Pedro Pérez Sarduy is an Afro-Cuban writer and broadcaster, who has published poetry and fiction, in addition to journalism. He gives lectures and reads his work at academic institutions internationally and is currently resident in London, UK.
Biography
Pedro Pérez-Sarduy was born in 1943 in Santa Clara, Cuba, where he was raised. He said in a 2016 interview: "When I was young I won a short story competition and in 1962 I went to Havana when the National School of Arts was being created. I suddenly found myself on the 6th floor of the Havana Libre hotel training as a literary advisor so that I could show people in the countryside how they could make their story into a story." He studied English, American and French literature and language at the University of Havana. From 1965 until 1979 he was a current affairs journalist for Cuban National Radio, and also worked on television on the first African and Caribbean music show in Cuba. After becoming resident in London, he worked in the Latin American department of the BBC World Service. His poetry has been published in three collections – Surrealidad, Cumbite and Melecón Sigloveinte, as well as appearing in The Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse and other publications. He is the author of one novel, translated from Spanish as The Maids of Havana, which is based on his mother's memories of life as an Afro-Cuban from 1938 onwards, and was described by poet and critic Nancy Morejón as "a chronicle of an un-chronicled social psychology". He also co-edited with historian Jean StubbsAfro-Cuba: An Anthology of Cuban Writing on Race, Politics and Culture. Sarduy has read his work internationally and lectured regularly on race, politics and culture at academic institutions. He was a Ford FoundationWriter in Residence at Columbia University, New York, on the CUNY Caribbean Exchange Program at Hunter College, in 1997 at the University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, and on the Rockefeller Fellowship Caribbean 2000 Program. He has also been a Charles McGill Fellow Visiting Lecturer at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, and Associate Fellow of the Caribbean Studies Centre at London Metropolitan University. Awards he has received include the Casa de las Américas and Julián del Casal in 1967; and in 2008 the Prix du Livre Insulaire, Ouessant, for the French translation of his novel, Les bonnes de La Havane.
Poetry
Surrealidad, Havana: Cuadernos UNION, 1967
Cumbite y Otras Poemas, Havana: Ediciones Union, 1987. Bilingual edition: Cumbite and Other Poems, New York: Center for Cuban Studies, 1990