
Friendship has splendors that love knows not.
Biography
About Mariama Bâ
Mariama Bâ (1929–1981) was a Senegalese author whose debut novel *So Long a Letter* (1979) transformed African women's literature and won the inaugural Noma Award for Publishing in Africa in 1980. Born in Dakar, she was raised by her grandparents in a traditional Muslim household after her mother's death, but her father insisted on her secular education. She worked as a primary school teacher for years while raising nine children after her divorce — the same social experience that informs her novel's exploration of polygamy, women's education, and friendship.
*So Long a Letter*, written as correspondence between two Senegalese women, became a foundational text of African feminist literature and is studied across the continent and internationally. She completed a second novel, *Scarlet Song* (1981), before dying of cancer at 51, never witnessing the full international impact of her work.
Key Themes
Quick Facts
- Born
- 1929
- Died
- 1981
- Lifespan
- 52 yrs
- Quotes
- 1 collected
Wisdom
Mariama Bâ's Famous Quotes
“Friendship has splendors that love knows not.”
One of the novel's most celebrated lines, this challenges the Romantic tradition's positioning of friendship as lesser than romantic love. Bâ's novel is structured as correspondence between two friends who have sustained each other across forty years of marriage, loss, and social pressure. Friendship here — patient, reciprocal, built on honest knowledge of the other — offers what love's passion and possession cannot: constancy without demand.
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Mariama Bâ (1929–1981) was a Senegalese author whose debut novel *So Long a Letter* (1979) transformed African women's literature and won the inaugural Noma Award for Publishing in Africa in 1980. Born in Dakar, she was raised by her grandparents in a traditional Muslim household after her mother's death, but her father insisted on her secular education. She worked as a primary school teacher for years while raising nine children after her divorce — the same social experience that informs her novel's exploration of polygamy, women's education, and friendship. *So Long a Letter*, written as correspondence between two Senegalese women, became a foundational text of African feminist literature and is studied across the continent and internationally. She completed a second novel, *Scarlet Song* (1981), before dying of cancer at 51, never witnessing the full international impact of her work. Mariama Bâ lived 1929 – 1981.
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