Bole Botake (1947âÂÂ2016) was an anglophone Cameroonian playwright, poet, and critic known for using theatre for political intervention and education.
Bole Butake was born in 1947 in Nkor, North West region of Cameroon. He pursued his education at Sacred Heart College Mankon and later at the University of Yaoundé, where he earned a BA in Modern English Letters(1972), a Maîtrise(1973) and a Master's degree in English Literature from the University of Leeds, England(1974). He then completed a PhD at Yaoundé in 1983, after which he taught at Yaoundé until 2012 when he retired.
Butake established an international reputation as a dramatist with plays like Lake God, And Palm Wine Will Flow, The Survivors, Dance of the Vampires and The Rape of Michelle, all of which have political underpinnings. He was one of a generation of Anglophone authors who were deeply engaged in the politics of their time, and became a household name in Cameroon in the 1980s and 1990s. A number of scholars have analysed his work, often focusing on their political critique and direct engagement with oppression, democracy and human rights and the role of the nation.
Butake was political in staging the plays of other authors as well. In 1991 he directed Bate Besong's play Beasts of No Nation, leading to the playwright being arrested for subversion. He also conducted workshops across Cameroon, teaching rural communities how to use theatre for social change.
Bole Butake was a professor of Performing Arts and African literature at the University of Yaoundé, where he taught for over 40 years before retiring in 2012.
Publications.