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Johnnie MacViban (born 1955) is a Cameroonian journalist, poet and novelist educated in the International School of Journalism and the International Communication Institute, Montreal (Canada). As a news analyst, he has worked with Cameroon Tribune and CRTV and was incarcerated on 26 July 1986 alongside Sam Nuvalla Fonkem and Ebssy Ngum for airing over the radio a story on ''The Enemies of Democracy.'' They were later released five months later in November of the same year.〔Index On Censorship: Volume 15, Issue 10, 1986〕〔Johnnie MacViban. The Mwalimu's Reader.Kansas: Miraclaire, 2011〕 In 1994, he won the Editor’s Choice Award in Poetry for the National Library of Poetry 〔Ann Arbor Review of Books:1.7, 2013〕 and his novel ''A Ripple from Abakwa'' was shortlisted for EduART's Jane and Rufus Blanshard Award for fiction.〔http://www.eduartawards.org/2011/05/johnnie-macviban-johnnie-macvibanhas-been-shortlisted-for-the-jane-and-rufus-blanshard-award-for-fiction-forhisnovelripples.html〕 == Bibliography== * ''An Anecdoted View''. Yaounde: Subsidy, 2004. * ''An Anecdoted Patchwork''. Garoua: Subsidy, 2006. * ''The Makuru Alternative''. Bamenda: Patron Publishing House, 2007. * ''A Ripple from Abakwa''. Bamenda: Patron Publishing House, 2008. * ''The Mwalimu’s Reader (A Collection of Critical Journalistic Essays)''. Kansas: Miraclaire, 2011. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Johnnie MacViban」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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