Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Ma Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie ochu ekela nolu mi ojo megwelu odo 1977. Ojane Nigerian i gwo otakada ya ko ami ukolo nwu chi fiction, nonfiction, kpai lectures. amone che mo nyo'nyo ene ki chi postcolonial feminist literature.
Igbo i che ojane Enugu ma bi. ugbo ki chi ichegbulu utogba chi University of Nigeria Nsukka, Adichie gbi ukoche medicine odo ka nyi abibo. Adichie gwi Nigeria eko ki chi odo mi egwela ki nya nyi ukoche atogba ojane United States, unyi ukoche ki le chi Drexel University efewo Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and went on to study at Eastern Connecticut State University, Johns Hopkins University, and Yale University in the U.S.
Two years after moving to the United States, she transferred to Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic, Connecticut, living with her sister Ijeoma, who was a medical doctor there.[12] In 2000, Adichie published her short story "My Mother, the Crazy African",[28] which discusses the problems that arise when a person is facing two cultures that are complete opposites from each other.[29] After finishing her undergraduate degree, she continued studying and simultaneously pursuing a writing career.[24] While a senior at Eastern Connecticut, she wrote articles for the university paper Campus Lantern.[27] She received her bachelor's degree summa cum laude with a major in political science and a minor in communications in 2001.[12][27] She earned a master's degree in creative writing from Johns Hopkins University in 2003,[27][30] and for the next two years was a Hodder Fellow at Princeton University, where she taught introductory fiction.[24][25] She began studying at Yale University, and completed a second master's degree in African studies in 2008.[12][24] Adichie received a MacArthur Fellowship that same year,[31] plus other academic prizes, including the 2011–2012 Fellowship of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University.[32]