presidential first round
- Japan coach Jones abused by 'some clown' on Twickenham return
- Springbok Du Toit named World Player of the Year for second time
- Iran says will hold nuclear talks with France, Germany, UK on Friday
- Mbappe on target as Real Madrid cruise to Leganes win
- Israel records 250 launches from Lebanon as Hezbollah targets Tel Aviv, south
- Australia coach Schmidt still positive about Lions after Scotland loss
- Man Utd 'confused' and 'afraid' as Ipswich hold Amorim to debut draw
- Sinner completes year to remember as Italy retain Davis Cup
- Climate finance's 'new era' shows new political realities
- Lukaku keeps Napoli top of Serie A with Roma winner
Maryse Conde: Daring storyteller who explored black identity
French writer Maryse Conde, who died on Tuesday at the age of 90, became one of the greatest chroniclers of the struggles and triumphs of the descendants of Africans taken as slaves to the Caribbean.
But the writer born in the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe did not pen her first book until she was nearly 40, and it triggered a controversy that saw authorities in several countries order the copies destroyed.
The mother of four, who once said she "did not have the confidence to present her writing to the outside world", was in her eighties before she won a major award, in 2018.
The New Academy Prize -- rushed into existence in Sweden when the Nobel Literature Prize was halted over a rape scandal -- praised how Conde "describes the ravages of colonialism and post-colonial chaos in a language which is both precise and overwhelming".
By then the francophone novelist, with close cropped grey hair, was confined to a wheelchair with a degenerative disease.
But she was delighted, saying in a video message that the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, which is part of France, was normally "only mentioned when there are hurricanes or earthquakes".
- Called out African dictators -
As well as tackling racism, sexism and a multitude of black identities over 30 books, Conde was one of the first to call out the corruption of newly independent African states.
Her first book "Heremakhonon", which means "Waiting for Happiness" in the Malinke language of West Africa, caused a scandal in 1976 and three West African countries ordered the copies destroyed.
"In those days, the entire world was talking of the success of African socialism," she later wrote.
"I dared to say that... these countries were victims of dictators prepared to starve their populations."
She found popular and critical success with novels like "Segu" and "I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem", but Conde still felt snubbed by the French literary establishment, never winning its top prizes.
There was belated recognition in 2020, when President Emmanuel Macron paid tribute to "the fights she has waged, and more than anything this kind of fever she carries within her," awarding her the Grand Cross of the National Order of Merit.
- Black awakening -
Conde's life was almost as eventful as one of her historical novels.
Born on February 11, 1934, as Maryse Boucolon, she grew up the youngest of eight children in a middle-class family in Guadeloupe, a French island in the Caribbean, and only became aware she was black when she left to go to an elite school in Paris when she was 19.
Growing up, she had not heard of slavery nor Africa, and her mother -- a schoolteacher -- banned the use of Creole at home.
Her literary imagination had been fired by Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights", which she later transplanted to the Caribbean in "Windward Heights".
In Paris her mind was opened to questions of identity when she met the Martinique writer and politician Aime Cesaire, one of the founders of the negritude literary movement that sought to reclaim black history and reject French colonial racism.
But unlike him, Conde was a passionate believer in independence from France.
"I understand that I am neither French nor European," she said in a 2011 documentary. "That I belong to another world and that I have to learn to tear up lies and discover the truth about my society and myself."
- Dramatic life -
Conde fell for a Haitian journalist, who left her when she got pregnant. Unmarried and with a small boy, she gave up on university.
Three years later she married Mamadou Conde, an actor from Guinea, and they moved to the west African country.
It fulfilled a need to explore her African roots, but life in the capital Conakry was tough. "Four children to feed and to protect in a city where there is nothing, it was not easy," she recalled.
Her marriage to Conde fell apart and she moved to Ghana and then Senegal, eventually marrying Richard Philcox, a British teacher who became her translator and, she would say, offered her the "calm and serenity" to become a writer.
She followed the scandal of "Heremakhonon", which centred on a Caribbean woman's disillusioned experience in Africa, with her "Segu" novels, set in the Bambara Empire of 19th-century Mali.
Then she published "I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem" in 1986, about a slave who became one of the first women accused of witchcraft during the 1692 Salem witch trials in the United States.
That won her American acclaim, and Conde lived in New York for 20 years, founding the Center for Francophone Studies at Columbia University before moving to the south of France.
Her later works tended to be more autobiographical, including "Victoire: My Mother's Mother", about her grandmother who was a cook for a white Guadeloupean family.
F.Moura--PC